by Ramin Mazaheri
That headline leaves out the biggest bombshell: Per court testimony leaked in September, France’s Foreign Ministry knew all about Lafarge’s collaboration with terrorists in Syria and repeatedly encouraged them to do so.
Many are assuming that future court inquiries will discover that the France’s Foreign Ministry and national spy services provided more than just moral support.
Since the story broke in June 2016 the story just gets more and more shocking: From 2010 to 2014 France’s Lafarge Construction collaborated with Al-Qaeda, ISIL and other terrorist groups at Lafarge’s concrete plant in Northern Syria. Lafarge, which merged with Swiss Holcim in 2015, is the largest manufacturer of building materials in the world, and one of France’s largest companies.
Several Lafarge officials testified that the French Foreign Ministry was in constant contact with Lafarge during their dealings with the terrorists. The Ministry knew that Lafarge was giving hundreds of thousands of euros in bribes and taxes to terrorists every month in order to keep the concrete churning. The Ministry pushed Lafarge to stay, and they never told Lafarge to evacuate despite kidnappings of Lafarge employees, which caused Lafarge to pay terrorists hundreds of thousands of euros in ransoms and…this is all we know about so far.
Here are the two main leaked quotes from Lafarge officials you need to know (from Le Monde):
“That’s not what Quai d’Orsay (the French Foreign ministry) said. They said that we had to hold on, and that everything would work out….The French government strongly pushed us to stay, because it was the biggest French investment in Syria and because it represented the French flag. So yes (Lafarge CEO) Bruno Lafont said: ‘We are staying.’” – Christian Herrault, Lafarge Executive
“We went to see – every six months – the French ambassador for Syria (in Paris), and nobody told us: ‘Now, you have to leave the plant.’” – Bruno Pescheux, Director of Lafarge Syria
But we all know the capitalist corporations have no ethics: they sell themselves to the highest bidder, and the only rule is to increase their profit margins as high as possible and by any means they can get away with.
So Lafarge…who really cares about them? But the leaked testimony is concrete proof (literally) that the French state worked with terrorists in a non-military, nation-building capacity in Syria.
The twin goals of Lafarge and the French state were multiple, even if not all are yet admitted: to build infrastructure which the terrorists needed to win the war, to provide them with steady funding streams via taxes, bribes and payoffs for oil and the other raw materials required in the concrete-making process, to ensure that Lafarge would be primed to dominate the Syrian market in the lucrative reconstruction effort, and to increase profits of the French shareholders.
From Lafarge’s point of view: The built a brand-new plant in Syria in 2010 and they didn’t want to lose all that sunk money, and Al-Nusra’s money was green, too, so what’s the problem? When they story broke they tried to blame it all on their Syrian management, but there was too much proof that their top guys at HQ knew about it. Their CEO even had to step down over it in April.
The collaboration only came to an end when ISIL occupied the plant in 2014, taking everyone hostage. The workers – oh la – how’d you like to work with terrorists as your boss? Murder, kidnapping, violence – it must have been terrible for them. Don’t worry for Lafarge – the plant is currently in the “safe hands” of Western special forces. I’m sure the WTO will force the Assad administration to pay top dollar to get it back one day….
But there seems to be no doubt that the collaboration continued even after 2014: The terrorists emptied the silos of all the manufactured cement, but Lafarge was the only with the access codes, thus further complicity seems proven.
The case only came to light thanks to an NGO called Sherpa, which examines the illegal financing of corporations, joined with a group of former Syria plant workers in order to make Lafarge the first multinational company to be sued for war crimes, illegal financing of terrorism and crimes against humanity.
So, this is all totally despicable…and it was all pushed for by the French state.
We know that France funds terrorists with weapons and cares nothing for multinational embargos in Syria, Libya or elsewhere, but this case shows how France supplies them with funds, and also how capitalism is intertwined with terrorism. Remember: if the Syrian terrorists had won, Lafarge would have been “heroes”.
But thanks God the terrorists did not win in Syria, with thanks as well to Hezbollah, Iran, Russia and the Syrian soldier, whom the Saker superbly chose as his “Man of the Year – 2013”.
So instead of a nightmare scenario for the Middle East, this is a nightmare for France. It is indeed a “ticking time bomb” for the French government, in a hastily-changed headline from French state media France 24. The MSM, both French and English, keep focusing almost-totally on the role of Lafarge instead of the French state, whose role is consistently bumped down to the last paragraph (when it is mentioned at all).
