I'd just like to note that after a recent discussion
in which a couple list-members got all pissy at the
suggestion that they would not post articles to this
list about students being prohibited from wearing
pro-life T-Shirts at school that I am absolutely
shocked, *shocked* I tell you, that nobody has
forwarded this news item to the List so far....

JDG

Halliburton out of the running 
 
Dick Cheney's former employer won't have lead role in
reconstructing Iraq
March 31, 2003: 7:15 AM EST 
 
http://money.cnn.com/2003/03/28/news/companies/Halliburton/index.htm


NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Halliburton, the energy and
construction company once run by Vice President Dick
Cheney, is no longer in the running for a $600 million
contract to rebuild post-war Iraq, according to the
United States Agency for International Development. 

The development is likely to spare Cheney, who was
Halliburton's CEO from 1995-2000, and the Bush
administration from conflict-of-interest criticism. 

A spokesperson for USAID, Ellen Yount, said there are
two remaining firms bidding on the contract. No
decision has been made on who will be awarded it, she
said. 


Halliburton, which declined to comment, could still be
awarded a sub-contractor role. 

Newsweek reported that it was unclear whether
Halliburton took itself out of the running for the
contract, was asked by the Bush administration to do
so, or whether its bid was simply not deemed
competitive. 

Post-war Iraq will require massive rebuilding centered
on reconstructing oil wells. The work will also
include emergency repair of electrical supply
facilities, water and sanitation systems, roads and
bridges, public buildings such as hospitals and
schools, irrigation structures and ports. 

Newsweek reported that a Cheney spokeswoman, Cathie
Martin, said the vice president "hadn't even heard"
that Halliburton would not be awarded the
reconstruction contract and added, "The vice president
has nothing to do with these contracts." 

Cheney sold his Halliburton shares when he re-entered
politics as Bush's running mate. He held on to some
options, but promised to donate all profits to
charity. 

Timothy Beans, the chief acquisition officer for the
U.S. Agency for International Development, would not
identify the final bidders on the contract, the weekly
magazine said. 

Halliburton has won one Iraq-related job. The
company's Kellogg Brown & Root unit this week was
awarded a contract by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
to put out oil fires and make emergency repairs to
Iraq's oil infrastructure. Halliburton wouldn't
speculate about the deal's monetary value. 

Shares of Dallas-based Halliburton (HAL: Research,
Estimates) fell 6 cents to $21.44 Friday.   
 




Halliburton Out of the Running 
 
The construction firm once run by Dick Cheney won�t
get a big Iraq contract  
 
By Michael Hirsh
NEWSWEEK WEB EXCLUSIVE 
   http://www.msnbc.com/news/892259.asp
 
 
      March 28 �  After taking some political heat,
Halliburton is stepping out of the kitchen. The giant
energy and construction firm once managed by Vice
President Dick Cheney is no longer in the running for
a $600 million rebuilding contract in postwar Iraq,
NEWSWEEK has learned.   

        TIMOTHY BEANS, THE chief acquisition officer
for the U.S. Agency for International Development,
said in an interview that Halliburton is not one of
the two finalists to be prime contractor for the
reconstruction of Iraq, though the Houston-based firm
could take part as a subcontractor. The contract is to
be awarded next week.
       Halliburton was one of five large U.S.
companies that the Bush administration asked in
mid-February to bid on the 21-month contract, which
involves the reconstruction of Iraq�s critical
infrastructure, including roads, bridges and
hospitals, after the war. But the administration has
come under increasingly strident criticism abroad and
at the United Nations for offering postwar contracts
only to U.S. companies. Many of the questions have
been raised about Halliburton, which Cheney headed
from 1995 until 2000. On Monday, the U.S. Army
announced it had awarded a contract to extinguish oil
fires and restore oil infrastructure in Iraq to
Halliburton�s Kellogg, Brown & Root engineering and
construction division. Rep. Henry Waxman, a California
Democrat, later sent a letter to Lt. Gen. Robert
Flowers, commander of the Army Corps of Engineers,
questioning why other oil-service companies had not
been allowed to bid.
        Allegations of a too-close-for-comfort
relationship with corporate America have long dogged
Cheney and other Bush administration officials, as
well as insiders. On Thursday, leading hawk Richard
Perle stepped down as chairman of the Defense Policy
Board, a Pentagon panel of unpaid outside advisers,
after congressional Democrats raised questions about
his relationship with Global Crossing, a telecom firm
that had sought his assistance in winning government
approval for a deal with an Asian conglomerate.
Cheney�s spokeswoman, Cathie Martin, said Friday she
�hadn�t even heard� that Halliburton would not be
awarded the reconstruction contract and added, �The
vice president has nothing to do with these
contracts.�
       What remains unclear is whether Halliburton
took itself out of the running for the contract, was
asked by the Bush administration to do so or whether
its bid was simply not deemed competitive. USAID�s
Beans would not elaborate on why Halliburton did not
make it onto the finalists� list, but he suggested
that Halliburton chose to play a subcontracting role.
And Beans said that Andrew Natsios, director of the
aid agency�which is handing out most of the postwar
contracts�is keen to counter any allegations of
favoritism or political influence. �If I got a phone
call from anybody putting any political pressure on
me, I would report it immediately to Natsios, as I�ve
been instructed to do,� said Beans. �He said if
anybody calls you, if there�s any pressure whatsoever,
you tell me immediately � No one has called me on
this. This is going to be done completely openly,
transparently and honestly.� USAID officials also
emphasize that bidding is reviewed by two
�independent� panels composed of engineers and career
civil servants. 
       Wendy Hall, a Halliburton spokeswoman, referred
all questions about the contract to USAID. But a U.N.
official who follows the issue told NEWSWEEK that the
Iraq reconstruction contract probably wasn�t worth the
bad publicity for Halliburton, which depends on
maintaining a favorable image both in Washington and
the Arab world (where it gets much of its oil-related
business, and where the war is increasingly
unpopular). �This kind of political controversy was
not in their corporate interests,� he said.
Halliburton may prefer to quietly work as a
subcontractor rather than be in the spotlight as prime
contractor, the official suggested.
       Beans said USAID had originally hoped to
announce the reconstruction contract on Wednesday and
has delayed the announcement until �realistically,
early next week.� He said the contract, part of $2.4
billion allocated for relief and reconstruction in
Bush�s supplemental budget request, has been delayed
mainly because of last-minute complications raised by
lawyers for the two final bidders, whom he would not
identify. (Among the other U.S. companies asked to bid
were Fluor Corp., Washington Group, Bechtel Group,
Louis Berger Group and Parsons Corp.) The snag
involves settling questions about liability issues if
a contractor accidentally uncovers and releases�by
digging or other means�poison gas or other weapons of
mass destruction during reconstruction, he said. 
  
