Monsanto Buys
‘Terminator’ Seeds Company
August 27, 2006
The United States
Government has been financing research on a genetic engineering technology
which, when commercialized, will give its owners the power to control the
food seed of entire nations or regions. The Government has been working
quietly on this technology since 1983. Now, the little-known company that
has been working in this genetic research with the Government’s US
Department of Agriculture-- Delta & Pine Land-- is about to become part of
the world’s largest supplier of patented genetically-modified seeds (GMO),
Monsanto Corporation of St. Louis, Missouri.
Relations between
Monsanto, Delta & Pine Land and the USDA, on closer scrutiny, show the
deep and dark side of the much-heralded genetic revolution in agriculture.
It proves deep-held suspicions that the Gene Revolution is not about
‘solving the world hunger problem’ as its advocates claim. It’s about
handing over control of the seeds for mankind’s basic food supply—rice,
corn, soybeans, wheat, even fruit, vegetables and cotton—to privately
owned corporations. Once the seeds and their use are patented and
controlled by one or several private agribusiness multinationals, it will
be they who can decide whether or not a particular customer—let’s say for
argument, China or Brazil or India or Japan—whether they will or won’t get
the patented seeds from Monsanto, or from one of its licensee GMO partners
like Bayer Crop Sciences, Syngenta or DuPont’s Pioneer Hi-Bred
International.
While most of us
don’t bother to reflect on where the corn in the box of Kellogg’s Corn
Flakes or the rice in a box of Uncle Ben’s Converted Rice come from, when
we grab it from the supermarket shelf, they all must originate with seeds.
Seeds can either be taken by a farmer from the previous season’ seeds, and
planted to produce the next harvest. Or, seeds can be bought new each
harvest season, from the companies which sell their seeds.
The advent of
commercial GMO seeds in the early 1990’s allowed companies like Monsanto,
DuPont or Dow Chemicals to go from supplying agriculture chemical
herbicides like Roundup, to patenting genetically altered seeds for basic
farm crops like corn, rice, soybeans or wheat. For almost a quarter
century, since 1983, the US Government has quietly been working to perfect
a genetically engineered technique whereby farmers would be forced to turn
to their seed supplier each harvest to get new seeds. The seeds would only
produce one harvest. After that the seeds from that harvest would commit
‘suicide’ and be unusable.
There has been
much hue and cry, correctly so, that this process, patented ‘suicide’
seeds, officially termed GURTs (Genetic Use Restriction Technologies), is
a threat to poor farmers in developing countries like India or Brazil, who
traditionally save their own seeds for the next planting. In fact, GURTs,
more popularly referred to as Terminator seeds for the brutal manner in
which they kill off plant reproduction possibilities, is a threat to the
food security as well of North America, Western Europe, Japan and anywhere
Monsanto and its elite cartel of GMO agribusiness partners enters a
market.
The
Curious History of Delta & Pine Land
Delta & Pine Land
is a company that, despite the pine in its name, has deep roots. Founded
in 1888, it has its headquarters at One Cotton Row in Scott, Mississippi,
nestled between Goat Island and Choktaw Bar Island on the Mississippi
River, near the Arkansas border. However, the people running things at
Delta Pine are anything but your typical Mississippi black-dirt cotton
farmers.
In 1983, Delta &
Pine Land (D&PL) joined with the US Department of Agriculture in a project
to develop Terminator seeds. It was one of the earliest experiments with
GMO. It was a long-term project. The US Government has been serious about
Terminator beginning more than two decades ago.
In March 1998 the
US Patent Office granted Patent No. 5,723,765 to Delta & Pine Land for a
patent titled, Control of Plant Gene _Expression. The patent is
owned jointly, according to Delta & Pine’s Security & Exchange Commission
10K filing, ‘by D&PL and the United States of America, as represented by
the Secretary of Agriculture.’
The patent has
global coverage. To quote further from the official D&PL SEC filing, ‘The
patent broadly covers all species of plant and seed, both transgenic (GMO-ed)
and conventional, for a system designed to allow control of progeny seed
viability without harming the crop’(sic).
Then, in a manner
reminiscent of Big Brother in George Orwell’s novel, 1984, D&PL
claims, ‘One application of the technology could be to control
unauthorized planting of seed of proprietary varieties…by making such a
practice non-economic since non-authorized saved seed will not germinate,
and, therefore, would be useless for planting.’ D&PL calls the
thousand-year-old tradition of farmer-saved seed by the pejorative term,
‘brown bagging’ as though it is something dirty and corrupt.
