P_Marlowe Posted May 18, 2007 Report Share Posted May 18, 2007 1) Many news reports say he did nothing, nothing unethical. All this girl friend stuff was approved and everyone knew it. News reports say he is trying to clean up the bank and this is payback. Hi, there was an article about it in the Herald Tribune,and I believe it did sum it up as well. The problem was not the increase, it was unethical,but this happens, and people knew it.The problem was, that he made lots of people hisenemy, people, who work there, and who are mostlydemocrats, but only a small margin is fundamental.If you behave in a way, that tells people, that youignore their advice, tell them, that the work they have done counts for nothing, than you better make sure, thatall, what you do is 100% clean, because you will turnthe non fundamentalists in fundamentalists. The case was used to to get him out. With kind regardsMarlowe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Winstonm Posted May 18, 2007 Author Report Share Posted May 18, 2007 1) Many news reports say he did nothing, nothing unethical. All this girl friend stuff was approved and everyone knew it. News reports say he is trying to clean up the bank and this is payback. Hi, there was an article about it in the Herald Tribune,and I believe it did sum it up as well. The problem was not the increase, it was unethical,but this happens, and people knew it.The problem was, that he made lots of people hisenemy, people, who work there, and who are mostlydemocrats, but only a small margin is fundamental.If you behave in a way, that tells people, that youignore their advice, tell them, that the work they have done counts for nothing, than you better make sure, thatall, what you do is 100% clean, because you will turnthe non fundamentalists in fundamentalists. The case was used to to get him out. With kind regardsMarlowe Of my three listed choices, it seems you are saying his own arrogance did him in. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike777 Posted May 18, 2007 Report Share Posted May 18, 2007 1) Board of Directors accept that Wolfowitz acted ethically and in good faith.2) Board of Directors say number of mistakes were made by the ethics panel. Former Director Dennis de Tray says that corruption at the bank is not a big deal and should not get in the way of the bank. Former number 2 at the bank Shengman Zhang's wife was swiftly promoted while working under him. I mentioned Executive Director Tom Scholar and his girlfriend already. If you need a source, talk with Board of Directors. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted May 18, 2007 Report Share Posted May 18, 2007 1) Board of Directors accept that Wolfowitz acted ethically and in good faith. 2) Board of Directors say number of mistakes were made by the ethics panel. In all serious Mike, do you believe for a moment that this is anything other than a political compromise designed to avoid an ugly fight? The Board wanted Wolfowitz gone as soon as possible. Giving Wolfowitz a bit of political cover was the expedient thing to do. I very much doubt that Board believes that Wolfowitz acted ethically or in good faith. (I certainly don't) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Winstonm Posted May 18, 2007 Author Report Share Posted May 18, 2007 1) Board of Directors accept that Wolfowitz acted ethically and in good faith.2) Board of Directors say number of mistakes were made by the ethics panel. Former Director Dennis de Tray says that corruption at the bank is not a big deal and should not get in the way of the bank. Former number 2 at the bank Shengman Zhang's wife was swiftly promoted while working under him. I mentioned Executive Director Tom Scholar and his girlfriend already. If you need a source, talk with Board of Directors.You seem to be attempting to defend Wolfowitz with claims that "he is no worse than anyone else" so what's the problem. That is distraction rather than defense. Regardless of what else occured at the bank, the question at hand is what did Wolfowitz do. He violated the bank's ethics codes, regardless of what the parting niceties claim. Had he not, he would not have been forced out. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike777 Posted May 18, 2007 Report Share Posted May 18, 2007 Ok ok if you guys do not accept the facts that all this was is politics and they wanted him out one way or another ok....He was a marked man and they found this way or some other way to stop him. If you think this was about ethics ok....I will not let the facts confuse you. ;) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hrothgar Posted May 19, 2007 Report Share Posted May 19, 2007 Ok ok if you guys do not accept the facts that all this was is politics and they wanted him out one way or another ok....He was a marked man and they found this way or some other way to stop him. If you think this was about ethics ok....I will not let the facts confuse you. :P For what its worth, Mike I agree with you: The ethics charges that were brought up against Wolfowitz are (obviously) part of a political process. I believe that the ethics issues are best viewed as a proxy for managerial competence. If Wolfowitz weren't such an incompetent / hated manager, I doubt that that situation would have festered the way that it did... We seem to differ about whether or not Wolfowitz should stay at the Bank. I don't believe that Wolfowitz was qualified for the position. After two years running the bank, his employees were in open revolt. Many of them were demonstrating in the streets demanding his removal. In part, I suspect that Wolfowitz's problems can be attributed to his reform agenda. However, I think his personal style and lack of managerial experience was a lot more significant... (The New York Times and the Washington Post both published lengthly articles documenting numerous managerial failures on Wolfowitz's part) Wolfowitz tried to act as a dictator and impose change from above without building any support within the institution. He had no implementation plan. In many ways, his failure at the World Bank parallels his failure in Iraq... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike777 Posted May 19, 2007 Report Share Posted May 19, 2007 I am on record as saying I could care less about Wolfowitz the manager. Sure this all stinks and I am on record saying I would not miss the bank being dissolved, now. I just rant about the public ripping of a man's honor and integrity. :P Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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