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Halliburton
Contracts Illegal - But Bush Busts The Whistleblower
by Evelyn
Pringle
http://www.opednews.com/
Halliburton Contracts Illegal - But Bush
Busts The Whistleblower
In October, 2004, Bunnatine Greenhouse, a
top military official responsible for making sure the Army Corps of
Engineers complies with contracting rules, came forward and revealed that
top Pentagon officials showed improper favoritism to Halliburton when
awarding military contracts.
The allegations made by this official
were first reported by Time Magazine.
Greenhouse said that when the
Pentagon awarded Halliburton a five-year $7 billion contract, it pressured
her to withdraw her objections, actions which she claimed were
unprecedented in her experience.
In a letter from her attorney's
office, Greenhouse told members of Congress that the Army gave the no-bid
contracts to Halliburton's subsidiary KBR for political reasons.
Greenhouse charged that contracts were approved over her
reservations, some of which were handwritten on the original contracts,
and extensions of contracts were awarded because underlings signed them in
collusion with senior officials without her knowledge.
A five-year
Iraq contract was awarded less than a month before the invasion, under a
clause which allowed for no-bid contracts in the case of a "compelling
emergency." Greenhouse contends that she objected to the 5-year terms of
the contract, questioning the probability of an emergency lasting for five
years.
When her superiors signed off on the contract and sent it
back for her approval, she wrote the following message next to her
signature: "I caution that extending this sole-source effort beyond a one
year period could convey an invalid perception that there is not strong
intent for a limited competition."
Federal contracting rules say
contracts must be awarded by career civil servants, not political
appointees. Greenhouse claimed the Army ignored this requirement when
giving contracts to Halliburton and violated "the integrity of the federal
contracting program as it relates to a major defense contractor."
"Employees of the U.S. government have taken improper action that
favored KBR's interests," Greenhouse wrote. "This conduct has violated
specific regulations and calls into question the independence" of the
contracting process, she said.
She also said the Army altered
documents in order to justify the Halliburton's contract work in the
Balkans. In a letter from Michael Kohn, Greenhouse's attorney, to then
acting Army Secretary Les Brownlee, Greenhouse charged that on a Balkan's
contract, a deputy assistant secretary of the Army had ordered changes in
documents to legitimize the contract "for political
reasons."
According to Kohn's letter, in January 2002, Greenhouse
sent an investigative team to review the Halliburton operation in the
Balkans. After which she reported: "The general feeling in the theater is
that the contractor (KBR) is 'out of control'" and was able to manipulate
Corps of Engineer officials.
The Balkan's contract was scheduled to
expire no later than May 27, 2004. However, it was extended without
Greenhouse's knowledge, after a search for other contractors was stopped.
Although the contract was originally awarded a "compelling emergency"
exception, the extended contract was awarded under another exception, that
KBR was the "one and only source."
Nothing was ever done about the
illegal contracts awarded to Halliburton. Instead, less than a year after
she reported these blatant violations of procurement law, Bush decided to
bust the Whistleblower, Ms Greenhouse.
The August 29, 2005 New York
Times reports: "A top Army contracting official who criticized a large,
noncompetitive contract with the Halliburton Company for work in Iraq was
demoted Saturday for what the Army called poor job performance.
"The official, Bunnatine H. Greenhouse," the Times wrote, "has
worked in military procurement for 20 years and for the past several years
had been the chief overseer of contracts at the Army Corps of Engineers,
the agency that has managed much of the reconstruction work in
Iraq."
Ms Greenhouse's lawyer, Michael Kohn, "called the action an
"obvious reprisal" for the strong objections she raised in 2003 to a
series of corps decisions involving the Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg
Brown & Root, which has garnered more than $10 billion for work in
Iraq," according to the Times.
Whistleblower Told The
Truth
When Cheney appeared on NBC's Meet the Press on Sept 14,
2003, he arrogantly stated: "And as vice president, I have absolutely no
influence of, involvement of, knowledge of in any way, shape or form of
contracts led by the Corps of Engineers or anybody else in the federal
government."
And when Cheney was specifically asked whether he had
known about Halliburton's no-bid contract, he said, "I don't know any of
the details of the contract because I deliberately stayed away from any
information on that."
