Millions for Billions

 

Jail the corrupt politicians

By ATHENS/BERLIN on 2014/01/06

(Own report) – New allegations of corruption have been leveled at leading German arms manufacturers. According to a former employee of the Greek defense ministry and several mediators of the arms industry, German arms manufacturers paid millions in bribes to induce Athens to purchase German weaponry, worth several billion Euros. Krauss-Maffei Wegmann and Rheinmetall were among the companies named. These deals helped inflate the country’s debts and were, therefore, in part responsible for escalating the crisis. Others, such as Siemens, had also paid millions in bribes to land lucrative contracts from Athens. According to a Greek journalist, who has done extensive research on corruption in Greece, German companies are the “main beneficiaries” of Greece joining the Euro zone because they subsequently profited from highly lucrative Greek government contracts. The sumptuous contracts helped plunge Greece into crisis while they, at the same time, helped the German industry to blaze its trail to the predominant position in Europe.

Bribes

New allegations of bribery have been leveled at leading German arms manufacturers. According to a former employee of the Greek defense ministry and several mediators of the arms industry, who have been questioned by the magistrate’s office in Athens, companies such as Krauss-Maffei Wegmann, Rheinmetall and Atlas have paid large bribes to sell arms to the Greek Armed Forces. The former General Secretary for Procurements of the Greek Defense Ministry, Antonios Kantas, admitted having accepted approximately eight million Euros in bribes, 3.2 million had come from Germany. According to reports, a large portion had been invested in a deal for 170 “Leopard 2” battle tanks, concluded in 2003, and for which Greece had paid 1.7 billion Euros over the past few years – despite the crisis. The deals also included the modernization of submarines, the sale of the “Asrad” anti-aircraft system and the delivery of self-propelled PzH 2000 howitzers. Rheinmetall and Krauss-Maffei Wegmann are denying they paid bribes.[1]

World’s Fifth Largest Arms Procurer

This was not the first time German arms deals with Greece have ended up in court. In the fall of 2013, the former Greek Defense Minister, Akis Tsochatzopoulos, was sentenced to 20 years in prison: He had accepted bribes worth 55 million Euros to purchase Russian-made anti-aircraft missiles and German-made 214-type submarines, developed by the HDW ship building company in Kiel. The bribes had been transmitted by HDW partner Ferrostaal (Essen). This deal, valued at about 2.85 billion Euros, was concluded in 2000. Shortly after the crisis in Greece clearly escalated, critics were already pointing out that the multi-billion German arms deals were playing a major role in Athens’ becoming the world’s fifth largest arms procurer for the period from 2005 to 2009.[2] These arms imports had exacerbated the Greek government’s debts to the point where the country finally plunged completely into a crisis.

At the Taxpayers’ Expense

German arms manufacturers are not the only ones to land lucrative deals through bribes in Athens. The Siemens Corp.’s bribes, for example, have also caused a storm. Since the late 1990s, Siemens has been receiving lucrative contracts from Greece. Siemens has digitalized the telephone network, provided communications systems for the Armed Forces and participated in establishing an electronic surveillance system for the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens. This system had been planned as a test-run for new “anti-terror” technology. Even though it was not operative on time,[3] it provided the corporation attractive dividends. To land that contract, Siemens had paid opulent bribes – the rumor is 15 million Euros per year. No problem, because it turned out to be profitable for Siemens: After all, the company could ultimately shift the costs of corruption onto the Greek population. A company, which pays “bribes in a government contract, can add a few million to its operating margin,” explained an investigator in describing the system: “The excessive prices are at the taxpayers’ expense.”[4]