Translated into
lay language, D&PL officially declares the purpose of its Patent No.
5,723,765, Control of Plant Gene _Expression, is to prevent farmers
who once get trapped into buying transgenic or GMO seeds from a company
such as Monsanto or Syngenta, from ‘brown bagging’ or being able to break
free of control of their future crops by Monsanto and friends. As D&PL
puts it, their patent gives them ‘the prospect of opening significant
worldwide seed markets to the sale of transgenic technology in varietal
crops in which crop seed currently is saved and used in subsequent seasons
as planting seed.’
Instead, the
farmer or the country whose farmers depend on Monsanto patented GMO seeds
must pay a license fee to Monsanto each year to get new seeds. ‘No tickee,
no laundy,’ as the old Brooklyn poet would say.
Terminator is the
answer to the agribusiness dream of controlling world food production. No
longer would they need to hire expensive detectives to spy on whether
farmers were re-using Monsanto or other GMO patented seed. Terminator corn
or soybeans or cotton seeds could be genetically modified to ‘commit
suicide’ after one harvest season. That would automatically prevent
farmers from saving and re-using the seed for the next harvest. The
technology would be a means of enforcing Monsanto or other GMO patent
rights, and forcing payment of farmer use fees not only in developing
economies, where patent rights were, understandably, little respected, but
also in industrial OECD countries.
With Terminator
patent rights, once a country such as Argentina or Brazil or Iraq or the
USA or Canada opened its doors to the spread of GMO patented seeds among
its farmers, their food security would be potentially hostage to a private
multinational company, a company which, for whatever reasons, especially
given its intimate ties to the US Government, might decide to use ‘food as
a weapon’ to compel a US-friendly policy from that country or group of
countries.
Sound far-fetched?
Go back to what then-Secretary of State Henry Kissinger did in countries
like Allende’s Chile to force a regime change to a ‘US-friendly’ Pinochet
dictatorship by withholding USAID and private food exports to Chile.
Kissinger dubbed it ‘food as a weapon.’ Terminator is merely the logical
next step in food weapon technology.
The role of the US
Government in backing and financing Delta & Pine Land’s decades of
Terminator research is even more revealing. As Kissinger said back in the
1970’s, ‘Control the oil and you can control entire Continents. Control
food and you control people…’
In a June 1998
interview, USDA spokesman, Willard Phelps, defined the US Government
policy on Terminator seeds. He explained that USDA wanted the technology
to be ‘widely licensed and made expeditiously available to many seed
companies.’ He meant agribusiness GMO giants like Monsanto, DuPont or Dow.
The USDA was open about their reasons: They wanted to get Terminator seeds
into the developing world where the Rockefeller Foundation had made
eventual proliferation of genetically engineered crops the heart of its
GMO strategy from the beginnings of its rice genome project in 1984.
USDA’s Phelps
stated that the US Government’s goal in fostering the widest possible
development of Terminator technology was ‘to increase the value of
proprietary seed owned by US seed companies and to open up new markets in
Second and Third World countries.’
Under WTO rules on
free trade in agriculture, countries are forbidden to impose their own
national health restrictions on GMO imports if it is deemed to be an
‘unfair trade barrier.’ It begins to become clear why it was the US
Government and US agribusiness which during the late 1980’s pushed at the
GATT Uruguay Round for creation of a World Trade Organization, with its
supranational arbitrary powers over world agriculture trade. It all fits
into a neat picture of patented seeds, forced on reluctant WTO member
nations, under threat of WTO sanctions, and now of Terminator or suicide
seeds.
A closer look at
who runs and owns Delta & Pine Land is instructive.
Arkansas Politics and D&PL
The largest
shareholder in D&PL is the Stephens Group of Little Rock, Arkansas. Here
is where things become interesting indeed.
The man who is
Chairman of the Board of DP&L is Jon E.M. Jacoby, who came to DP&L as
representative of the Stephens Group. Jacoby is a Director and Vice
Chairman of The Stephens Group LLC, the Arkansas-based private equity firm
owned by the Stephens family.
The Stephens Group
prides itself on being the nation's largest investment bank outside Wall
Street, based, of all places, in little ol' Little Rock, in hillbilly
land, Arkansas, one of the poorest states in the United States. Stephens
Inc. is also one of the biggest institutional shareholders in 30 large
multinationals including the Arkansas based firms Tyson Food, the
world’s largest chicken industrial factory operation and the infamous
Arkansas giant, Wal-Mart.
