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


To: sylvester80 who wrote (408113)5/21/2003 12:49:04 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
Congress Curious About Iraq Deals
By Edward Epstein
The San Francisco Chronicle

Tuesday 20 May 2003

Washington -- Top Republicans and Democrats in Congress are calling for greater scrutiny of
the American effort to rebuild Iraq, and some want to investigate how huge contracts were
awarded to Bechtel Corp. of San Francisco and Halliburton Co., a Houston firm once run by
Vice President Dick Cheney.

Democrats such as Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, a presidential candidate, and Rep.
Sherrod Brown of Ohio expect that their calls for an investigation will be dismissed as attempts
to score partisan points by embarrassing President Bush. But GOP Rep. Henry Hyde of Illinois,
usually a firm Bush ally and chairman of the House International Relations Committee, said he
is concerned with the "lack of transparency" that has surrounded the reconstruction program for
postwar Iraq.

Hyde, speaking at a hearing Thursday, said a lack of basic information about the Pentagon's
Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Affairs has hamstrung congressional efforts to find
out what's going on, who's responsible, how contracts are awarded and the effectiveness of
efforts to restore law and order as well as basic services in Iraq.

"I understand, for example, that the very charter of the Office of Reconstruction and
Humanitarian Affairs is still classified as national security information," Hyde said in asking for a
General Accounting Office review of the Iraq situation.

Saying he is particularly concerned about reports of continuing lawlessness, Hyde asked the
GAO to "monitor the reconstruction effort in detail, concentrating on the efforts to provide
security and interim relief to the people of Iraq and on the rebuilding of its economy and political
system."

"The committee expects the full cooperation of every element of the executive branch in the
GAO's efforts," he added.

Hyde didn't mention the Bechtel or Halliburton contracts. But Lieberman did, zeroing in on
Halliburton's Kellogg, Brown & Root subsidiary. Cheney headed Halliburton until 2000 and has
no contact with it now, his office says.

But Cheney received $162,352 from the company in 2002, part of a five-year deferred
repayment of his pay the last year he served as chairman.

In calling for Senate Governmental Affairs Committee hearings, Lieberman questioned
Halliburton's no-bid contract to oversee rebuilding Iraq's oil fields. "Only through complete
disclosure can we ensure that the American people will have confidence in how their government
chose to award those contracts," Lieberman said. The committee chairwoman, Sen. Susan
Collins, R-Maine, will have to decide whether to hold such hearings.

Halliburton has an Army Corps of Engineers' contract valued at up to $7 billion for the oil field
work in which no other bids were sought. It received that huge contract after winning a far
smaller, competitive bid to draw up a contingency plan before the Iraq invasion for rebuilding the
oil industry.

Brown, at the House hearing, said the Army Corps estimated that Halliburton would get a
maximum of $800 million for its work under the second contract, which could be rebid within a
year.

"I don't take away the qualifications of Halliburton or Kellogg, Brown & Root. They are
reputable companies. It didn't matter though if other companies were capable of doing a job they
were never asked," Brown said.

Brown also raised questions about Bechtel's contract from the U.S. Agency for International
Development, valued at up to $680 million, to rebuild everything from schools to wastewater
systems and the electricity grid. The firm won the contract over eight other companies in a
limited competitive- bidding process.

Bechtel's board includes former Secretary of State George Shultz, and its chief executive
officer is Riley Bechtel, whom Bush has named to the administration's Export Council.

Like other administration officials who have said the contracting process was without political
favoritism and delivered highly qualified firms, Wendy Chamberlin, assistant USAID
administrator, defended the limited bidding process for the Bechtel contract. She said it was
vital to have the contractor in place as the war ended to begin work quickly. The importance of
speed short- circuited the regular bidding process, which can take six months or more, she
said.

In San Francisco, Bechtel spokesman Jonathan Marshall said the company will cooperate
fully with Congress. "We have nothing to hide. Our record will show we are the most qualified
company for this highly complex work," he said.
CC



To: sylvester80 who wrote (408113)5/21/2003 1:30:16 PM
From: CYBERKEN  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Virtually the ENTIRE American public knows more than Buffet. Haven't you been watching him make a fool of himself on the scale of a Phillips or a Shepard, for DECADES? The man is hopelessly retarded outside of his speciality. And he's only one up on YOU because, in his narrow speciality, he is NOT...