In fact this is already a very real bomb: About a ¼ kilometer from where I live, right on the northern border of Paris, there is a Lafarge plant. In October, six homemade petrol bombs were discovered at the plant by workers, and a terrorist case was opened (I had wondered what all those helicopters were for?) Obviously, some group wants revenge for Lafarge for their role in Syria.
The MSM will definitely have to focus on the French state’s role soon, as the NGO leading the court case has demanded that France’s longtime foreign minister Laurent Fabius be forced to testify.
Will indictments be handed down to French state officials like Fabius? God I hope so. The first indictments were just handed down to 3 Lafarge officials for financing terrorism, violating EU embargos and “endangering the lives of others”.
And following those indictments new Lafarge CEO Beat Hess made a stunning admission to French media: He said that the company is “going through a difficult time” right now.
Wow, I’m really sorry to hear that – it just breaks my heart.
I am really just so filled with compassion for poor Beat Hess and those poor souls at Lafarge that I just can’t write seriously on this issue any longer – Hess has made me so emotional!
So, I’m going to step aside to compose myself, but I encourage you to seek out other sources on this scandal.
And I do want to pass on this unpublished part of the interview between Beat Hess and the French media. I cannot explain why this section was not included, but perhaps you can figure it out?
———————————————————————
Leaked interview between Lafarge CEO and unnamed French Journalist
French journalist: You said that Lafarge “is going through a tough time” – can you please explain that a little bit further?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: Well, it’s always a bit depressing to be caught committing crimes – it inspires a real soul-searching. But it’s especially depressing because we thought we had gotten away with it for so many years.
French journalist: How bad do you think it will get for Lafarge, and is there anything I can do to help?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: Well that’s very nice of you, but the judges will only give us a small fine. The judges are French and not Syrian, after all. I have faith that our judges realize that they’d just be penalizing our innocent shareholders – such as me. Maybe one of our management team will have to go to jail for bit – but only somebody from our Syrian management team. This is what I meant when I said that I have “full confidence” in the French legal system.
French journalist: So you must be quite disappointed over all this?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: It’s extremely disappointing! I can’t tell you high our hopes were when ISIL came along – the sky was really the limit for our Syria operations. We were positioned to rule the concrete market in their Caliphate. So, I ask those who would throw the first stone at Lafarge’s house of concrete: Isn’t our dashed dream of Syrian market domination enough? I think so, and my friends have all said that they agree with me.
French journalist: So the fall of ISIL has really caused management morale to plummet?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: And we already had to pick ourselves up after the loss of our beloved Al-Nusra! They were really great guys. People don’t realize that we are not just cold businessmen: we have personal relationships with our employees. In 2015 when Laurent Fabius (Francois Hollande’s longtime foreign minister) said Al-Nusra was “doing some good things on the ground” he was obviously talking about our concrete plant. After all, our profits were through the roof! And some Syrians took him to court for “supporting terrorism speech” for saying that…but what they don’t realize is that France only prosecutes brown-skinned people for that charge.
French journalist: As they are correct to do, of course. So who made better colleagues: Al-Nusra or ISIL?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: An interesting question…well, all employees have different strengths and weaknesses, of course. But you just can’t beat ISIL’s dedication: I remember when some poor local plant worker fell into one of the concrete mixers – ISIL told everyone that he was just doing his part to help build the Caliphate. I’m sure that really boosted their morale. Frankly, I hope (French President Emmanuel) Macron is able to finally get our French workers to show such dedication. France can be a lot better than just the world’s fifth-largest economy if we would not be so ethnocentric and would take some management tips from our ISIL colleagues. I gave the ISIL management a well-earned a bonus for how they handled that episode, and they told me that the workers’ family was “taken care of” as well. Lafarge is just a big family business, after all!
French journalist: How do you respond when your Syria workers said they were forced to collaborate with terrorists? Is that a fair criticism?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: It’s the upper boss who picks the lower boss – about that there can be no question, or else the entire Western cultural system crumbles. Frankly, I have also had some very bad bosses…but you don’t see me filing a lawsuit with the European Court of Human Rights like these guys did!
