News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinecabal-eliteinternational-bankingimf — Viewing Item


Colin powell bound for the world bank { April 27 2004 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/27/business/worldbusiness/27powell.html

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/04/27/business/worldbusiness/27powell.html

April 27, 2004
Psst! Is Powell Bound for the World Bank?
By ELIZABETH BECKER

WASHINGTON, April 26 - Forget the official pronouncements that Secretary of State Colin L. Powell is staying put at the State Department.

The buzz in the capital is at least a couple of steps beyond that, as people in business and finance circles here are speculating that he could become the next president of the World Bank, the largest and most influential development agency in the world.

The whispers only grew louder the other night after Mr. Powell dined with James D. Wolfensohn, the current bank head, at his home in the Kalorama section of Washington.

Over Arctic char, Mr. Powell joined Mr. Wolfensohn and a handful of other guests, including Alan Greenspan, the Federal Reserve chairman, to toast Horst Köhler, the former head of the International Monetary Fund who resigned last month to run for president of Germany.

"It was basically a family dinner,'' Mr. Wolfensohn said. "Colin Powell came as a friend, not a member of the administration.''

Dinner guests said that not a word was uttered about whether Mr. Wolfensohn would stay on for an unusual third term or pass the baton to his good friend Mr. Powell.

"I don't think there's the slightest likelihood that Colin Powell would want to become president of the World Bank after putting up with everything he's put up with as secretary of state,'' Mr. Wolfensohn said in an interview.

Maybe so. But it could be that Mr. Wolfensohn has yet to proclaim himself on his way out.

To others, however, the World Bank job would seem an obvious landing spot for Mr. Powell. After all, he would be running the show, not jockeying for position in a war cabinet where his views are often in the minority.

Richard Boucher, spokesman for the secretary of state, said that his boss was not "looking for the job nor has he been asked to take it.''

Yet the rumors persist, if only because many World Bank officials say they would love to have him as the next president should Mr. Wolfensohn leave. He has the reputation of a good manager who can lift morale. And his life story has made him popular around the world.

"Who better to represent the bank than Colin Powell?'' said a senior bank official who insisted on not being identified.

The speculation about Mr. Powell increased after the publication of Bob Woodward's book, "Plan of Attack.'' Mr. Woodward's portrait of the secretary of state as dissenting from the hawks in the Bush war cabinet seemed to confirm what many believed inevitable, that Mr. Powell will not remain as secretary in a second Bush administration.

To those pressing for Mr. Powell to make the move, what better position than as spokesman for the world's poor? He served as chairman of America's Promise, a charity aimed at helping children at risk.

While his policy speeches are replete with praise for the Iraq war and Mr. Bush's more muscular initiatives, Mr. Powell never fails to list as major accomplishments the administration's contributions to the fight against AIDS and world poverty - all items on the bank's agenda.

By tradition, the president of the United States gets to decide the head of the World Bank. Should Mr. Bush win re-election, he could pick Mr. Powell as the first black to head the organization.

The administration denied that Mr. Powell or anyone else is at the head of a list of candidates for a position that will not be open until June 2005.

"It's premature and wouldn't be fair to anyone to throw names out there,'' said Tony Fratto, deputy assistant secretary for public affairs at the Treasury Department, which the White House has charged with coming up with a slate of candidates.

To be fair, Mr. Powell was not the only prospect gossiped about in the corridors this weekend at the annual spring meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. One name was Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg. Before he was elected mayor of New York, he told friends he would like to be secretary general of the United Nations or president of the World Bank.

Less glamorous names being bandied about were John Taylor, a top-ranking official at the Treasury Department; Peter McPherson, the president of Michigan State University, who headed the first team sent to Iraq to revitalize the economy; and Robert B. Zoellick, the United States trade representative.

Of course, there is the distinct possibility that no one will be succeeding the popular Mr. Wolfensohn, who could be reappointed. So far he has refused to say whether he would accept a third five-year term.

"I'd rather not be in the position of acting as a lame duck or a pretender,'' he said.



Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company


protests
Architect of bush trade picked for worldbank { May 30 2007 }
Bank of international settlements switzerland gold
Bis established in 1930 under hague agreements { April 5 2004 }
Blair helps relieve debt for 18 nations { June 11 2005 }
Brazil bailout { August 8 2002 }
Bribery culture harming poor nations { September 29 2004 }
Colin powell bound for the world bank { April 27 2004 }
Congressman ron paul bill sunset bretton woods
Euros donated to palestinians through world bank
Failures of 20th century { October 8 2000 }
Groups protest world banks destructive prototype carbon fund
Imf admits some mistakes
Imf allows bankruptcy { September 29 2002 }
Imf bailout { August 15 2002 }
Imf cuts debt clause { January 8 2003 }
Imf director endorses tokyo yen intervention { February 25 2004 }
Imf dr death { April 17 2000 }
Imf forces countires sell off privitize public assets { March 4 2002 }
IMF forces ghana to privitize its water
Imf grants 495m to turkey
Imf hides its gold holdings { July 1999 }
Imf policies promoted poverty in argentina
Imf puts off debt relief till the next year { October 3 2004 }
Imf says dollar overvalued { October 17 2007 }
Imf seeks chief as kohler is put up for german presidency
Imf severed dollar from other currencies 1976
Imf should end its bankroom deals
Imf unveils profound changes { March 2006 }
IMF warns risk of permanent oil shock { April 7 2005 }
Imf wins new powers to police global economy { March 2006 }
India farmers committing suicide { May 19 2004 }
Indonesia new world monetary system { May 4 1998 }
Israel imf debt { April 11 2003 }
Liquidate imf
Out of control { May 14 2002 }
Protectionism would hamper growth says IMF { April 26 2004 }
Spaniard gets us nod as next imf chief { April 23 2004 }
US opposes IMF golf selloff for debt relief { February 6 2005 }
Us rejects imf warning that debts could affect global economy
Venezuela spurns IMF
Wallstreet disagrees with argentina loan payoff
What is imf { November 14 2001 }
What is world bank { November 14 2001 }
Wolfensohn attacked green paint [jpg]
Wolfensohn gets green paint by protestors { March 17 2004 }
Wolfensohn kofi bloomberg bono clinton 70th birthday { December 5 2003 }
Wolfensohn will help aid palestinian reforms
Wolfowitz cut uzbekistan funds after airbase row { April 13 2007 }
Wolfowitz no longer in world bank race
Wolfowitz reverses debt relief plan for congo { April 12 2007 }
World bank arm invests in china loan sector { February 24 2004 }
World bank free markets causing hunger in niger { August 11 2005 }
World bank join wto
World bank project in uruguay causes uproar in argentina { April 18 2006 }
World bank urges private investment { September 28 2004 }
Worldbank forced african farmers subsidized goods { December 9 2007 }
Worldbank future

Files Listed: 57



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple