Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
03ABUDHABI3208
2003-07-09 13:32:00
SECRET//NOFORN
Embassy Abu Dhabi
Cable title:  

ABU DHABI'S NEXUS OF ECONOMIC POWER, PART II: THE

Tags:  ECON EFIN EINV EPET PINS PREL PGOV TC 
pdf how-to read a cable
null
Diana T Fritz 03/21/2007 12:21:22 PM From DB/Inbox: Search Results

Cable 
Text: 
 
 
SECRET

SIPDIS
TELEGRAM July 09, 2003


To: No Action Addressee 

Action: Unknown 

From: AMEMBASSY ABU DHABI (ABU DHABI 3208 - UNKNOWN) 

TAGS: ECON, EFIN, EINV, EPET, PINS, PREL, PGOV 

Captions: None 

Subject: ABU DHABI'S NEXUS OF ECONOMIC POWER, PART II: THE ABU 
 DHABI EXECUTIVE COUNCIL 

Ref: None 
_________________________________________________________________
S E C R E T ABU DHABI 03208

SIPDIS
CXABU:
 ACTION: ECON 
 INFO: POL P/M AMB DCM 
Laser1:
 INFO: FCS 

DISSEMINATION: ECON
CHARGE: PROG

APPROVED: AMB: MMWAHBA
DRAFTED: ECON: CCRUMPLER
CLEARED: A/DCM:KVANDEVATE ECON:TWILLIAMS C/ECON:OJOHN POL:SWILLIAMS

VZCZCADI946
OO RUEHC RUEHHH RUCPDOC RUEATRS RHEHNSC RUEAIIA
RHEFDIA RUEHDE
DE RUEHAD #3208/01 1901332
ZNY SSSSS ZZH
O 091332Z JUL 03
FM AMEMBASSY ABU DHABI
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 0782
INFO RUEHHH/OPEC COLLECTIVE
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHDC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
RHEHNSC/NSC WASHDC
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC
RHEFDIA/DIA WASHDC
RUEHDE/AMCONSUL DUBAI 3263
S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 07 ABU DHABI 003208 

SIPDIS

NOFORN

STATE FOR E, EB/ESC/ESP, INR/EC, INR/B, NEA/ARP AND NEA/RA
COMMERCE FOR 1000/OC/
COMMERCE FOR 4520/ITA/IEP/ONE
COMMERCE FOR 4530/ITA/MAC/OME/DGUGLIELMI,
4500/ITA/MAC/DAS/WILLIAMSON,
3131/CS/OIO/ANESA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 7/9/2003
TAGS: ECON EFIN EINV EPET PINS PREL PGOV TC
SUBJECT: ABU DHABI'S NEXUS OF ECONOMIC POWER, PART II: THE
ABU DHABI EXECUTIVE COUNCIL

REF: 02 ABU DHABI 1415

S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 07 ABU DHABI 003208

SIPDIS

NOFORN

STATE FOR E, EB/ESC/ESP, INR/EC, INR/B, NEA/ARP AND NEA/RA
COMMERCE FOR 1000/OC/
COMMERCE FOR 4520/ITA/IEP/ONE
COMMERCE FOR 4530/ITA/MAC/OME/DGUGLIELMI,
4500/ITA/MAC/DAS/WILLIAMSON,
3131/CS/OIO/ANESA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 7/9/2003
TAGS: ECON EFIN EINV EPET PINS PREL PGOV TC
SUBJECT: ABU DHABI'S NEXUS OF ECONOMIC POWER, PART II: THE
ABU DHABI EXECUTIVE COUNCIL

REF: 02 ABU DHABI 1415


1. (U) Classified by Ambassador Marcelle M. Wahba, for
reasons 1.5 (b) and (d).

--------------
Introduction
--------------


2. (C) This is the second cable in a series that focuses
on the informal, and less visible, power structure of Abu
Dhabi emirate and -- through the power of the purse strings
-- the UAE federal government. The Supreme Petroleum
Council (see reftel),the Abu Dhabi Executive Council, and
the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) together form the
"Iron Triangle" of economic institutions in the UAE. This
message attempts to describe the second -- and perhaps the
most powerful -- leg of that Iron Triangle, the Abu Dhabi
Executive Council, which oversees all major budgeted
government expenditures for Abu Dhabi Emirate and the
federal government. End introduction.