Jackson Stephens,
who founded the group with his brother, Witt, were more than just lucky
Arkansas bankers and billionaires. Stephens evidently built his career and
fortune by being connected to the ‘right’ people. He was a US Naval
Academy classmate of Jimmy Carter and during the Georgia bank scandals of
President Carter’s Office of Management & Budget chief, Bert Lance, it was
Jack Stephens who stepped in to bail Lance out of an extremely
embarrassing financial debacle with Lance’s old bank, National Bank of
Georgia.
How Stephens
helped Jimmy Carter’s fellow Georgia buddy, Lance, is the interesting
part. Stephens introduced Lance to a Pakistani businessman, Agha Hasan
Abedi. Abedi was the founder of a curious Luxembourg-registered,
London-based bank called BCCI.
In 1990, BCCI was
convicted of money laundering for the Columbian Cocaine Cartels in Miami.
In October, 1992,
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee released an 800-page report on the
BCCI collapse. They called the BCCI scandal, ‘the largest case of
organized crime in history, spanning over some 72 nations,’ adding that it
represented an ‘international financial crime on a massive and global
scale,’ and that the bank ‘systematically bribed world leaders and
political figures throughout the world.’
The Senate report
concluded that among the provable charges against BCCI were ‘BCCI's
criminality, including fraud…involving billions of dollars; money
laundering in Europe, Africa, Asia, and the America; BCCI's bribery of
officials in most of those locations; its support of terrorism, arms
trafficking, and the sale of nuclear technologies; its management of
prostitution; its commission and facilitation of income tax evasion,
smuggling, and illegal immigration; its illicit purchases of banks and
real estate; and a panoply of financial crimes limited only by the
imagination of its officers and customers.’
Jackson Stephens
was no casual business acquaintance of BCCI’s Agha Hasan Abedi. In
response to the concerns over Jackson Stephens' involvement in BCCI, the
Ohio Attorney General noted in a 1993 report, ‘Stephens' name has been
linked to securities violations that allegedly occurred when the Bank of
Commerce and Credit International (BCCI), a foreign bank dominated by
Pakistani financier Agha Hasan Abedi, acquired stock and control over the
Washington-based First American Bank.’ In 1991, Stephens joined BCCI
investor Mochtar Riady in buying BCCI's former Hong Kong subsidiary from
its liquidators.
The Stephens Group
was well-connected to another interesting Asian banking group, the
billionaire Indonesian Riady family of Moktar and his son James Riady, who
own the Lippo Bank in Indonesia. The Riadys are Chinese-Indonesian
businessmen who, of all places, moved to Arkansas in the 1970’s, despite
holding billions of assets in Asia. Stephens and Riady hit it off and soon
Stephens and Riady bought a bank in Hong Kong. Stephens then invited Riady
to invest in a Little Rock, Arkansas bank called Worthen.
BCCI and Jackson
Stephens, chairman of the Stephens Group of Arkansas were well known to
one another. Stephens Group board member, Jon E.M. Jacoby, today Chairman
of Delta & Pine Land, and still a Vice Director of The Stephens Group, was
a very senior, trusted member of the Stephens’ inside circle for more than
35 years.
Jackson Stephens’
Stephens Group financially staked Sam Walton when he started Wal-Mart in
1970. Stephens also financed Tyson Foods to become the agribusiness global
giant it is today. Jon Jacoby, as senior executive of the Stephens Group,
had arranged the 1970 Wal-Mart deal. Jon E.M. Jacoby and Jackson Stephens
went way back.
Jacoby was Vice
President of Stephens Inc. in the early 1990’s, shortly after the BCCI
scandals and early into the Presidency of another Jackson Stephens
protégé, former Arkansas Governor and recipient of Stephens’ political
largess, William Jefferson Clinton.
When an Arkansas
reporter questioned Jacoby on allegations of Clinton’s alleged corruption
as Governor of Arkansas, Jacoby quipped, “You see a girl walking down the
street. You can say, ‘There goes a beautiful girl’ or "There goes a
whore.’ What the hell's the difference? They've both got legs.”
Arkansas politics
is known for its colorful metaphors and its colorful politicians like
William Jefferson Clinton. It’s good to get a little of the flavor of this
Arkansas colorfulness to get a better picture of Delta & Pine Land.