Those statements were proven false on June,
2004, by an article in Time Magazine entitled, “The Paper Trail: Did
Cheney Okay a Deal?”
The truth is, Bush and Cheney both were
informed that Halliburton would get the contract before it was ever
awarded. Time Magazine quoted an email sent by the Army Corps of
Engineers, that said the contract for construction of oil pipelines was
approved by Under Secretary of Defense Douglas Feith “contingent on
informing WH tomorrow. We anticipate no issues since action has been
coordinated w VP’s [Vice President’s] office.”
The author of the
email, Stephen Browning, said in an interview that he wrote the memo after
he and retired Lt Gen Jay Garner met with Douglas Feith about plans to
declassify the earlier $1.8 million contract with the Halliburton.
According to Browning, Feith told him that he had already informed
Cheney's office.
The email was dated March 5, 2003, and
Halliburton was awarded the contract three days later without allowing for
any bids from other companies.
The email totally contradicts
Cheney's televised claims that he had no involvement in Halliburton's
contracts whatsoever and proves that Cheney and the White House played a
key role in boosting Halliburton into the number one war profiteering
position in Iraq.
When confronted with the email, Bush dismissed
it by saying the Corp of Engineers was just trying to give the Vice
President's office a heads-up on the process. Now I suppose people's
opinions could vary as to what the email actually meant, depending on what
the definition of co-or-di-na-ted is.
No Political Appointees Were
Involved - None
In the heat of the debate over Halliburton
contracts, some readers may recall a news conference, where Richard
Boucher, spokesman for State Department at the time, explained how
decisions are made on military contracts. "The decisions are made by
career procurement officials. There's a separation, a wall, between them
and political-level questions when they're doing the contracts," he
said.
Then the chief counsel of the Army Corp of Engineers appeared
on "60 Minutes" where he denied that there was any involvement by
political appointees in the Halliburton contract. He specifically said:
"The procurement of this particular contract was done by career civil
servants."
We also heard from a spokesman from the Department of
Defense, Major Joseph Yoswa, who claimed safeguards existed to insure that
the process was free of favoritism. "Most important,” he said, “career
civil servants, not political appointees, make final decisions on
contracts," according to The New Yorker.
Next Halliburton
spokeswoman, Wendy Hall, stepped up to the mike in August, 2003, and said
Halliburton's military contracts were awarded "not by politicians but by
government civil servants, under strict guidelines."
Finally,
during a hearing on March 11, 2004, before the Government Reform
Committee, six senior government officials from the CPA and DOD testified
under oath, and were each asked the following question by Republican
Committee Chairman, Tom Davis:
"I want to get this on the record,
and everybody is under oath. Have you or anyone in your office ever
discussed with the Vice President or with his office the award of a
contract for Iraqi reconstruction prior to any contract being
awarded?"
Every single one of those six officials said "no sir,"
which means every single one of them lied under oath. I may not know how
Cheney got this number of people to lie under oath, but the fact is he did
it and nothing was ever done about it.
Three months after the
hearing, the June 14, 2004, LA Times reported: "The Pentagon admitted that
a $7 billion no-bid contract to extinguish oil fires in Iraq was awarded
to Halliburton after a political appointee from the Bush administration
recommended the company for the job."
The political appointee
referred to was Michael Mobbs, a special assistant to Undersecretary of
Defense Douglas Feith.
During the Summer of 2002, the Times wrote,
"Mobbs was in charge of the Pentagon's Energy Infrastructure Planning
Group (EIPG) to develop a plan for reconstructing Iraq's oil industry."
This is how the Halliburton contract got set up. In November 2002,
a Pentagon group led by Mobbs (under Cheney's instruction), came up with
the idea to pay Halliburton $1.9 million to develop a secret contingency
plan for handling the Iraqi oil industry. Its important to understand that
it was this order to develop a contingency plan, that ultimately led to
the firm being awarded the $7 billion oil infrastructure
contract.
To ensure that Halliburton would get the contract, Cheney
used the exact same strategy that he developed back when he was secretary
of defense during the first Bush Presidency. The way it works is actually
quite simple. Halliburton gets funding to create a market for its services
and then it becomes the logical company to carry out the plan when the
time for awarding contracts rolls around.