--------------
Summary
--------------


3. (C) The Abu Dhabi Executive Council determines how Abu
Dhabi Emirate's oil wealth is spent, approves the federal
budget, and wields tremendous influence over major
construction contracts, and multi-year, multi-billion
dollar expansion projects. Although some observers say the
Executive Council is simply Crown Prince Khalifa's rubber
stamp of approval -- indeed, Khalifa has approved projects
in advance and presented them to the Executive Council as a
matter of protocol -- such instances are infrequent.
Working-level UAE bureaucrats, American businessmen, and
our Commercial Officers contend that the Executive Council
members symbolize years of practical experience in running
local government, as well as their own substantial private

businesses.


4. (C) In addition to a handful of royal family members
and shaykhs, the chairmen of the key Abu Dhabi departments
also are members of the Executive Council. Membership
changes only when a department chair leaves his post,
usually through retirement or reassignment to a higher
position. As in the Supreme Petroleum Council (SPC),the
Executive Council is chaired by Abu Dhabi Crown Prince
Khalifa bin Zayid Al-Nahyan and consists of his key tribal
allies and trusted advisers. The Bani Fatima -- as the six
sons of Zayid's wife are known -- are not well represented
in this key power structure.


5. (S//NF) The amount of money at the disposal of the
Executive Council during any given year is unknown, but the
Abu Dhabi Finance Department estimates that total current
expenditures for the emirate of Abu Dhabi in 2002 totaled
more than USD $13 billion. Indeed, the Deputy Managing
Director of ADIA speculates that Abu Dhabi Emirate receives
about 85 percent of the UAE's annual oil revenue (about USD
$16 billion in 2002) -- with the remaining 10 and 5 percent
tranches going to top tier royal family members and ADIA,
respectively.


6. (C) The Executive Council oversees the formation of the
Abu Dhabi Emirate budget, as well as influencing the final
shape of the UAE federal budget. It's unclear whether the
Executive Council weighs in on certain big-ticket off
budget items, such as off budget defense outlays, internal
security expenditures, social programs supported by Abu
Dhabi (such as the pension fund and marriage fund),and
other subsidies and transfers not included in the federal
accounts. While the Executive Council may be aware of such
expenditures, it does not appear that it either deliberates
or approves the outlays. President Zayid and Shaykh
Khalifa retain ultimate veto power for such high profile
and often personally lucrative projects.

-------------- --------------
Executive Council Members: Shaykhs, Allies, and Technocrats
-------------- --------------

7. (C//NF) The membership of the Executive Council is
strikingly similar to that of the Supreme Petroleum Council
(SPC). Five of the Executive Council's 16 members also sit
on the SPC, including Shaykhs Sultan, Tahnoon, and Surour.
Shaykh Khalifa is without full brothers. Although the Bani
Fatima are not represented on the Executive Council, UAE
Armed Forces Chief of Staff Shaykh Mohammed (MbZ) -- the
eldest of the Bani Fatima -- has cultivated important
alliances with Executive Council members Shaykhs Saeed and
Hamed.


8. (C//NF) In addition to Crown Prince Khalifa, three of
Shaykh Zayid's sons sit on the Executive Council, and head
perhaps the most important and influential offices in the
Abu Dhabi bureaucracy:


A. Shaykh Sultan bin Zayid Al-Nahyan, who also holds a
position on the SPC, is the nominal UAE Deputy Prime
Minister and Deputy Chairman (Vice President) of the
Executive Council. Probably more important, he is
Chairman of Abu Dhabi Public Works. Crown Prince
Khalifa's son, Mohammed, is married to Sultan's
daughter. Although Sultan is marked by scandal --
Post has confirmed that Sultan struggles with alcohol
and drug addiction -- he has refrained from commercial
ventures and reportedly is personally repulsed by some
of his relatives' corruptibility.


B. Shaykh Saeed bin Zayid Al-Nahyan is Chairman of the
Abu Dhabi Seaport Authority, and formerly held the
position of Undersecretary at the powerful Abu Dhabi
Planning Department. His mother, Aisha Al-Darmaki,
hails from the very influential and business-oriented
Al-Darmaki tribe. Saeed is considered to be an ally
of Shaykh Mohammed.


C. Shaykh Hamed bin Zayid Al-Nahyan is a young,
dynamic and Western educated son of Zayid from the
Bani Muza line. He received a Masters in Economics
from the University of Wales in 2000, and -- only in
his early thirties -- was recently named Chairman of
the Abu Dhabi Department of Economy. A number of
American businessmen here say that Hamed is a
progressive thinker, and -- in his capacity as
Chairman of the Board of the General Health Authority
-- is supportive of privatization of the health
services sector.

(Note: Although not an official member of the
Executive Council, Shaykh Dhiyab bin Zayid Al-Nahyan -- as
head of the Abu Dhabi Water and Electricity Authority -- is
a frequent observer to Executive Council meetings. He is
Shaykh Zayid's 16th son (born in 1972),and is a full
brother to Shaykh Saeed. Dhiyab speaks excellent English
and graduated from UAE University in 1994. End note.)


9. (C//NF) Crown Prince Khalifa deliberately has included
rival branches of the Al-Nahyan in powerful local
positions. Five other royal family members therefore,
including Crown Prince Khalifa's son and a handful of
Shaykh Zayid's cousins and nephews, also appear in the
Executive Council line-up. Although their presence on the
Executive Council is clearly a political move -- the second
largest town in Abu Dhabi Emirate, Al-Ain (the seat of the
Al-Nahyan),is well represented here -- these shaykhs also
have years of practical experience in running local
government. Most head important Abu Dhabi or Al-Ain
departments, and maintain private business interests:


A. Shaykh Sultan bin Khalifa Al-Nahyan is the Crown
Prince's son and President of Crown Prince Khalifa's
court. He is also Honorary President of the Abu Dhabi
Chamber of Commerce and Industry, which suggests his
avid business interest. Sultan has significant real
estate holdings in Abu Dhabi, and is the local agent
for French jeweler Cartier. He has been known to
misuse his royal status to take advantage of
commercial opportunities in Abu Dhabi and ask for
kickback payments -- often to his father's chagrin.
Sultan's uncle, MbZ, reportedly implicated him in a
corruption scandal circa 1995, alleging that Sultan
took kickbacks from a private firm for a government
contract -- he's known as "Shaykh Ten Percent" -- and,
as a result, Crown Prince Khalifa has since forbidden
Sultan from representing foreign companies seeking
government contracts. More recently, Zayid reportedly
ordered his grandson to diversify his ownership in the
lucrative construction of Marina Mall in Abu Dhabi and
allow other shareholders.


B. Shaykh Tahnoon bin Mohammed Al-Nahyan is the Deputy
Chairman (Vice President) of the Executive Council,
and also the President's Representative to the Eastern
Region (Mayor of Al-Ain). He is from the Bani
Mohammed -- the uncles to Crown Prince Khalifa on his
mother's side (Zayid's only former wife within the Al-
Nahyan) -- that in the past represented a political
counterweight throughout Abu Dhabi government to
Zayid's progeny. Tahnoon is in his sixties and is a
respected elder and close adviser to Crown Prince
Khalifa. Not surprisingly, he also holds a position
on the SPC.


C. Shaykh Saeed bin Tahnoon Al-Nahyan has many years
of experience in Al-Ain government -- currently as
Head of the Al-Ain Municipality, and formerly as the
Undersecretary of the Al-Ain Municipality and Town
Planning Department. Saeed is the most prominent son
of Tahnoon bin Mohammed -- who also sits on the
Executive Council -- and together they form a powerful
Al-Ain lobby. Saeed and his father reportedly hold a
monopoly on all Al-Ain projects; only Shaykh Zayid and
Khalifa can veto their business activities in the
Eastern Region.


D. Shaykh Hamdan bin Mubarak Al-Nahyan has worked his
way up through the ranks of the Abu Dhabi Department
of Civil Aviation since joining the Department in
1985, and now acts as Chairman. He is from Al-Ain and
is son-in-law and brother-in-law to Executive Council
members Tahnoon bin Mohammed and Saeed bin Tahnoon,
respectively. Ironically, Hamdan told Embassy
officials several years ago that he has no interest in
private business. He is a liberal thinker and
considered to be pro-Western.