French journalist: But I wonder if a worker dying in a cement mixer wouldn’t run afoul of French regulations?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: Is this some kind of “gotcha journalism”? Because you keep focusing on that one incident – why don’t you focus on the other incidents where terrorists killed workers at our plant but Lafarge plant equipment was totally innocent? Huh?!
French journalist: Please excuse me…uh…I think occurrences like that are actually now not covered, thanks to Macron’s decree reducing the French labor code.
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: ISIL’s growth rates were just spectacular over a year or two, remember? And do you think it’s because ISIL let worker safety regulations get in the way of production targets? Thankfully they didn’t, and that’s why our Northern Syria’s plant output was among our best in the world. For that we proudly sent them a plaque!
French journalist: But it seems that Lafarge and the French Foreign Ministry kept the plant running even though it was causing the local population “a lot of evil”.
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: First of all, a lot of the local workers brought problems on themselves by constantly trying to run away. That cost them their Christmas bonuses one year. We had no choice but to keep those for ourselves, of course. Secondly, as a proud French patriot I completely support our efforts to achieve the end goal of the terrorists – regime change: if that caused the locals “evil”, well then those locals deserve it for supporting their democratically-elected government instead of ISIL. We have finally admitted that we had regular contact with the Foreign Ministry – they kept hammering this point home! So let’s just trust them, because they are the ones who know politics – I just know concrete.
French journalist: But back to the “tough time” – was it tough to work with people like ISIL?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: What’s tough is trying to find better middle managers! Thanks to the terrorists I had a lot more free time on my hands to live “the Parisian dream”: drinking, eating and cheating on my wife. What people don’t realize is that working with ISIL was dangerous and actually did cause me a lot of pain – all that rich food and wine gave me gout. Also, my wife found out about my affairs, and she really embarrassed me by insisting that she conduct her own extramarital liaisons…and without including me! This led to the other “rich man’s disease” – alimony, because she eventually divorced me. If you only knew the pain I suffer every month due to what I have to hand over to her every month – thanks to our damn socialist alimony laws. And where’s my leaked testimony talking about that?!
French journalist: But surely you have kept some of your profits from working with ISIL?
Lafarge Official: People don’t want to believe that more money equals more problems. I didn’t have time to check out how ISIL was running our Syria plant because I spent so much time finding places to store the profits that plant made. Do you know how much paperwork there is for the Isle of Man, Jersey or the state of Delaware? They are such a headache! I should have just kept our profits in France…that’s obviously a joke! Maybe Luxembourg though….
French journalist: But didn’t you know what type of group ISIL was?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: People have to realize that ISIL was a totally new phenomenon in 2014, and aren’t people always telling us to be more open-minded with foreign cultures? That’s what Western moral relativism is about, right? We had to give them a chance. Anyway, our lawyers said that ISIL can be considered just another type of “popular, grassroots group”. Frankly, I wondered if we were turning into socialists.
French journalist: I think it’s great that Lafarge’s CEO has come out to talk about their “difficult time”. It’s our job as the media to make sure our readers are sympathetic to everyone, especially people like you.
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: I appreciate that, because we truly put our heart and soul into our concrete…and to see that our concrete is being used for the Syrian People instead of the people of the Caliphate is really distressing for us! And, please – make sure to give the officials of the French Foreign Ministry the same treatment.
French journalist: Undoubtedly – they were promoting “French values”, after all, and how can that be wrong? But do you think this is just another frivolous lawsuit caused by workers taking advantage of overly-generous French workers’ rights laws?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: The fact that our Syrian workers are suing us is a betrayal, and it’s been very difficult for us to accept. After all, we taught them so many skills: hostage negotiation, working under pressure, how to work with difficult colleagues, how to evade gunfire, etc. But instead of leveraging these new skills into new jobs they are trying to hold us hostage! Frankly, it’s those workers who are the terrorists, and not the terrorists!
French journalist: Do you think Lafarge will recover from this scandal?
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: I think that if we can bounce back from building for the Nazis – which helped us get to where we are today – we can bounce back from this. It’s not like the terrorists are Nazis!
French journalist: No, because the Nazis killed West Europeans, so that makes them far, far worse, obviously. We won’t tolerate any such comparisons!
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: That would also make the entire Western cultural system crumble.
French journalist: Thanks for taking the time to speak with us.
Lafarge CEO Beat Hess: This was all off the record, right?