Got Off Cheap

The Siemens Corp. and the German manager in charge, got off cheap. For example, Michalis Christoforakos, the former Siemens manager in Greece, could avoid legal proceedings in Athens by fleeing to Munich, where he received a suspended sentence in one trial and was fined 350,000 Euros in a second. German courts found Christoforakos guilty in 2009, but refused to extradite him to Greek courts on the grounds that the charges pending against him in Greece would have surpassed the German statute of limitations. Two other Siemens managers have been fined €45,000 and €250,000 by German courts respectively, and because one must not answer twice for the same charges (“double jeopardy”), they cannot be tried again in Greece, where they risk a much harsher sentence. The sentence in Greece would risk being harsher because of the extent of the damage corruption has inflicted on the country. In Athens, a parliamentary committee of inquiry has calculated the damages inflicted solely by the Siemens Corp. at more than two billion Euros. In early 2012, Siemens reached an agreement with the Greek government: to waive the compensation for 80 million Euros in outstanding Greek financial obligations, to donate 90 million Euros for educational and anti-corruption programs and to expand its activities in Greece by about 100 million Euros. In Greece, this has been widely criticized as totally insufficient.

Primary Beneficiaries of Joining the Euro Zone

The discovery of the bribery by the arms industry and the Siemens Corp. signifies, by no means, that all cases of German corruption in Greece have been uncovered. In June 2013, the Deutsche Bahn AG admitted that its subsidiary, DB International, has siphoned off finances to obtain contracts to build the Metro in Athens.[5] Earlier, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission accused Daimler of having landed its Greek business deals with bribes.[6] According to critics, this all has system. “The primary beneficiaries” of Greece’s joining the Euro zone have been German companies, explained Tasos Telloglou, a journalist, who has done extensive research on Greek corruption. Since then, they have been given lucrative contracts “particularly from the government.”[7] With these contracts, German exports to Greece – which in 2002 were at about five billion Euros – had soared by 60 percent until 2008, reaching eight billion Euros.

Door Opener

Even though the German Chancellery’s decision to vote in favor of Greece’s joining the Euro zone in the spring of 2000 has been repeatedly criticized, it has proven beneficial for German industry. According to reports, the Chancellery had received indications from Brussels that the Greek trade balance was already showing a “very large deficit,” which could create enormous problems in a common currency.[8] This assessment, considered insignificant by Chancellor Schröder’s cabinet, has been confirmed. On the other hand, the German industry has succeeded in consolidating its predominance over Europe with its excessive exports – not only, but also – to Greece.[9] The bribes paid in Athens, which are now fueling headlines, have opened some of the doors along this path.

Further information and background on Germany’s policy toward Greece can be found here: Die Folgen des Spardiktats, Ausgehöhlte Demokratie,Protectorate-LikePatterned after the TreuhandImpoverishment Made in GermanyThe Traits of the CrisisOn the Relevance of DemocracyOnly MisunderstandingsSqueeze Dry and Obscure and Austerity Kills.

[1] Griechischer Ex-Spitzenbeamter gesteht Schmiergeld-Deal um deutsche Panzer. http://www.sueddeutsche.de 28.12.2013. Druck auf deutsche Rüstungsfirmen steigt. http://www.sueddeutsche.de 04.01.2013.

[2] Jan Grebe, Jerry Sommer: Griechenland: Hohe Militärausgaben trotz Finanzkrise, BICC Focus 9, Juli 2010.

[3] Minas Samatas: Security and Surveillance in the Athens 2004 Olympics. Some Lessons From a Troubled Story, in: International Criminal Justice Review, September 2007.

[4] Jörg Schmitt: Ein paar Millionen draufschlagen. http://www.spiegel.de 10.05.2010.

[5] Bahn-Tochter zahlte Schmiergeld in Griechenland. http://www.focus.de 18.06.2013.

[6] USA klagen Daimler an; http://www.n-tv.de 24.03.2010.

[7] Abgründe an Korruption – Deutsche U-Boote für Griechenland. Frontal21, Sendung vom 12.11.2013.

[8] Kanzleramt kannte Griechenland-Risiken schon vor Eurostart. http://www.stern.de 20.06.2012.