E. Shaykh Surour bin Mohammed Al-Nahyan, who also sits
on the SPC, holds the largely honorific title of
Chamberlain of the Presidential Court, but owes his
position on the Executive Council more to his business
acumen and many years of experience in Abu Dhabi
Municipality. He was formerly UAE Central Bank
Governor, Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Department of
Justice, and Head of Purchasing for Abu Dhabi. Surour
has many private business interests, including
significant real estate holdings in the United States,
and has largely divorced himself from governmental
responsibilities in recent years. He is a son-in-law
of Shaykh Zayid and Shaykha Fatima, and also is
related by marriage to the Al-Ghurair -- the leading
merchant family in Dubai.


10. (C//NF) Crown Prince Khalifa has cultivated close
relations and business ties with major Emirati families,
particularly those with roots in other areas of Abu Dhabi
Emirate, such as Al-Ain and Liwa. In addition to their
local prominence on the Abu Dhabi commercial scene, these
successful businessmen head the major departments in Abu
Dhabi Municipality and provide invaluable technical and
financial counsel to Khalifa. It is interesting to note
that former Iraqi Foreign Minister and long-time resident
of Abu Dhabi Adnan Pachachi also once served on the
Executive Council:


A. Shaykh Mohammed bin Butti Al-Hamed is the
President's Representative to the Western Region
(Mayor of Abu Dhabi),as well as Chairman of the Abu
Dhabi Power and Water Authority and Sewage Projects
Committee. Bin Butti reportedly uses his municipal
position to benefit his private business interests --
he chairs the Al-Hamed Group of Companies, and is one
of 14 shareholders in Al-Ahlia General Trading Co.
Ltd. (the local agent for BMW). It is rumored that
the relatively modest and unassuming Khalifa dislikes
the corruptible bin Butti, and has sought to remove
him as Abu Dhabi Mayor. Earlier this year, more than
300 employees were fired from Abu Dhabi Municipality,
reportedly as a warning to bin Butti to reign in his
excesses. Bin Butti heretofore has been impervious to
Khalifa's attacks, probably because of his long
relationship with Shaykh Zayid. It also helps that
three of his daughters are married to sons of Shaykh
Zayid.


B. Mohamed Habroush Al-Suweidi is a trusted and long-
time financial adviser to both Shaykh Zayid and Crown
Prince Khalifa, and has years of experience in both
emirate and federal-level government. He currently
heads the Abu Dhabi Finance Department -- the
bookkeeper and accountant for Abu Dhabi and the UAE --
as well as the National Drilling Company, Islamic
Development Bank, National Bank of Abu Dhabi, and
other prominent economic organizations. Al-Suweidi is
a member of the SPC by virtue of his position on the
ADNOC Board of Directors. In the early days of the
federation, he held the positions of Minister of State
for Finance and ADIA Director.


C. Khalfan Ghaith Al-Muhairbi chairs two important
departments in Abu Dhabi Municipality -- the
Purchasing Department and the Social Services
Department -- and therefore holds two seats on the
Executive Council. Prior to his appointment to the
Purchasing Department in 1991, he served as the
Undersecretary for the Abu Dhabi Finance Department
for Customs Affairs, and was on the Board of Directors
for Gulf Air.


D. Ali bin Ahmed Al-Dhaheri is from Al-Ain and has
been Secretary General of the Executive Council since

1987. He reportedly has made millions of dollars
simply by agreeing to put certain projects on the
Executive Council's agenda for deliberation. Al-
Dhaheri also is Undersecretary of Shaykh Khalifa's
Office, and reportedly the Crown Prince's personal
assistant and adviser on the day-to-day administration
of Abu Dhabi. He is a member of the SPC and ADNOC
Board of Directors, and formerly served as a member of
the Higher Council for Petroleum Affairs. Al-Dhaheri
is a private businessman, as well, with interests in
Al-Ahlia General Trading Co. Ltd., and Emirates
Company for Insurance.


E. Mohammed Sultan bin Surour Al-Dhaheri represents a
powerful business family in Abu Dhabi and Al-Ain, and
serves as Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Department for
Organization and Management. His father, Sultan bin
Surour Al-Dhaheri is Speaker of the National
Consultative Council and his brother Surour, is
Chairman of Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank. Mohammed
Sultan is a managing partner in the Al-Dhaheri Group
of Companies -- the most prominent of which is the
Union Bank of the Middle East. He worked in the UAE
Central Bank for many years and formerly served as
Central Bank Governor.