Ramin Mazaheri is the chief correspondent in Paris for Press TV and has lived in France since 2009. He has been a daily newspaper reporter in the US, and has reported from Iran, Cuba, Egypt, Tunisia, South Korea and elsewhere. His work has appeared in various journals, magazines and websites, as well as on radio and television. He can be reached on Facebook.
Regarding the “Leaked interview between Lafarge CEO and unnamed French Journalist”
Forgive me if I mistakenly smell bs here, but to quote someone saying something so excessively crass as “….locals deserve it (evil) for supporting their democratically-elected government instead of ISIL”, I could interpret only as satire or dishonest quotation. ???
Remember that Fabius was the French foreign minister that said that “al-qaida(HTS or whatever acronim used at that time) was doing a good job in Syriaduring a trip to morocco. I’ll let you guess what it’s origin and religion his for supporting the takfiri so openly.
Seeing him behind bar would really make my day
How about Fabius exporting HIV-contaminated blood to Iran in the 1980s? That still causes protests to this day – he was cleared of all charges…by the French.
“In the mid-80s, when Fabius served as prime minister, France’s national blood transfusion centre knowingly distributed HIV-contaminated blood products….He was, however, cleared of all charges. The tainted products were also exported to several foreign countries, including Iran, where several hundred patients were contaminated. Iranian health authorities claimed that this led to the very first cases of AIDS in the country.”
http://observers.france24.com/en/20150729-blood-scandal-protest-fabius-iran-france
Yeah, the Iranian Revolution of 1979 starts steadfastly opposing the Zionist occupation of Israel….and known-Zionist Fabius gives us HIV-contaminated blood? Quite a coincidence. Iranians will never forget that.
And then al-Nusra is “doing good things on the ground”? Fabius being bars would be cause for celebration. But he’s too busy spending all of his time bailing his no-good son out of problems in Las Vegas. Ugh.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/11966348/French-foreign-ministers-son-wanted-over-3.5-million-Las-Vegas-gambling-spree.html
LaFarge sold 6 million tons of cement to terrorists in 2 years.
This article missed the real significance of the Holcim-LaFarge cement factory story. Mazaheri allowed the French Lügenpresse to delimit the issues, and I’m surprised and sad he fell for that.
Paying extortion to terrorists is small potatoes compared to the fact that all the cement was sold to terrorists for building fortifications. The economy in Northern Syria was non-existent as the civilians had fled the head-choppers. Thierrey Meyssan wrote an article about this in March of 2017. His article starts with less relevant details and then he gets to the big point: 6 million metric tons of concrete sold to terrorists. Meyssan claims that NATO and French military engineers designed these for the takfiris.
Revelations – Lafarge-Holcim’s jihad http://www.voltairenet.org/article195754.html
Ask yourself why it took the efficient Russian air force about 6 months to make a big dent in the terrorist infrastructure, The answer is 6 million tons of concrete.
LaFarge was far more than indiscreet. In fact, it was working hand-in-glove with the terrorists and … their backers in Western governments.
I just read the Voltaire.net piece.
This is one of the most shocking stories I have ever read.
Absolute must-read.
When does Lafarge end up at The Hague.
Katherine
Hi,
I don’t think I “missed” what you discussed, in fact I put it first:
“The twin goals of Lafarge and the French state were multiple, even if not all are yet admitted: to build infrastructure which the terrorists needed to win the war…”
Thanks for posting the Voltaire link.
I knew nothing about this!
Thanks, Ramin.
The sendup is hilarious.
I also read the linked story about Lafarge building the Atlantic Wall.
Is Lafarge really any worse than U.S. companies that kept Hitler going with vehicle, petrol, etc.?
Maybe they are.
It is meant as a genuine question.
If we are going to come down hard on Lafarge for their collaboration, why not also take the opportunity to point out how American companies such as Ford, Brown Brothers Harriman, and others were “collaborating”?
Katherine
Thanks RM, I had not been aware of this company or their actions. Wonder how deep their connections go with the security establishment in france, as well as france’s israeloamerican master’s?
Thanks Ramin, for an excellent article, and especially the all too well-known sarcasm in the attached “interview”, it made my day.
Also thanks for the article on Fabius (OMG), and @cosimo for the Meyssan article, a must-read and welcome supplement.
Will they stand in the Hague? I doubt it. Are the real architects of the Yugoslavia war on trial there?