[9] See also Der deutsche Glaube ans Sparen and Hartz IV for Everyone

 

Related: 

– Britain Cuts Defense Force by 20%

Bloated Military Budgets and Greek Debt

It’s a real pity Greece didn’t take a page out of Powers’ book when their debt problems first started. Over the last decade, Greece has spent a much larger proportion of GDP on defense than most other European Union (EU) nations. Economists claim that if Athens had cut defense spending to levels similar to other EU states, they could have saved around €150 billion – which is more than its last bailout.

Prominent economist Angelos Phillippides points out that Germany became an economic powerhouse mainly because it had no military budget for 62 years. Greece, in contrast, spent 7% of its GDP on defense when other European countries spent an average 2.2%. If you were to add up 5% compounded from 1946 to today, there would be no debt at all.

Germany: the Country Profiting most from Greek Weapons Purchases

Dimitris Papadimoulis, an MP with the Coalition of the Radical Left party, claims that Germany – which campaigns the loudest for Greek austerity cuts – is also the country that benefits the most from Greek arms purchases. In fact Greece is Germany’s biggest European arms purchaser, buying 15% of Germany’s total arms exports. This includes over €2 billion for submarines Greece doesn’t need and which have proven to be faulty. Papadimoulis complains that Greece still owes €1 billion on the submarines. This is three times the amount Germany pressured Athens to make in additional pension cuts to secure its latest EU aid package.

A Trail of Bribery and Fraud

According to the Guardian, speculation is rife that international aid was dependent on Greece following through on agreements to buy more military hardware from Germany and France. Katerina Tsoukala, a Brussels based security expert, talks about the veil of secrecy and corruption that surrounds Greece’s military procurements. She has reason to believe they have spent far more on defense expenditures than official records reveal. In April, former defense minister Akis Tsochadzopoulos was jailed pending trial on charges of accepting an €8 million bribe from Ferrostaal, the German company that helped oversee the scandal-marred sale of four Class 214 submarines to the Greek navy. To date, Athens has taken delivery of only one of the subs, after the other vessels were found to have technical glitches.

– The Submarine Deals That Helped Sink Greece

Greece, with a population of just 11 million, is the largest importer of conventional weapons in Europe—and ranks fifth in the world behind China, India, the United Arab Emirates and South Korea. Its military spending is the highest in the European Union as a percentage of gross domestic product. That spending was one of the factors behind Greece’s stratospheric national debt.

– MAN The scandal of the German company… – German Embassy …

.. In terms of the tanks in 2002, Greece has bought 170 tanks Leopard, paying 1.7 billion euros. This amount is sufficient, as they said information from the Pentagon, to purchase 250 tanks! ….

.. While supposedly chosen the best float in the market, a few months before their release recorded many important problems with the shield of the chariot of the tower (not passed the test) and chromating of cannon. …

… The submarines Before more than a decade, Germany has won the supply contract signing of Greece three plus one Type 214 submarines. Former executives of Ferrostaal admitted that they gave 65 million in bribes to get work. Greece, the Germans already paid 2.2 billion for the programs of four new construction and modernization of other three type 209 and the repair of Railway wagons (this is envisaged in the contract), but only got … one. The notorious “Papanikolis”, which when delivered in Greece, found that … tilted. Now, the Germans seek to build the other two 214 extra 1.3 billion euros….

– Crimes against humanity: Two complaints against Siemens from Romania and Argentina

– Confidential Secret Report Findings Re Ferrostal Greek Gov Case Pribes Etc H ΔΙΑΦΘΟΡΑ ΤΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΩΝ …

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You can read the full text here: http://www.scribd.com/doc/98979913/Siemens

7 comments on “Millions for Billions

  1. MAN The scandal of the German company

    MAN, concerning bribes to supply 142 trolley. The damage to the State by the German company is unclear, but the former Transport Minister Ch. Verelis filed suit in the German justice, stressing that hide the truth from the company resulted in no attacks and moral damage. Also ask the Greek government to pursue and seek damages and give until they be excluded from MAN any job related to the Greek government.

    “The case of oiling MAN has been cleared completely legal in Germany. There have been no convictions and the company has also paid heavy fines of around 200 million euros in Germany. Moreover, as the last act, people’s management company have ordered and paid money to the company itself for the damage caused, “he says in a statement, Mr. Verelis.

