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mouse
10-31-03, 12:08 AM
Study: Bush backers land Iraq deals

Campaign donors garner $8 billion in reconstruction projects


MSNBC NEWS SERVICES

WASHINGTON, Oct. 30 — Companies awarded $8 billion in contracts to rebuild Iraq and Afghanistan have been major campaign donors to President Bush, and their executives have had important political and military connections, according to a study released Thursday.

THE STUDY of more than 70 U.S. companies and individual contractors turned up more than $500,000 in donations to the president’s 2000 campaign, more than they gave collectively to any other politician over the past dozen years.
The report was released by the Center for Public Integrity, a Washington-based research organization that produces investigative articles on special interests and ethics in government. Its staff includes journalists and researchers.
The center concluded that most of the 10 largest contracts went to companies that employed former high-ranking government officials, or executives with close ties to members of Congress and even the agencies awarding their contracts.

COMPETITIVE BIDS ESCHEWED
Major contracts for Iraq and Afghanistan were awarded by the Bush administration without competitive bids, because agencies said competition would have taken too much time to meet urgent needs in both countries.

“No single agency supervised the contracting process for the government,” the center’s executive director, Charles Lewis, said. “This situation alone shows how susceptible the contracting system is to waste, fraud and cronyism.”
The top contract recipient was the Halliburton subsidiary KBR, with more than $2.3 billion awarded to support the U.S. military and restore Iraq’s oil industry.
Halliburton was headed by Vice President Dick Cheney before he resigned to run with Bush in 2000.
Halliburton’s top executive, Dave Lesar, said Wednesday he was offended by criticism of the company’s Iraq work but believed it was “less about Halliburton and more about external political issues.”
“As a company uniquely qualified to take on this difficult assignment, we will continue to bring all of our global resources to bear at this critical time in the Middle East. We have served the military for over 50 years and have no intention of backing down at this point,” he said.
Bechtel was second with a $1 billion capital construction contract involving Iraq’s utilities, telecommunications, railroads, ports, schools, health care facilities, bridges, roads and airports.

‘LEGITIMATE POLICY INTERESTS’
The company’s Internet site says, “We do engage in the political process, as do most companies in the United States. We have legitimate policy interests and positions on matters before Congress, and we express them in many ways, including support for elected officials who support those positions.
“We do not expect or receive political favors or government contracts as a result of those contributions.”
The center’s analysis of contractor political donations showed:
The top 10 contractors contributed $11 million to national political parties, candidates and political action committees since 1990.
Fourteen of the companies won contracts in both Iraq and Afghanistan. Those companies, combined, have given more than $23 million in political contributions since 1990.
Most contractors, their political action committees and their employees have contributed just under $49 million to national political campaigns and parties since that year.
In the same time period, contractor donations to Republican Party committees outpaced contributions to the Democrats, $12.7 million to $7.1 million.

COMPANIES WELL-CONNECTED
Many of the companies with large contracts have important political connections.
Former Secretary of State George Shultz is a member of Bechtel’s board of directors, although he has no management role, according to the company’s Web site.
Riley Bechtel, the chairman and chief executive officer, was named early this year to the President’s Export Council, which advises the president on programs to improve U.S. trade.
Jack Sheehan, senior vice president in Bechtel’s petroleum and chemicals business, served on the Defense Policy Board, which advises the defense secretary on a variety of issues.
The San Francisco-based company on Thursday strongly defended its work in Iraq and said allegations it won sweetheart deals, overcharged the U.S. government and excluded Iraqis were “simply not true.”
Bechtel is lead contractor in Iraq for the U.S. Agency for International Development and has so far clocked up just over $1 billion in business there for infrastructure work such as restoring power and water and rebuilding schools and bridges.
The privately held company reacted to what it said were “inaccurate and misleading statements” about its work in Iraq, especially from California Rep. Henry Waxman, a Democrat who has been particularly critical of the contracting process in Iraq.
“These charges simply are not true. It is important to get the facts straight about such allegations,” Bechtel said.
Other contractors were also noted for their connections. Among those cited by the Center for Public Integrity:
David Kay, head of the Bush administration’s search for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, is a former vice president of Science Applications International Corp. He left the company in October 2002.
Christopher “Ryan” Henry left the same company as a vice president in February to become principal deputy undersecretary of defense for policy.
Scott Spangler, principal owner of Chemonics International, was a senior U.S. Agency for International Development official during the first Bush administration. The company receives 90 percent of its business from USAID.
Sullivan Haave Associates Inc. was founded by Carol Haave, currently the deputy assistant secretary of defense for security and information operations.
The center’s findings are based, in part, on 73 Freedom of Information Act requests and an analysis of a federal contractor database.

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

American
10-31-03, 02:09 PM
This is of no great suprise, nor should it be. Considering the political party association...most Republicans are backed buy industry...most large industry and the wealth with exception of Hollywood, back the Rep party. This was about as strong a front page story as pam Anersons implants....
I have said it before...but when there is no news they make it...heck..if you twist a dry towl long and hard enough water will eventually come out.

ebola
10-31-03, 04:37 PM
Sadly, he's right.
Atrocity ceases to be noteworthy and is no longer recognized when atrocity is "business as usual".

ebola

bryanweatherly
10-31-03, 04:58 PM
While this "article" is just a disguised editorial underhandedly attacking the Bush administration (which is under the topic of media bias and non-objectivity,) it does raise a good point about the corruption that is bred by semi-socialist/fascist economy that the United States is buried in.

Government should STAY OUT of private business and vice versa. Campaign contributions to political parties are fine, but they should be given to politicians because they advocate an individual's political philosophy. Not because they are going to use their magic governmental powers to grant an individual's company a crooked contract to perform a job that the government has no business doing in the first place.

mouse
10-31-03, 05:40 PM
Sadly, he's right.
Atrocity ceases to be noteworthy and is no longer recognized when atrocity is "business as usual".

ebola

Yes, but by accepting it as "business as usual", we become complicit in perpetuating it.

ebola
10-31-03, 08:22 PM
Yes, but by accepting it as "business as usual", we become complicit in perpetuating it.

Not necessarily. Just because it's business as usual doesn't mean we have to accept it. There may come a time when we see that business as usual itself is the source of our woes.

>>corruption that is bred by semi-socialist/fascist economy that the United States is buried in.
>>

semi-socialist/fascist? I'm a bit confused. Are you saying the USA's economy resembles that of the USSR?

>>Government should STAY OUT of private business and vice versa. Campaign contributions to political parties are fine, but they should be given to politicians because they advocate an individual's political philosophy. Not because they are going to use their magic governmental powers to grant an individual's company a crooked contract to perform a job that the government has no business doing in the first place.>>

But from the very genesis of the world-capitalist system, the central tendency of the state has been for it to act as a tool weilded by the capitalist class to aid in capital's expansion. Will there come a time when we can trust businesses to contribute to politicians based only on person ideals? 400 years of history has told us "No".

ebola
np: poison the well