Take an example on mr. Prescott Bush (Yes, the father of George and grandfather of George W.). He grew filthy rich from trading with the Nazi´s, including from slave labour of prisoners of Auschwitz: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2004/sep/25/usa.secondworldwar
Interesting sentence in this article: “The Anti-Defamation League in the US is supportive of Prescott Bush and the Bush family. In a statement last year they said that “rumours about the alleged Nazi ‘ties’ of the late Prescott Bush … have circulated widely through the internet in recent years. These charges are untenable and politically motivated … Prescott Bush was neither a Nazi nor a Nazi sympathiser.” ”
(I guess the Lafarge management isn’t takfiri-sympathized as well).
So, Prescott Bush walked…
Cheers, Rob
Great article on an important piece of this particular (mafia) puzzle. Every detail given fits perfectly with the century-old modus operandi perfected by the British East India some 400 years ago. If we were to dig one layer deeper than Ramin does in his excellent article we would find that all parties involved – governmental, non-governmental, NGOs, military, Intel, judiciary, media are all 100% certified Zion assets.
Here, by the way, is a map of LaFargeHolcim’s concrete factory turned US special forces base about 20km east of Kobani:
http://wikimapia.org/#lang=en&lat=36.546617&lon=38.584682&z=18&m=b&show=/35440079/US-Helicopter-airfield
Quote of the day courtesy of Beat Hess*:
“I think that if we can bounce back from building for the Nazis – which helped us get to where we are today – we can bounce back from this. It’s not like the terrorists are Nazis!”
* other famous Hesses:
– Moses Hess, friend of Karl Marx, crypto-Jewish
– Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s right-hand man and NSDAP party member 16 (!), son of a rich merchant, crypto-Jewish
http://mileswmathis.com/hiller.pdf
Trivia: that quote about a French capitalist building defensive walls for the Nazis has just slotted into its proper context a little detail which stuck in my mind since the 50s: in a postwar “piece noire” by Jean Anouilh, the lead character justified his action; he said it was an act of Resistance because his company made such bad cement.
Yes they add sugar in concrete.
Oh And you miss one point, Fabius is an israeli citizen.
Lafarge has done what was ordered by Fabius, nothing more.
Comments from frenchman aleksandar in today’s SyrianPerspective.com:
Yes they [Lafarge] add sugar in concrete.
Oh And Fabius is an israeli citizen.
Lafarge has done what was ordered by Fabius, nothing more.
Well Sarkozy killed Gadaffi, he did not ask me if I agreed.
But maybe in your country, they ask for your opinion
The plant seems to have been quite instrumental in fomenting this war.
And the French got a helping hand from their NATO-allies. The plants security manager in the period 2011-13 was headhunted straight from Norwegian intelligence. Jacob Wærness was a fluent Arabic speaker who worked for POT, one of Norway’s intelligence services. He ‘quit’ his job in the Section for counter-terrorism, to become risk manager for the cement plant just after the ‘revolt’ started.
He even wrote a book about his adventures.
The blurb is as follows (translated):
“In 2011, Jacob Wærness, former employee of the Section for Counter-terrorism at the Police Surveillance Service received a job offer: the multinational company Lafarge needed a security manager for its cement plant in northern Syria, the country’s largest. At that time Syria is a relatively well-functioning dictatorship, characterized by a starting rebellion that most people expected to calm down relatively soon. For Wærness, the job seemed challenging and exotic, and he said yes.
Two years later, when his contract expired, Syrian society had almost collapsed, but the cement plant is still in operation. Over time, he has been the only local representative of the Group Management, in collaboration with those who had control over the area at all times – whether they are Kurds, moderate rebels or extreme Islamists who have subsequently become subordinate to IS, or government forces. He has smuggled armored cars from Lebanon, obtained protection from local armed groups, and repeatedly had to negotiate and buy free kidnapped staff. All in order to ensure the facility and the staff as well as possible and to keep the operation running. This is his story.”
Now we here in Canasta know who and what LaFarge really is. Shun Them! Don’t Spend a Dollar On Them! They could start or aid a terrorist cell here!
(Edited for caps,which violate the rules.MOD)
Hi Ramin,
Thanks for this article. As I don’t see it mentioned in your article nor in the comments, I will add that Queen Hillary sat on the board of Lafarge in the 90s. I guess it is worth noting.
M.