    Also for Mercedes and MAN, the commission investigated the transport ministry for urban transport (ETHEL-OSCE) in Local Government in refuse, the Ministry of Public Order in fire engines for the Olympic Games and the Armed Forces. Also investigated two contracts, one in the CIU for diesel engines and coaches, as well as in a subway. These exceeded 300 million. In the same context investigated possible kickbacks in Greece for the purchase in 2001 of EUR 90 million, for trolley, the company Neoplan. This is a subsidiary of MAN, which is also under the microscope of German prosecutors. The armament 13 billion euro cost only four of its arms programs which, as said in Parliament, pushing blackmailing Germany Greece to give her. But nearly all the major programs has gotten accompanied by numerous allegations of scandals.In terms of the tanks in 2002, Greece has bought 170 tanks Leopard, paying 1.7 billion euros. This amount is sufficient, as they said information from the Pentagon, to purchase 250 tanks! While supposedly chosen the best float in the market, a few months before their release recorded many important problems with the shield of the chariot of the tower (not passed the test) and chromating of cannon. And if they were solved, Leopard still have problems, since the Germans yperkostologoun advance and ask!315 million euros, the Germans got the contract to upgrade the electronics 40 F4 Phantom fighter aircraft, signed in 1998.

    This is a huge amount to extend for only a few years the operational life of aircraft, which finally retired.The telecommunications project “Hermes” paid properly and had to be delivered in 2006, but still … come. The contract of 350 million euros was paid with the signing in 1999.

    The Justice, investigates the case in the scandal Siemens.161 million euro cost supply of various military vehicles from Mercedes. The contract was signed in 2001 by Aki Tsohatzopoulos and as it turned out, had paid kickbacks. Investigated by the Justice.The Germans put in hand and contracts … American missile system “Patriot”. Through Siemens, bribes handed out lavishly to get the work of electronic boards. The Health The Germans played a corrupt and patient health.

    Specifically, according to a report of Inspector of Health and Welfare (SEFYP), Siemens gave bribes to get the task of replacing tubes diagnostic medical equipment. These, cost 30-50 thousand euro and was constantly replacing them, since it was defective. Thus, in the years replacement cost value corresponding to a CT (!). The submarines Before more than a decade, Germany has won the supply contract signing of Greece three plus one Type 214 submarines. Former executives of Ferrostaal admitted that they gave 65 million in bribes to get work. Greece, the Germans already paid 2.2 billion for the programs of four new construction and modernization of other three type 209 and the repair of Railway wagons (this is envisaged in the contract), but only got … one. The notorious “Papanikolis”, which when delivered in Greece, found that … tilted. Now, the Germans seek to build the other two 214 extra 1.3 billion euros. Yards In the same case of submarines, form and Shipyards, which the Germans took a healthy business and literally tore. From the moment that have, in the shipyards stopped manufacturing military ships and … generally specialized production.

    When it was in control of SDOE Shipyards under German command, found numerous irregularities (false invoices and virtual etc.) which imposed fines 10ekat.efro. When completed the audit of Financial Crime, the Germans threatened to close the shipyard and transferred as such to the Lebanese-Iskandar Safa. Who found that the fines loaded without his knowledge, and the terms of 300 million euros for the OSE, which had not met …Kyra Merkel if you Take us to court …Αναίρεση τροποποιήσεων

    https://de-de.facebook.com/GermanEmbassyWashington/posts/10150868953656795

  2. Γ. ΤΡΑΓΚΑΣ Eξοπλιστικά – Mίζες – ΑΠΑΓΟΡΕΥΜΕΝΗ ΖΩΝΗ – vol.1 ( 7.1.14 )

    Γ. ΤΡΑΓΚΑΣ Eξοπλιστικά – Mίζες – ΑΠΑΓΟΡΕΥΜΕΝΗ ΖΩΝΗ – vol.2 ( 7.1.14 )

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