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- <text id=93TT1932>
- <title>
- June 21, 1993: A Matter Of Honor
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 21, 1993 Sex for Sale
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCANDALS, Page 33
- A Matter Of Honor
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Marianne Gasior blew the whistle on her employer because it
- was selling weapons-related goods to Iraq. Now she's threatening
- to reopen the Iraqgate scandal.
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN GREENWALD--With reporting by Jonathan Beaty/Washington and John F. Dickerson/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Nothing in Marianne Gasior's quiet life prepared her for the
- ordeal she has undergone in the past three years. The petite
- former attorney for Kennametal Inc., a Pennsylvania machine-tool
- maker, says she has been harassed, followed and even run off
- the road since she accused the company of illegally shipping
- metal-working equipment with military uses to Iraq. But Gasior
- has persisted in her whistle-blowing ways. She has now amassed
- evidence that, she says, threatens to expose the misdeeds of
- American companies as well as a vast Bush Administration cover-up
- of how scores of firms, some using U.S.-backed loans, helped
- build Saddam Hussein's war machine and even sold him materials
- he desperately needed to make a nuclear bomb.
- </p>
- <p> After years of lonely spadework, Gasior is finally getting some
- respect. Two powerful Democratic Congressmen, Jack Brooks of
- Texas and Charlie Rose of North Carolina, took her findings
- to the White House and Attorney General Janet Reno last month.
- Their goal: to press for a re-examination of U.S. business ties
- to Iraq and the role of the Justice Department in a possible
- cover-up. Last week at a Washington reception, the Cavallo Foundation
- honored Gasior with a $10,000 award for her "moral courage"
- and for her efforts to expose wrongdoing. Said Rose at the ceremony:
- "She is remarkable and courageous, and without her, much of
- what we know could not have been learned."
- </p>
- <p> Gasior's evidence, which she claims shows a concerted government
- effort to suppress information about just how much U.S.-made
- war materiel ended up illegally in Saddam Hussein's hands, could
- help crack the murky scandal known as Iraqgate that dogged George
- Bush's final months in office. Questions still swirl around
- the role that Washington and a number of U.S. companies played
- in supplying Saddam's $100 billion worldwide military shopping
- spree that led up to his invasion of Kuwait.
- </p>
- <p> At the heart of the scandal stands the outfit that financed
- a large portion of it: the Atlanta branch of Italy's Banca Nazionale
- del Lavoro, which extended $5.5 billion in loans to finance
- Saddam's military procurement network in the U.S. Critics charge
- that the Bush Administration, which was eager to support Iraq
- as a counterweight to Iran, and was even more eager to assure
- itself access to oil at cheap prices, turned a blind eye to
- BNL's activities and allowed missile and nuclear technology
- that helped Iraq's missile and nuclear development to slip out
- of the country.
- </p>
- <p> Gasior, 31, stumbled into the hothouse world of Iraqi trade
- after joining Kennametal, a Fortune 500 company, at its Latrobe,
- Pennsylvania, headquarters near Pittsburgh in 1989. Gasior became
- alarmed when she discovered that a shipment of carbide metal-working
- tools to Baghdad--tools that could be used to cut uranium--might be illegal. She also learned of Kennametal sales to
- Matrix Churchill, Iraq's main U.S. purchasing agent, which was
- gathering materiel for projects like the infamous Supergun.
- She says she warned company officers that Kennametal was not
- following export regulations, and questioned other company practices.
- Within nine months of being hired, she was asked by her superiors
- to resign for being "uncooperative." Unable to find a new job,
- Gasior moved back into her parents' suburban Pittsburgh home.
- </p>
- <p> By the time Iraq stunned the world with its invasion of Kuwait,
- Gasior was about ready to blow the whistle on her former employer.
- She had read about the BNL scandal and remembered a transaction
- at Kennametal that involved carbide tools and a BNL letter of
- credit. Appalled at the thought that U.S. companies had helped
- provide Saddam with the equipment to wage war, Gasior and another
- Kennametal employee took their suspicions to Justice officials
- in Philadelphia in December 1990. "They listened carefully until
- we got to the part about the BNL letter of credit," Gasior says.
- "Then they stood up, thanked us for coming in, said they would
- look into it, and ushered us out the door. They didn't even
- look at the documents we brought."
- </p>
- <p> While the authorities seemingly ignored Gasior, she was not
- forgotten. She says a few days after her Justice Department
- interview, cars mysteriously started following her. One night
- a car that had been shadowing her forced her off the road. The
- same vehicle pursued her in a wheel-screeching, hilltop chase
- until she got away by shutting off her lights. Then there were
- the constant phone calls to her home from someone who only breathed
- over the line, and a false newspaper report that an arrest warrant
- had been issued in her name. She began to fear for her life.
- "It was as if we were living in the Soviet Union," she recalls.
- "My parents couldn't believe this was happening."
- </p>
- <p> At the height of her distress, Gasior found a sympathetic ear
- in Congress. Struck by her story, Rose, who had been tracking
- BNL, asked her to testify before his subcommittee. "Marianne
- is a very brave lady," Rose says, "who had far too large a conscience
- to work in corporate America and too much conscience, for sure,
- to work for Kennametal."
- </p>
- <p> While Gasior's testimony in August 1991 received wide media
- coverage, there still was little follow-up. She was, however,
- invited to testify before an Atlanta grand jury. From Gasior's
- point of view, her second experience with the Justice Department
- was a disaster. She insists that the prosecutor was aggressively
- hostile and refused to listen to her story. Soon after her appearance,
- the U.S. Attorney's office in Atlanta sent a letter to Kennametal
- stating that the grand jury found the company blameless.
- </p>
- <p> Gasior returned home determined to expose not just Kennametal
- but everyone connected with the military supply of Iraq. For
- the next year and a half, operating from her dining-room table,
- she collected documents and evidence. Those documents include
- internal memorandums from the Justice Department that could
- prove one of the key allegations of the Iraqgate scandal: that
- Justice tried to bottle up the investigation. "The issues go
- beyond Iraqgate," she insists. "Top people in the Justice Department
- and the Department of Agriculture obstructed justice in this
- case for political reasons, and they are still there."
- </p>
- <p> Kennametal, meanwhile, has sued Gasior for violating her severance
- agreement by accusing the company of harassment. The case is
- scheduled for trial in Latrobe next month. Kennametal continues
- to insist that its letter from Justice clears the company of
- all wrongdoing in connection with exports to Iraq, and denies
- any role in harassing Gasior.
- </p>
- <p> Gasior, however, has finally managed to bring her evidence to
- the attention of the highest authorities. Rose was so impressed
- with her "smoking gun" document that he enlisted Brooks, who
- chairs the House Judiciary Committee, to help set up a meeting
- with Attorney General Reno. Though Rose and Brooks presented
- allegations of a Justice Department cover-up, Reno listened
- impassively--and it is not clear precisely what, if anything,
- she may do about it. "I know she's giving it serious consideration,"
- says Rose, who realizes, just as Reno does, that a full-scale
- investigation could send shock waves through Washington and
- corporate suites. That hasn't deterred Jack Brooks, who has
- already introduced a bill--his first of the new Administration--to renew the office of special counsel. If Reno doesn't move,
- its first task may be to investigate the Justice Department's
- handling of the BNL case. "This affair is not over; there is
- much more to learn," Rose said in introducing Gasior last week.
- "I hope the ultimate truth will be put on the table, but as
- of today, it is not."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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