AP/ February 11, 2009, 4:51 PM

Official: Wolfowitz In Talks To Resign

Embattled World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz is negotiating an agreement to resign, according to an official familiar with the talks.

His departure would include an acknowledgment from the bank that he doesn't bear sole responsibility for the controversy surrounding a generous pay package for his girlfriend, the official said.

The negotiations were taking place as the bank's board resumed deliberations over Wolfowitz's fate Wednesday afternoon.

The official said Wolfowitz wanted the bank to accept some responsibility for conflicts of interest cited against him by a special bank panel. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the delicate state of the negotiations.

It was not clear whether the bank's 24-member board would accept Wolfowitz's terms. It is up to the board to decide what action should be taken in the matter.

Pressure on Wolfowitz to resign has grown since the bank panel report, released Monday, regarding his handling of the 2005 pay package of bank employee Shaha Riza.

Wolfowitz has maintained that he acted in good faith.

The bank panel said the board must consider whether Wolfowitz "will be able to provide the leadership" to ensure that the bank achieves its mission of fighting poverty around the world.

Before taking over the bank nearly two years ago, Wolfowitz was the No. 2 official at the Pentagon and played a lead role in mapping out the U.S.-led war in Iraq.

The White House, which picked Wolfowitz for the World Bank post, indicated for the first time on Tuesday that it was willing to consider new leadership.

By tradition, the bank has been run by an American, with the approval of the bank's board. The bank's sister agency, the International Monetary Fund, is headed by a European.

Wolfowitz canceled a planned trip to a bank-sponsored development conference in Bled, Slovenia, on Thursday and Friday to work with the board.

In a last ditch plea to save his job, Wolfowitz appeared before the board on Tuesday. "You still have the opportunity to avoid long-term damage by resolving this matter in a fair and equitable way that recognizes that we all tried to do the right thing, however imperfectly we went about it," he told the board.

Riza worked for the bank before Wolfowitz took over as president in June 2005. She was moved to the State Department to avoid a conflict of interest, but stayed on the bank's payroll. Her salary went from close to $133,000 to $180,000. With subsequent raises, it eventually rose to $193,590. The panel concluded that the salary increase Riza received "at Mr. Wolfowitz's direction was in excess of the range" allowed under bank rules.

The panel said Wolfowitz "placed himself in a conflict of interest situation" when he became involved in the terms and details of Riza's assignment and pay package and "he should have withdrawn from any decision-making in the matter."

The panel acknowledged, however, that informal advice Wolfowitz received from the bank's ethics committee "was not a model of clarity."

European members — led by France, Germany and the Netherlands — are pushing for Wolfowitz to resign. The United States is the bank's largest shareholder, so his nomination by Bush was approved by the bank's board even though Europeans didn't like him because of his role in the Iraq war.

German media quoted Development Minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul as saying earlier Wednesday that Wolfowitz "would do the bank and himself a great service if he resigned. That would be the best for all involved."

The recent controversy, which has gripped the bank for a month, has threatened to tarnish the poverty-fighting institution's reputation and hobble its ability to persuade countries around the world to contribute billions of dollars to provide financial assistance to poor nations.

"This has certainly been a bruising episode for the bank, and what you have to do is figure out a way forward to maintain the integrity of the institution," White House press secretary Tony Snow said Wednesday.

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice have said the conflict-of-interest charges against Wolfowitz were not grounds for him to be fired.
© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
97 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
wfbdem says:
Only reason the rightwing keeps bringing up Monica Lewinsky is that they are still p!ssed off the president got a BJ from a Jew on Easter.
Not on Easter!!?!?!? Heavens!!
Gees...2 thousand years some Romans nailed a guy to a tree for saying "Hey! wouldn't it be great if we all just got along", and and now the twisted followers won;t even let a guy get a hummer.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
twomtns says:
With European nations refusing to put aside their opposition to Wolfowitz %u2013 and Canada withdrawing its support %u2013 Wolfowitz engaged the White House to help strike a face-saving deal allowing him to step aside.The resignation deal under discussion would allow Wolfowitz to collect his full $375,000 U.S. salary as part of his resignation, and require the bank to issue a statement of praise for his work on battling African poverty and fighting corruption
now thats what I call blowing & sucking at the same time to call this crook a rat insults rats
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
beanerman4 says:
on Sandy Berger
"While I derived great satisfaction from years of practicing law, I have not done so for 15 years and do not envision returning to the profession."

And you wonder why this isn't on the front page? This is piddly compared to todays everyday is a new scandal day with George (King, Decider, Almighty) and Co. If justice is ever served on these cronies, it won't just be a slap on the wrist fine and community service either. It will be big news too.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
pepperp1 says:
Only would one of the new republican welfare crowd believe they are entitled to hard earned US Tax revenues in the form of a monetary reward to themselves for quitting a job that they were not qualified for and where they violated the ethics policy to give their Babe a $60,000 annual increase and TAX FREE to boot! I would have though the base salary we helped pay was offensive enough; just know we surfs who work to pay those bucks say no.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
starleo146 says:
veteran71 YOU SAID IT ALL GREAT POST TO PROCESSOR2 BUT I REALLY DOUBT SHE UNDERSTOOD IT BECAUSE SHE HAS SHUT HER EYES TO EVERYTHING EXCEPT CLINTON GETTING A bj Hope she is o.k. and comes out of it soon
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
starleo146 says:
I wonder what else he did in the name of the U.S. It really scares me what kind of deals he might have made while pres. World Bank We will never know I don't gues the news media is only interested in what only comes over AP NO DIGGING.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
gasp3 says:
Where's the KKK when u need them......Wolfie your days r numbered.......along with the Chimp that put you on the map!!
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
bm6005 says:
processor2

What a MAROON you are!!!! What happened to my country? Where did it go? Where were/are all these war mongering NAZI's hiding in our society!
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
bm6005 says:
He's an AIPAC, PNAC, AEI scumbag. Send him to Israel in exile and never let him darken our shores again!!
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
jvman4u says:
Hey, just tell him to shut up and get out, besids BUSHY will have another war for him to organize... Someone asked, how does BUSHY find all these rejects and low-life`s? They all are graduates of the same school, the: EVANGELICAL School of NO ETHICS, REPUBLICANISM at it`s finest!
reply
See all 97 Comments