|
Army reassigns official who criticized Halliburton
deal
WASHINGTON (AP) — A high-ranking Army Corps of
Engineers official who publicly criticized the Pentagon's decision
to award Halliburton Co. a no-bid contract for work in Iraq has been
demoted, officials said Monday.
Bunnatine H. Greenhouse, who had been the Corps
of Engineers' top procurement official since 1997, was removed,
effective Saturday, for what Corps of Engineers officials called a
poor job performance. Her lawyer, however, said her removal
constitutes "blatant discrimination" and violates an earlier
agreement with the Army to suspend her demotion until "a sufficient
record" pertaining to her complaints is complete.
"The failure to abide by prior commitments and
the circumstances surrounding Ms. Greenhouse's removal are the
hallmark of illegal retaliation," her attorney, Michael D. Kohn,
wrote in the letter to Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld.
"Her removal will send a message to all
concerned that if they dare stand up to corrupting influences within
the Army contracting world their careers will be destroyed," he
added.
Greenhouse was reassigned to a lesser job in
the Corps of Engineers and removed from the Senior Executive
Service, the top rank of civilian government employees.
Rumsfeld's chief spokesman, Lawrence Di Rita,
referred questions about the Greenhouse matter to the Army.
Carol Sanders, a spokeswoman for the Corps of
Engineers, did not immediately return phone calls seeking comment.
Kris Kolesnik, executive director of the
National Whistleblower Center, which is advising Greenhouse on
contacts with members of Congress and the news media, said in an
interview that Kohn was informed by the Pentagon's Inspector
General's office that it is still preparing a report based on
Greenhouse's allegations.
Greenhouse went public last year with her
criticism of Iraq-related work awarded to Halliburton by the Corps
of Engineers. Her main objection was the issuance to Halliburton
subsidiary Kellogg, Brown & Root of a no-bid, five-year contract
to restore Iraqi oil fields shortly before the Iraq war began in
2003.
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or
redistributed. |