F. Mohammed Saleh bin Badwa Al-Darmaki is Chairman of
the Abu Dhabi Customs Department, and a confidant of
Crown Prince Khalifa. He formerly was Undersecretary
to the Ruler's Representative Office in the Eastern
Region, and remains very close to Shaykh Tahnoon bin
Mohammed and his sons. Most observers say that bin
Badwa is destined for a prominent position in the UAE
federal government once Khalifa succeeds his father as
UAE President.


G. Musallam Saeed Al-Qubaisi is Chairman of the Abu
Dhabi Department of Planning and also Chairman of the
Electricity Privatization Committee. The Planning
Department is perceived by American businessmen to be
the most corrupt and ill-managed department in Abu
Dhabi Municipality -- probably because Al-Qubaisi is
an admitted Francophile who prefers to award Planning
Department contracts to French firms. Al-Qubaisi also
is a member of the Board of Directors for Abu Dhabi
Islamic Bank, and is a partner in a number of local
oilfield services companies.


11. (C) Khalifa trusts some members of the Executive
Council more than others, and often meets with Council
members one-on-one to either seek their advice or to
discuss personal interests in certain projects. It is
understood that many Council members use their position on
the Executive Council to promote projects that are
personally profitable, but this private stake, we are told,
is never discussed among the larger group. Nevertheless,
the business interest is known to all Council members, who
do not contest the project in the open forum -- they expect
quid pro quo treatment at a later date.

(Note: Although not all departments in Abu Dhabi are
represented on the Executive Council, they include Shaykh
Zayid's Private Department, the Ruler's Representative in
the Western Region, the Zayid Bin Sultan Al-Nahyan
Charitable Foundation, the Court of His Highness the Crown
Prince, His Highness the Crown Prince's Private Management
Office, Private Department of Shaykh Hamdan bin Mohammed
Al-Nahyan, Private Department of Shaykh Tahnoon bin
Mohammed Al-Nahyan, Private Department of Shaykh Mohammed
bin Khalid Al-Nahyan, Abu Dhabi Chamber of Commerce and
Industry, Water and Electricity Authority, Agriculture and
Livestock Department in Al-Ain, Civil Aviation, the
Cultural Foundation, Customs Department, Economic
Department, Finance Department, General Industries
Corporation, Organization and Management Department,
Planning Department, Directorate General of Police, Public
Works Department, Purchasing Department, Seaport Authority,
Social Care and Children's Affairs Authority, Social
Services Department, and Sharia Judicial Department. End
note.)

--------------
How The Executive Council Works
--------------


12. (C) Executive Council meetings generally are closed
sessions. Technical advisers or project managers may be
admitted from time to time. Some shaykhs and royal family
members may also attend if they have a personal stake in a
project to be discussed by the Executive Council. One of
the Executive Council staff tells us that shaykhs sometimes
will seek Khalifa's approval for a project in advance, and
attend the Executive Council meetings for the rubber stamp
of approval.


13. (C) More frequently, the Executive Council seriously
deliberates the merits of projects -- but only those funded
directly by Abu Dhabi and Al-Ain Municipalities, including
federal projects. Our working-level contacts within the
various Abu Dhabi departments say that each office is
responsible for vetting projects and pitching them to the
Department Chairman. The Chairman can authorize projects
valued up to a set, designated amount, (department budgets
are usually fungible) but extraordinary multi-billion
dollar projects must receive final approval from the
Executive Council. The Chairman advocates for his
Department's projects during Executive Council
deliberations.

14. (C) Planning Department personnel tell us that the
Executive Council may even deliberate the specifics of a
project, including its budget. This is particularly true
of high-profile projects, such as Abu Dhabi's construction
of a new six-lane Corniche Highway -- carrying a price tag
of about USD $330 million. The Chief Engineer of the
Corniche project told Econoff that he was requested to
appear before the Executive Council to explain the proposed
construction in detail, to include artists' renderings of
the finished product.


15. (C) The approval process for the Abu Dhabi annual
budget, and each department's annual allocation, is similar
to that of major projects. The Abu Dhabi Department of
Economic Affairs Manager of Economic Affairs says that each
department is responsible for developing its own budget,
and the Chairman presents the proposed departmental budget
to the Executive Council for approval. Relying on the
previous year's budget as a guide, the Executive Council
either approves or amends the budget.


