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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Skywatcher who wrote (314081)11/4/2002 1:38:44 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Frank R. Lautenberg's entry into the New Jersey Senate race at 78 has generated a few jokes. Al Franken observed that "Lautenberg is young enough to be Strom Thurmond's son but old enough to be Thurmond's daughters' grandfather."

After Walter F. Mondale, 74, got into the Minnesota race last week, Chris Matthews, the television host, said: "I thought a great bumper sticker for Fritz Mondale could be, `Vote for Mondale. He's younger than Lautenberg.' "



To: Skywatcher who wrote (314081)11/4/2002 1:39:25 PM
From: Skywatcher  Respond to of 769670
 
And the great DICK with his conflicting powers:
Conflict Of Interest For Vice President?
By David Lazarus
San Francisco Chronicle

Sunday, 3 November, 2002

Let's say there's a businessman -- in China, for example -- with stellar public-sector connections. He
wins billions of dollars in government contracts for his company. Let's say this businessman becomes a
high-ranking government official himself. And let's say the government begins throwing its enemies into
prison without trials or access to attorneys.

Would anyone be surprised if the official's former company wins the contract for building all those new
prison cells? Probably not. We'd just assume that's how things work in a place like Beijing. Only this isn't a
hypothetical situation, and it's not really about China. We're actually talking about the U.S. government and
an American company. And the official in question is none other than Vice President Dick Cheney.

Cheney, of course, previously served as chief executive officer of Halliburton, the Dallas oil-services
giant. Less well-known is that Halliburton owns a subsidiary called Kellogg, Brown & Root, which is one of
the Defense Department's leading contractors.

KBR, as the company's called, is profiting handsomely from America's war on terror. Among other
things, it's responsible for feeding most of the troops at Bagram Air Base, the U.S. military's headquarters
in Afghanistan.

KBR's contract to provide support services for the Army lasts 10 years and contains no limit on
spending. It could end up being worth billions. KBR has a similar deal with the Navy.

In July, the government announced that KBR had been awarded a $9.7 million contract to build an
additional 204-unit detention center at the U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where hundreds of
"enemy combatants" have been held since January.

This is on top of $16 million received by KBR in February to get the Guantanamo prison facility off the
ground, as well as another $7 million in April to expand the compound.

Most of the detainees have been denied any form of due process since being taken prisoner. This is
slippery stuff. Cheney plays a central role in shaping Washington's response to the Sept. 11 attacks. A
company he once ran benefits directly from the government's actions.

"You can't get a clearer example of conflict of interest," said Bill Allison, managing editor for the Center
for Public Integrity, a nonpartisan government watchdog group in Washington, DC. "It's a troubling
phenomenon, to say the least."

That's not how Halliburton sees it. The company says Cheney currently plays no role whatsoever in any
business dealings between Halliburton and the government. As for the $3.8 billion in government contracts
and loans received by the company during Cheney's tenure as CEO, from 1995 to 2000, Halliburton
spokeswoman Wendy Hall stressed that Cheney steered clear of all defense matters. "He didn't want the
appearance of being influential over any contracts awarded to KBR," she said.

Allison at the Center for Public Integrity all but laughed off this claim. "It's beyond belief that the CEO is
not involved in all aspects of the company's business," he said. Indeed, it does seem a stretch to think that
a former U.S. defense secretary, with a Rolodex stuffed full of Pentagon contacts, would have nothing to do
with his company's lucrative defense business.

In any case, KBR did quite well under Cheney's watch. The company's defense contracts during the
period ranged from $10 million for removal of hazardous waste at military bases and $5 million for
maintenance of Florida missile facilities to $470 million for supporting U.S. forces in Bosnia and Croatia.

Moreover, documents uncovered by the Center for Public Integrity show that Halliburton received $1.5
billion in government loans and loan guarantees during the five years Cheney was CEO. That compares
with just $100 million during the previous five years.

And the government contracts keep rolling in. Last year, for example, KBR was one of a number of
defense-industry heavyweights handed a $5 billion government contract to dispose of outmoded weapons of
mass destruction in the former Soviet Union.

In March, KBR received an almost $47 million contract to provide support services at the Naval Air
Facility in El Centro (Imperial County), not far from the Mexican border.

And in August, a team of companies led by KBR received a $725 million, five- year contract to provide
maintenance services at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, the country's premiere nuclear
weapons lab.

Cheney retired from Halliburton in August 2000. He received $4.3 million in deferred compensation that
year, plus $806,332 in salary. He subsequently sold more than $40 million in stock options. Even though
he's no longer in Halliburton's executive suite, Cheney reported on his 2001 tax return that he received
nearly $1.6 million in deferred compensation from the company last year.

Cheney is still receiving deferred compensation from Halliburton, but neither the company nor the White
House would specify how large his payment will be this year or how long the payments will continue. This
is cash that he's already earned. Yet it's also cash that Halliburton is accruing in part from its activities in
Guantanamo Bay and Afghanistan.

"He's receiving money from the government and money from a private-sector company with government
contracts," said Allison. "Whose payroll is he on?" The answer: Both of them. And that couldn't be right.
CC



To: Skywatcher who wrote (314081)11/4/2002 1:47:25 PM
From: MSI  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
"Bush has a "fetish for secrecy," Vanderbilt University professor emeritus Hugh Davis Graham, now
deceased, told the National Journal earlier this year. "

... with much to be secret about.

"Graham was among the plaintiffs of a lawsuit challenging President Bush's executive order to limit public access to the records of former presidents. The lawsuit, filed last November by the nonprofit group Public Citizen, contends that the executive order violates the Presidential Records Act of 1978 [see Dec. 10, 2001, Register]. "

vanderbilt.edu

"At the time of his death, Graham was the co-organizer of an international conference on the history of the Reagan presidency that took place March 28-30 at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Thomas Schwartz, associate professor of history, was among those who participated. "