I'm sure no one needs
reminding of how well this plan paid off for Cheney when he left office in
1992 and soon thereafter became very gainfully employed with Halliburton.
Ten years later, his method of contract manipulation worked like a charm
again.
According to testimony at a House oversight hearing, by GAO
investigator, William Woods, it was discovered that Michael Mobbs even
acknowledged in a memo that the $1.9 million task order would uniquely
position Halliburton to win the far larger sole-source contract to
actually do the restoration work to Iraqi oil fields.
In fact,
Mobbs himself later admitted that he had described the contingency plan in
a meeting of the Deputies' Committee to an audience that including
Cheney's chief of staff, Scooter Libby, Rice's deputy national security
adviser, Steven Hadley (guy who took the fall for the 16 words about
uranium in Africa in Bush's state of the union address), the deputy
secretaries of state and defense, and the deputy director of the
CIA.
On March 8, 2003, Halliburton was awarded the $7 billion
contract and the war began on March 20, 2003.
When the topic of the
no-bid contract came up in the media, Bush claimed that it was merely a
deal to put out oil well fires. However, Pentagon officials were soon
forced to admit that it was a very big deal and would in fact amount to
billions of dollars for Halliburton. But even then, the story of the day
was that the contract was only temporary and would be replaced by
competitive bidding shortly.
After months of senseless delays, new
contracts were finally awarded on January 16, 2004 but once again,
Halliburton netted the top prize. The Parsons Corporation was awarded an
$800 million contract, but the $1.2 billion contract went to
Halliburton.
During a June 8, 2004, briefing to staff members of
the House Committee on Government Reform, Mobbs and Pentagon officials
were asked about the specific details of the contracting procedure that
was employed with Halliburton.
Before making a final decision,
Mobbs admitted that he briefed top officials from several executive
agencies, in the Deputies Committee, to make sure they had no objections.
According to Mobbs, White House Staff members were also at the meeting.
After that meeting, Mobb's said that a White House official told Douglas
Feith that the group did not object.
These disclosures prove that
Cheney and Bush were informed about the Halliburton contracts on at least
two key occasions during the procurement process.
So we've got all
these high level officials plotting together for 6 months to set up a plan
to hand Halliburton billions of dollars, and Bush and Cheney expect us to
believe that not one of these guys uttered a word about contracts to
either one of them.
And the media is no help.
During the
Clinton administration, it chased after a stupid story about a 20-year-old
land deal involving $100,000 (hardly the crime of the century) for 8 years
and to this day, I still have never figured out what they were expecting
to find exactly. I do know one thing, it wasn't that the Clintons and
their cronies were accused of funneling billions of tax dollars through
the bodies of our slain and injured young soldiers like what is going on
right now in the Bush administration.
The media in fact spends
very little effort and time investigating and reporting on the real crimes
within the current administration, even when they involve fraud and
corruption by officials at every level of government who are openly
handing our tax dollars to war profiteers to the tune of a billion dollars
a month.
I often find myself wondering whether the mainstream media
has been bought off entirely.
Who's Next In Line For
Retaliation?
The question is, who's next? Greenhouse wasn't the
only official to report on the illegal procurement practices of the Bush
administration. According to a report on an investigation of Halliburton
by the Government Accounting Office titled, Rebuilding Iraq: Fiscal Year
2003 Contract Award Procedures and Management Challenges, contracts worth
billions of dollars were awarded to Halliburton without full and open
competition, including Iraq's oil infrastructure contract.
The GAO
determined that the administration had violated procurement law when it
issued various task orders under already existing contracts and that out
of 11 task orders examined, more than half were awarded outside the scope
of their contracts.
As an example of the inept procurement process,
the GAO report described how "a military review board approved a six-month
renewal contract with Halliburton worth $587 million in just ten minutes
and based on only six pages of documentation."
After wasting
millions of tax dollars conducting the investigation, the GAO concluded
that the contracts should have never been awarded to the company in the
first place and yet Halliburton remains the number one contractor in Iraq.
Go figure.
Evelyn Pringle epringle05@yahoo.com
(Evelyn
Pringle is a columnist for Independent Media TV and an investigative
journalist focused on exposing corruption in government)
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