16. (C) Most observers say that each of the Department
Chairmen predictably lobbies for a larger budget each year,
as well as for approval for pet projects. Crown Prince
Khalifa's consensus-driven management style sets the tone
for discussions, which are non-confrontational and end with
general agreement. Our contacts at the working-level of
the Abu Dhabi Economic Department tell us that department
heads often seek alliances with each other prior to
Executive Council meetings -- especially if a project
involves one or more departments working collaboratively --
to approve projects with as few modifications as possible.

--------------
Executive Council Strengths and Weaknesses
--------------


17. (C) Given the considerable experience of the Executive
Council's members in both government bureaucracy and
private sector ventures, decisions undertaken by the
Council probably are based on a technical and financial
evaluation of a project, and are in the perceived long-term
interests of the Emirate. The consensus-based decision
making process of the Executive Council ensures that the
effects of political favoritism are limited. Local
businessmen say that Crown Prince Khalifa sets clear limits
to how much each Council member can personally profit from
the group's decisions.


18. (C) The Executive Council, nevertheless, is
susceptible to outside influence and corruptibility. The
fact that most Council members hold high-ranking municipal
positions as well as head leading local companies is a
conflict of interest by Western standards. The most
powerful business families in Abu Dhabi also are
represented on the Executive Council, and profit from the
group's decisions. It is a frequent complaint among our
private sector (mostly expatriate) contacts that tendering
of government contracts in Abu Dhabi is far from
transparent.


19. (C) Recently, a lesser Abu Dhabi businessman commented
to Econoff that Mohammed bin Butti Al-Hamed, the Mayor of
Abu Dhabi Municipality, gives municipal projects to certain
local companies and inflates the project costs by as much
as two or three times -- with the resultant extra dividends
going to all involved. Bin Butti also has been accused of
profiting personally by gouging the municipality on the
costs of spare parts.

--------------
Implications for U.S. Companies
--------------


20. (C//NF) Many foreign companies have made considerable
inroads with the Executive Council membership, and use
those relationships to win multi-million dollar government
contracts in Abu Dhabi -- often despite a lower American
bid. In mid-2002, a French firm beat out American company
TYCO for the USD $850 million contract to construct the
Shweihat pipeline. Although the initial TYCO bid
reportedly was 20 percent lower than the French bid, the
French company's sponsor Shaykh Dhiyab bin Zayid Al-Nahyan
convinced the Executive Council to retender the project.

21. (C//NF) U.S. companies, too, have lobbied and received
contracts from the Executive Council. Many American firms
-- particularly those in the construction, public
utilities, and transportation sectors -- benefit from
cultivating relationships with key Executive Council
members. In 1998, Crown Prince Khalifa and the Executive
Council awarded American company CMS the contract for the
first independent water and power project (IWPP) in Abu
Dhabi in 1998. Based entirely on its success in managing
the first IWPP, CMS also won the tender for the second IWPP
in 2001.


22. (C//NF) The Executive Council also convenes to mediate
high-profile business disputes, and to maintain equity
among the competing business families in Abu Dhabi. In
this capacity, American firms have sought partiality among
Executive Council members in local business disputes. Most
recently in mid-2002, the Executive Council overruled the
Abu Dhabi Planning Department and Abu Dhabi Civil Aviation
on their decision to grant a $30 million deal to French
company Airsys, instead of U.S. company Raytheon, for air
traffic control radars in Abu Dhabi and Al-Ain. The Abu
Dhabi Executive Council -- in writing -- exempted Raytheon
from the Israeli boycott clause in the antiquated, standard
contract form still used by the Department of Civil
Aviation. Using their connections within Abu Dhabi's
Planning Committee, the French sought to have the Raytheon
bid disqualified for non-compliance unless the firm
accepted the boycott provision.

--------------
Comment
--------------


23. (C) Comment: While the Executive Council from time to
time may simply provide political cover for decisions taken
by Shaykh Zayid and Crown Prince Khalifa, it is clear that
the Executive Council more frequently acts as the key body
in administering the considerable wealth of the UAE.
Executive Council members are experienced technocrats and
businessmen in their own right, and represent the best and
the brightest that the UAE has to offer. We will seek
meetings with some of the lesser-known Executive Council
members in the coming year to gain further insight into the
machinations of this powerful, yet low profile, body. End
comment.

Wahba