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Old 06-25-2004, 08:55 AM   #1
MeniJennaCash
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FlashBack: Rebuilding Iraq Very Profitable

April 2003, an oldie but a goodie

Almost as soon as the last bomb was dropped over Iraq, the United States began the business of rebuilding the country. As it turns out, it's very big business.

The U.S. will spend approximately $25 billion to repair Iraq by the end of next year - and billions will be needed after that.

Almost all of that money will go to private contractors who vie for lucrative government deals to rebuild Iraq's roads, retrain its police force and operate its airports.

Given all the taxpayer money involved, you might think the process for awarding those contracts would be open and competitive.

But, as 60 Minutes reported last spring, the earliest contracts were given to a few favored companies. And some of the biggest winners in the sweepstakes to rebuild Iraq have one thing in common: lots of very close friends in very high places. Correspondent Steve Kroft reports.
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One is Halliburton, the Houston-based energy services and construction giant whose former CEO, Dick Cheney, is now vice president of the United States.

Even before the first shots were fired in Iraq, the Pentagon had secretly awarded Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown & Root a two-year, no-bid contract to put out oil well fires and to handle other unspecified duties involving war damage to the country?s petroleum industry. It is worth up to $7 billion.

But Robert Andersen, chief counsel for the Army Corps of Engineers, says that oil field damage was much less than anticipated and Halliburton will end up collecting only a small fraction of that $7 billion. But he can't say how small a fraction or exactly what the contract covers because the mission and the contract are considered classified information.

Under normal circumstances, the Army Corps of Engineers would have been required to put the oil fire contract out for competitive bidding. But in times of emergency, when national security is involved, the government is allowed to bypass normal procedures and award contracts to a single company, without competition.

And that's exactly what happened with Halliburton.

?We are the only company in the United States that had the kind of systems in place, people in place, contracts in place, to do that kind of thing,? says Chuck Dominy, Halliburton?s vice president for government affairs and its chief lobbyist on Capitol Hill.

He says the Pentagon came to Halliburton because the company already had an existing contract with the Army to provide logistical support to U.S. troops all over the world.

?Let me put a face on Halliburton. It's one of the world's largest energy services companies, and it has a strong engineering and construction arm that goes with that? says Dominy.

?You'll find us in 120 countries. We've got 83,000 people on our payroll, and we're involved in a ton of different things for a lot of wonderful clients worldwide.?

?They had assets prepositioned,? says Anderson. ?They had capability to reach out and get sub-contractors to do the various types of work that might be required in a hostile situation.?

?The procurement of this particular contract was done by career civil servants, and I know that it's a perception that those at the very highest levels of the administration, Democrat and Republican, get involved in procurement issues. It can happen. But for the very most part, the procurement system is designed to keep those judgments with the career public servants.?

But is political influence not unknown in the process? In this particular case, Anderson says, it was legally justified and prudent.

But not everyone thought it was prudent. Bob Grace is president of GSM Consulting, a small company in Amarillo, Texas, that has fought oil well fires all over the world. Grace worked for the Kuwait government after the first Gulf War and was in charge of firefighting strategy for the huge Bergan Oil Field, which had more than 300 fires. Last September, when it looked like there might be another Gulf war and more oil well fires, he and a lot of his friends in the industry began contacting the Pentagon and their congressmen.

?All we were trying to find out was, who do we present our credentials to,? says Grace. ?We just want to be able to go to somebody and say, ?Hey, here's who we are, and here's what we've done, and here's what we do.??

?They basically told us that there wasn't going to be any oil well fires.?
Grace showed 60 Minutes a letter from the Department of Defense saying: "The department is aware of a broad range of well firefighting capabilities and techniques available. However, we believe it is too early to speculate what might happen in the event that war breaks out in the region."

It was dated Dec. 30, 2002, more than a month after the Army Corps of Engineers began talking to Halliburton about putting out oil well fires in Iraq.

?You just feel like you're beating your head against the wall,? says Grace.
However, Andersen says the Pentagon had a very good reason for putting out that message.

?The mission at that time was classified, and what we were doing to assess the possible damage and to prepare for it was classified,? says Andersen. ?Communications with the public had to be made with that in mind.?

?I can accept confidentiality in terms of war plans and all that. But to have secrecy about Saddam Hussein blowing up oil wells, to me, is stupid,? says Grace. ?I mean the guy's blown up a thousand of them. So why would that be a revelation to anybody??

But Grace says the whole point of competitive bidding is to save the taxpayers money. He believes they are getting a raw deal. ?From what I?ve read in the papers, they're charging $50,000 a day for a five-man team. I know there are guys that are equally as well-qualified as the guys that are over there that'll do it for half that.?

Grace and his friends are no match for Halliburton when it comes to landing government business. Last year alone, Halliburton and its Brown & Root subsidiary delivered $1.3 billion worth of services to the U.S. government.
Much of it was for work the U.S. military used to do itself.

?You help build base camps. You provide goods, laundry, power, sewage, all the kinds of things that keep an army in place in a field operation,? says Dominy.

continued below
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Old 06-25-2004, 09:04 AM   #2
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Old 06-25-2004, 11:15 AM   #3
TheJimmy
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not shocking...actually expected...


from any administration really...


what REALLY pisses me off is how fucking BLATENT they are about doing crap like that...knowing that the public can't or won't FIRE their asses for it...


even IF Haliburton was the best company for the job, for the sake of APPEARANCES they should have picked another company...it's that simple...but there we go with their blatent disregard or respect for the public or public opinion and for that I say
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Old 06-25-2004, 11:50 AM   #4
MeniJennaCash
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this admistration is unreal
and people bitched about clinton getting blown???
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Old 06-25-2004, 11:57 AM   #5
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that's barely even good liberal propoganda. if they'd of opened it to a competitve bid you wankers would be crying about the additional environmental impact of the burning oil from the wasted time. and would have probably have found some tie between the awarded company and someone in the us govt
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