Stephens Group, Tyson Farms and Other Arkansas Fairy Tales
A tangled web of
relations links the Stephens Group and Delta & Pine Land of Scott,
Mississippi with another satellite in the agribusiness orbit of the
influential Stephens Group. The Stephens Group is also linked intimately
with Arkansas-based Tyson Foods, the US’ largest agribusiness processor of
industrialized chicken meat, and arguably one of its most unsanitary ones.
Tyson Foods
curiously emerged from the recent Avian Flu (H5N1) virus scare as a
winner, using the lie that their factory farm mass-bred assembly-line
chickens were more ‘sanitary’ than free-roaming small farm chickens of
Asia.
Washington
Administrations, at least since the Presidency of Bill Clinton, seem to
have a love affair of some sort with Tyson Foods.
It began when
Clinton sought to name an Arkansas crony, Mike Espy, to be his Secretary
of Agriculture. Before Clinton could submit Espy’s name to the Senate for
confirmation, however, Espy was sent to Arkansas for a meeting that would
decide if Espy had the right stuff. The meeting was with Don Tyson, head
of Tyson Foods.
Tyson apparently
concluded that Espy indeed had the right stuff, at least as far as Tyson
was concerned. Soon after being named head of USDA, Espy enacted measures
significantly weakening Federal chicken waste and contamination standards.
That opened the floodgates for expansion of Tyson Foods chicken factory
farms into the huge concentrations of chicken waste and rivers overflowing
with toxic pollution in Arkansas and beyond.
The Wall Street
Journal on May 28, 2003 reviewed the allegations surrounding
then-President Clinton and his wife, Hillary. They detailed some relevant
points from the Clintons’ Arkansas days:
1977
Hillary Rodham
Clinton joins the Rose Law Firm. Jackson Stephens joins with former Carter
administration budget director Bert Lance and a group of Mideast
investors--later identified as key figures in the corrupt Bank of Credit &
Commerce International--in an unsuccessful attempt to acquire Financial
General Bankshares in Washington, D.C
1978
October:
Mrs. Clinton, now a partner at the Rose Firm, begins a series of
commodities trades under the guidance of Tyson Foods executive Jim Blair,
earning nearly $100,000. (author’s emphasis). The trades are
not revealed until March 1994.
November: Bill
Clinton is elected Governor of Arkansas.
The Rose law firm
was the house law firm of Jackson Stephens’ Stephens Group investment bank
in Little Rock. To be the corporate law firm of the Stephens Group was no
casual affair. It implied a deep trust relationship and perhaps more. As
one crony of Jackson Stephens put it at that time, ‘Jackson Stephens? He’s
the man who owns Arkansas.’
The head of the
prestigious Rose law firm in Little Rock in those days was C. Joseph
Giroir jr. In 1977 Giroir hired a young lawyer named Hillary Clinton to
work for Rose. It was all one cozy Arkansas-Indonesia family back then.
The Wall Street
Journal commentary on the Clinton years had the following entry for
1987, as Clinton was still Arkansas Governor:
1987:
Officials at
investment giant Stephens Inc., including longtime Clinton
friend, David Edwards, take steps to rescue Harken Energy, a struggling
Texas oil company with George W. Bush on its board. Over the next three
years, Mr. Edwards brings BCCI-linked investors and advisers into Harken
deals. One of them, Abdullah Bakhsh, purchases $10 million in shares of
Stephens-dominated Worthen Bank. (author’s emphasis).
Jackson Stephens’
political largesse was non-partisan: Democrats Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton,
and then Republican George W. Bush, the man now in the White House as
Monsanto seeks approval to take over the Stephens Group’s Delta & pine
land.
In December 1992,
just after Clinton had been elected President in a campaign financed at
critical points by Jackson Stephens and friends, including the
Indonesian-American Riady family, Vince Foster, an Arkansas friend of the
Clinton’s, and a law partner at Hillary’s Rose law firm, met James
McDougal. Foster arranged for McDougal to buy the Clintons' remaining
shares in Whitewater Development Co. That land deal was focus of
Congressional investigation of the Clintons. McDougal was loaned the money
for the purchase by Tyson Foods counsel Jim Blair, the long-time Clinton
friend and commodities adviser who in 1978 had ‘tutored’ Hillary in her
fabulously successful commodities speculation. The loan by Tyson’s Jim
Blair to McDougal was never repaid.