       The controversy over the awarding of the first
postwar contracts only to U.S. companies is part of a
larger ongoing issue of whether Iraq�s transformation
will be more U.S.-led or multilateral. On Thursday,
Bush and his No. 1 ally, British Prime Minister Tony
Blair, dickered at Camp David over how central a role
the United Nations would play in postwar Iraq. Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who has taken the lead on
postwar as well as wartime issues, is pushing a plan
that relies on speed, efficiency and U.S. �unity of
command� in contrast to United Nations-led
nation-building efforts in places like Bosnia, Kosovo
and East Timor. Blair, in part because he is under
terrific political pressure at home to take a
multilateral approach, has effectively become the
spokesman for U.N. interests in Washington.  
 

        USAID officials say the practical demands of
rebuilding Iraq quickly, and the legal obligation they
are under to favor U.S. firms�Congress wrote such
�aid-tying� preferences into the law�have drastically
limited their choices. They point especially to the
need for speed, which in turn requires security
clearances; generally only U.S. companies have such
clearances. Also, invoking a legal exception called
�impairment of foreign assistance� allowed the
administration to circumvent normal bidding
procedures, which can take many months. �It�s where
people cannot wait,� said Beans. �Remember, these were
part of the front-end rush job to get support in. We
couldn�t piddle around ... When we were still before
the United Nations, we didn�t know how this was going
to go. We were in contingency planning. A $600 million
procurement is huge. Normally it would take us five to
six months to get it done. They said you�ve got two
months.� The stakes are bigger than that, actually:
the prime contractor is likely to get a lot more than
$600 million funneled its way in future extensions of
the contract.
       Even big British construction firms like
Costain and Balfour Beatty have not been asked to bid
as prime contractors, even though British troops are
fighting alongside American soldiers and have secured
the major port of Umm Qasr, which is to be part of the
rebuilding project. Earlier this week, USAID awarded a
nearly $5 million contract to a Seattle-based company,
Stevedoring Services, to run Umm Qasr. British firms
had expressed interest in the contract.
       Natsios says that in an effort to broaden the
participants he has invoked a special provision of the
law opening up subcontracts to friendly countries. He
and other aid officials note that up to about 50
percent of the work is going to be subcontracted, as
is happening in Afghanistan. As of yet, however, no
foreign firms have been awarded even a subcontracting
role in Iraq, USAID officials said. Last week, British
cabinet minister Clare Short traveled to Washington
and complained to Natsios and other administration
officials about the contracting process. 
        Beans said the war�s slower-than-expected
progress has at least one silver lining for him. �I�ve
been under incredible pressure to get these things
done,� he said. �The fact that they�ve been slowed
down a little bit has given me a little extra time.�
       
       � 2003 Newsweek, Inc.
          
   


=====
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
John D. Giorgis               -                  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Tonight I have a message for the brave and oppressed people of Iraq:
 Your enemy is not surrounding your country � your enemy is ruling your  
 country. And the day he and his regime are removed from power will be    
           the day of your liberation."  -George W. Bush 1/29/03

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