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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (2102)1/16/2002 11:18:32 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 15516
 
Bush faces flak over family links with winner of US defence contract
news.independent.co.uk

By Jason Nissé

13 January 2002

President George W Bush's administration, already on the
back foot over its connections with the collapsed energy giant
Enron, faces questions over a massive defence contract which
aided an investment firm with Bush family links.

Last September,
the Army signed a $665m (£460m) contract
to develop the Crusader Advanced Field Artillery System, a
$12bn weapons programme being built by United Defense
Industries (UDI). Last week, Mr Bush signed a defence
appropriation bill which included $487m for the programme.

This has helped Carlyle Group, the well-connected
Washington-based investment group, which controls UDI, to
float the defence contractor on the New York stock exchange.


Last month Carlyle sold $225m of shares in UDI in the flotation,
retaining a 54 per cent stake worth $560m. But questions are
being asked on Capitol Hill because of close links between
Carlyle and the Bush administration, and because a Pentagon
advisory panel recommended cancelling the CRUSADER.


Carlyle, which was founded in 1987 by David Rubenstein, a
lawyer who worked in the Carter administration, boasts
$12.5bn of investments.

Its chairman is Frank Carlucci, who was Defence Secretary in
the Reagan administration and is a close friend of Donald
Rumsfeld, the current Defence Secretary. The two were
members of the same wrestling team at Princeton University.
The chairman of Carlyle Europe is John Major, the former
British Prime Minister. An adviser to Carlyle in Asia is GEORGE
BUSH SNR., the former president and father of the current
president. And George W Bush himself was, for five years, on
the board of Caterair, a business Carlyle backed.


"It's the first time the President of the United States' father is
on the payroll of one of the largest US defence contractors,"

said Charles Lewis, a director of the Centre for Public Policy.
He is among critics who have raised concerns over the
about-turn on the Crusader contract. The programme was first
put forward four years ago, then costed at $23bn. It was
rejected in December 1997 by the Pentagon-appointed National
Defense Panel as being inappropriate for modern warfare, a
view reiterated last April despite UDI's shrinking the programme
to $12bn.

CARLYLE bought UDI for $850m in 1997. Last August it took
$290m in dividends out of the company and, in November,
$90m. Its total investment is showing a $315m PROFIT.


Carlyle denies that any of its managers, directors or advisers
used their influence to aid contracts for UDI.

But the Crusader questions come at a time when the president
is facing questions about his links to Enron.

And in a subtle twist, it has emerged that in its darkest hour,
when it was trying to raise money to stay afloat, the investment
firm ENRON turned to for help was Carlyle Group. Carlyle was
wise enough to reject the approach.


Also from the News section.

news.independent.co.uk