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According to the Ad Hoc Group Report, at paragraph 44, Mr. Coll in his recent interview stated as follows:"According to Mr. Coll, he told Mr. Wolfowitz and Ms. Cleveland that the terms proposed by Ms. Riza, regarding her promotion increase, her annual increase and guaranteed promotion to Levels I and J were ‘outside the Staff Rules' and that moving forward with them was a reputational risk to the Bank. In Mr. Coll's view, there is ‘no doubt that the President knew or had been made aware of by me that this was outside the rules."Memos and notes prepared by Mr. Coll at the time show that his views were quite opposite-Mr. Coll affirmed that there were no personnel policies that clearly applied to this situation:For example, in handwritten edits he wrote on a draft of the Riza agreement, Mr. Coll wrote:"There is no precedent to his kind of situation and no policy that would clearly apply to resolve it." (Handwritten annotations of X. Coll on draft agreement dated 08/26/05 (emphasis added). The final agreement with Ms. Riza, which was signed by Mr. Coll, similarly states: "There is no precedent of this kind and no personnel policy that clearly applies to resolve it." (September 1, 2005 Letter Agreement signed by X. Coll and S. Riza) (Emphasis added).
- He wrote, in a memo to himself dated August 22, 2005, that he told Mr. Wolfowitz "we were in a very difficult situation - with no precedents at the Bank - and that it had enormous potential to damage the bank's reputation.In balance, I thought the situation required more flexibility than in other past cases and that there was great risk to the Bank if we could not come to a workable agreement in a few days." (August 22, 2005 email from X. Coll to himself)
- He added: "I felt comfortable that I had raised points of concern with the President and that he had taken these seriously and given due consideration."(Id.)
- Mr. Coll also wrote at the time that the decision, with which Mr. Wolfowitz concurred, to make any promotions contingent on evaluation and peer review "was a workable solution that was more within bounds of acceptable policy.This addition brought the process for potential promotions more in line with current practice at the Bank.I felt that, on balance this was a reasonable way to move forward and find a solution given the very complex and difficult set of circumstances." (Id.)
"Because of the strong and largely undisputed documentary record, the Ad Hoc Group has decided to base its conclusions primarily on the documents it has before it as they reflect a contemporaneous record and provide a comprehensive picture of the events supplemented where needed by evidence from the meetings and interviews."
"The Ad Hoc Group acknowledges that the informal advice as provided by the Ethics Committee was not a model of clarity. It should have been drafted in language that would not open a possibility of misinterpretation."(Para 81).
"As for Mr. Wolfowitz' involvement in deciding the details of the arrangement with Ms Riza, the August 8, 2005, letter from the Chairman of the Ethics Committee contains a sentence that reads: ‘The EC cannot interact directly with staff member situations, hence Xavier [Coll] should act upon your instruction.' Read in isolation, the above-mentioned sentence could be interpreted as the Ethics Committee advising that Mr. Wolfowitz should take an active role in the negotiation with Ms Riza."
"We will have a meeting with Ms Cleveland later today. We also will be seeing Ms. Riza later today. We will be seeing Mr. Danino,[ Roberto Dañino , former general counsel for the bank] and probably tomorrow Mr. Melkert[former chairman of the World Bank's Ethics committee]. They will all be interviewed on the record. And you will have these transcripts available as soon as possible." (p. 65 Wijffels transcript).
"The Ad Hoc Group views with profound regret the public pronouncements by some current an d former Bank officials and staff members on this matter, and the disclosure of information, otherwise confidential in manners inconsistent with the applicable staff rules and policies of the Bank. The Ad Hoc group is strongly of the view that all officials and staff of the World Bank Group must adhere to the highest standards of conduct."(Para 103)
"The Group is troubled by Mr. Wolfowitz's own public statements as well of his lawyer made on his behalf...."
"But of greater concern to the Group is the attitude it reveals about the nature of the process currently underway. It has turned an internal governance matter into an ugly public relations campaign in which he believes he is being publicly attacked and therefore has resorted to public attacks of his own which denigrates the very institution he was selected to lead..."
Anyone who knows anything about this also knows that it is part of a power play by certain European and Asian interests at the bank to challenge American dominance of the institution. Two previous managing directors, Shengman Zhang and Caio Koch-Weser, were allowed to have their spouses working there without any demur. Riza's job did not require her to report to the office of the president in any case. Wolfowitz nonetheless offered to sign a statement, as soon as he was appointed, recusing himself from any involvement in her work. It was certain bank high-ups who laid the trap for him by insisting that she lose her post and who have now sprung the trap by blaming him for following their well-documented recommendation that she be compensated for this unfairness. In the intervals, they have disgraced themselves by feeding a gullible or biased press and destroying the privacy of a woman who is worth more than all of them put together. Her "confidentiality agreement" with these characters was torn up without even a hint of scruple.I have been living in Washington for a quarter of a century and have said some mean things about people and had some mean things said about me. Fair enough. I sat and thought for quite a while today and decided that this is the nastiest and dirtiest and cheapest campaign of character assassination I have ever seen. Yet almost everyone in my so-called profession seems to regard it with a smirk or as a feather in the cap. Good grief. If it succeeds in ruining two careers and poisoning two lives, I do so much hope that it makes the perpetrators-bankers and reporters working as a team-deliriouslyhappy.As the Wall Street Journal editorializes today:All of this is further evidence that what Mr. Wolfowitz is facing here is a kangaroo court. The Europeans and bank staff thought they could get him to leave quietly if they smeared him and Ms. Riza enough in the press.Paul Wolfowitz is made of different stuff than those who seek to remove him.
Clarice Feldman is an Attorney in Washington, DC and frequent contributor to American Thinker.