No sooner did Bill
and Hillary Clinton move into the White House, and the Tyson
Foods-approved Mike Espy took over as US Secretary of Agriculture, than
Hillary’s former law partner, Joseph Giroir, set up a corporation. It was
called Arkansas International Development Corporation (AIDC). In fact, it
appears that the AIDC was set up to do joint ventures with the Indonesian
Lippo Group of the business partners of Jackson Stephens, Mokhtar and
James Riady.
The Arkansas
International Development Corporation brokered a deal between Indonesia’s
Lippo Group and Arkansas’ Tyson Foods that opened Indonesia to import
Tyson Foods industrially-produced Arkansas factory farm chickens. One food
Indonesia does not need to import is certainly chickens. The cheap
Arkansas imports destroyed the fragile economy of domestic Indonesian
small family chicken farmers.
Another project of
AIDC was to issue bonds to build an airport in the Arkansas backwoods for
the sole purpose of shipping Tyson Farms chickens to Indonesia. Recall
that Clinton’s wife had been profiting from the trading advice of Tyson
Foods since October 1978, a month before her husband became Governor.
Under the Clinton
Presidency, agribusiness, especially agribusiness tied to the Stephens’
interests, made huge advances.
Agriculture
Secretary Espy was forced to resign in October 1994, and was indicted on
charges of accepting bribes and other gratuities. Among the charges
against him were making false statements, concealing money from prohibited
sources, illegal gratuities, illegal contributions, falsifying records,
interstate transportation of stolen property, money laundering, and
illegal dispersal of USDA subsidies. The largest corporate offender was
Tyson Foods. Tyson had illegally offered Espy $12,000 in airplane rides,
football tickets and other payoffs. Espy got off because the law makes it
easier to convict a briber than a bribee. Tyson paid the government $6
million to close its case.
Tyson had been
enthusiastic supporters of the Clinton family for years. In 1994, Time
reported that a senior pilot for Tyson, Joe Henrickson, had been grilled
for three days by the Espy Independent Prosecutor, Dan Smaltz, and FBI
agents. They grilled the Tyson pilot about earlier transfers of cash to
the (Arkansas) Governor's (Bill Clinton) mansion. According to Time,
Henrickson claimed to have carried white envelopes containing a
quarter-inch stack of $100 bills on six occasions.
Time
magazine reported that, ‘In one case, [Henrickson claimed] a Tyson
executive handed him an envelope of cash in the company's aircraft hanger
in Fayetteville and said, 'This is for Governor Clinton.’ Arkansas has its
political traditions and the Stephens and Tyson families are evidently
skilled practitioners of that art.
The
real interest in Jacoby’s Delta & Pine Land
By now the
question comes, what is so attractive about the Stephens Group’s Delta &
Pine Land that Monsanto makes its second bid to add it to its global
genetically-engineered seeds empire?
It’s the patent
Delta & Pine Land, together with the US Government, holds--Patent No.
5,723,765, titled, Control of Plant Gene _Expression. The USDA
through its Agricultural Research Service (USDA-ARS) in Lubbock, Texas, as
already noted, has worked with Delta & Pine Land since 1983 to perfect
Terminator GMO technology. Patent No. 5,723,765 is the patent for
Terminator technology.
One year later, in
early 1999 Monsanto, the largest producer of GMO seeds and related agri-chemicals,
announced it was acquiring Delta & Pine Land along with Delta’s Terminator
patents.
In October 1999,
however, following a worldwide storm of protest against Terminator seeds
that threatened the very future of the Rockefeller Foundation’s ‘Gene
Revolution’ Dr. Gordon Conway, President of the prestigious Rockefeller
Foundation, met privately with the Board of Directors of Monsanto. Conway
convinced Monsantom that for the long-term future of their GMO Project,
they must go public to indicate to a worried world that it would not
‘commercialize’ Terminator. Development of the genetic revolution and
genetic engineering as a research area had been the project of the
Rockefeller Foundation over decades, along with researchers in the
family’s Rockefeller University.
The Anglo-Swiss
Syngenta joined with Monsanto in declaring solemnly that they would also
not commercialize their work on GURTS or Terminator suicide seed
technology.
That 1999
announcement took enormous pressure off of Monsanto and the agribusiness
GMO giants, allowing them to advance the proliferation of their patented
GMO seeds globally. Terminator could come later, once farmers and entire
national agriculture areas like North America or Argentina or India had
been taken over by GMO crops. Then, of course, it would be too late. The
Rockefeller-Monsanto 1999 press conference was clearly application of
classic Lenin Bolshevik tactics—Two Steps Forward, One Step Back…
Despite the
Monsanto declaration of a moratorium on Terminator development, the US
Government and the again independent Delta & Pine Land refused to drop
their Terminator development.
In 2000, a year
after the Monsanto Terminator moratorium announcement, the Clinton
Administration’s USDA Secretary, Dan Glickman, refused repeated efforts by
various agriculture and NGO organizations to drop the Government’s support
for Terminator or GURTs. His Department’s feeble excuse for not dropping
support for the work with Delta & Pine Land was that it allowed the US
Government to put ‘leverage’ on D&PL to ‘protect the public interest.’ Six
years later it became clear: the only leverage the US Government had put
on D&PL’s commercialization efforts on GURTs had been to lever it into
commercial reality.
Delta Vice
President, Harry Collins, declared at the time in a press interview in the
Agra/Industrial Biotechnology Legal Letter, ‘We’ve continued right
on with work on the Technology Protection System (TPS or Terminator). We
never really slowed down. We’re on target, moving ahead to commercialize
it. We never really backed off.’
Nor did their
partner, the United States Department of Agriculture, back down on
Terminator after 1999. In 2001 the USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS)
website announced: ‘USDA has no plans to introduce TPS into any germplasm…Our
involvement has been to help develop the technology, not to assist
companies to use it.’ As if to say, ‘see, our hands are clean.’ Then they
went on to say the USDA was, ‘committed to making the [Terminator]
technology as widely available as possible, so that its benefits will
accrue to all segments of society (sic)…ARS intends to do research on
other applications of this unique gene control discovery…When new
applications are at the appropriate stage of development, this technology
will also be transferred to the private sector for commercial
application.’ Terminator was alive and well inside the Washington
bureaucracy.
In 2001, the USDA
and Delta & Pine executed a Commercialization Agreement for Terminator,
its infamous Patent No. 5,723,765. The Government and Delta & Pine Land
were not at all concerned about worldwide outcry against Terminator.
That announcement
came two years after Monsanto had dropped its planned takeover of D&PL,
with its Terminator patents.
The world was left
with the (misleading) impression that Terminator was dead. Reality was it
was anything but dead. Seven years later, long after public outcry against
Terminator technology had died down, Monsanto re-entered and bought Delta
& Pine Land and its Terminator patents.
Delta & Pine Land’s global net
The key scientific
member of the Delta & Pine Land board since 1993 has been Dr. Nam-Hai
Chua. Chua, 62, is also head of the Rockefeller University Plant Molecular
Biology Laboratory in New York, and has been for over 25 years, the labs
which are at the heart of the Rockefeller Foundation’s decades-long
development, and spending of more than $100 millions of its own research
grants to create their Gene Revolution. Until 1995, Chua was also a
scientific consultant to Monsanto Corporation, as well as to DuPont’s
Pioneer Hi-Bred International. Chua is at the heart of Rockefeller’s Gene
Revolution. And, clearly, Delta & Pine Land and their research on
Terminator have been in the center of that work.
Delta & Pine Land
is well-placed globally to proliferate its suicide seeds now, with the
corporate and financial clout of the giant Monsanto company. Delta & Pine
already has subsidiaries including D&PL Argentina, D&PL China, D&PL China
PTE in Singapore, Deltapine Paraguay, Delta Pine de Mexico, Deltapine
Australia, Hebei Ji Dai Cottonseed Technology Company in China, CDM
Mandiyu in Argentina, Delta and Pine Land Hellas in Greece, D&M Brazil
Algodao of Brazil, D&PL India, D&PL Mauritius Ltd.
This vast global
network combined with Monsanto’s dominant position in the GMO seeds and
agri-chemicals market along with the unique DP&L Patent No. 5,723,765,
Control of Plant Gene _Expression, now give Monsanto and its close
friends in Washington an enormous advance in their plans to dominate world
food and plant seed use.
F. William
Engdahl is Contributing Editor of Global Research and author of the
soon-to-be-released book, Seeds of Destruction: the Dark Side of
Genetically-engineered Food. He also authored ‘ A Century of War:
Anglo-American Oil Politics,’ Pluto Press, He may be contacted at his
website,
www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net