"Obama Confronts a Choice on Copters" read this week's New York Times
. The President soon "will have to decide whether to proceed with some
of the priciest aircraft in the world -- a new fleet of 28 Marine One
helicopters that will each cost more than the last Air Force
One....The choice confronting Mr. Obama encapsulates the tension
between two imperatives of his nascent presidency, the need to meet
the continuing threats of an age of terrorism and the demand for
austerity in a period of economic hardship."

This is a gross misrepresentation of the choice Obama faces.
Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn) and others have alleged that the
contract for 28 Marine One helicopters was awarded to the Italian firm
Finmeccanica as a thank you for Italy's participation in the Iraq War.
The evidence, however, indicates that the contract was more
specifically a payoff to the Italian government for supplying the
forged documents showing Saddam had obtained weapons grade uranium
from Niger. President Bush famously used this fraudulent "yellowcake"
intelligence to justify launching the war.

When reviewing the helicopter contract, President Obama can either be
actively complicit by continuing with Finmeccanica; he can duck and
cover by simply switching to the proper supplier, Sikorsky; or he can
use the mandated review of this purchase decision to root out those in
military, the aerospace industry and Congress who were willing to
compromise the security of all subsequent American presidents so that
Bush could cover up his core war crime.

Officials up and down the chain who awarded the contract knew that
they were doing something extraordinarily wrong. The rigged bidding
process bypassed, for example, Marine One pilots who repeatedly sought
to give input. They had many safety concerns. At the time of the bid,
the helicopter chosen was not certified to fly in the U.S. It was an
old model made of heavy materials; this flew in the face of why the
President supposedly needed a new fleet: i.e., so many extra security
devices had been added to Marine One after 9/11, it was struggling to
lift off. In its losing bid, the Connecticut-based Sikorsky, which had
manufactured virtually all presidential helicopters since Eisenhower
first ordered one, proposed a new model made of much lighter,
composite materials.

But the Marine One pilots' prime objection, which was raised
repeatedly by many other officials in private, was national security.
Finmeccanica was doing business with Iran, China and Libya. Why
outsource so sensitive a project? At the time of the bid, the security
clearance necessary to manufacture and maintain Marine One required
U.S. citizenship and prohibited Marine One team members from being
married to citizens of another country.

After the bid was awarded, John Pike, head of GlobalSecurity.org, told
us: "Analyzing the defense industry for nearly 30 years, I try to stay
calm and nonpartisan. But the Finmeccanica deal raised every hair on
my neck. Apparently no one else sees the irony in a foreign military
contractor building Marine One and Ayatollah One."

Many others did see the irony but were intimidated or paid off. For
example, right after Finmeccanica won the contract, Kim Weldon, the
daughter of then-Congressman Curt Weldon (R - Pa), landed a full-time
job with the company. Previously she'd been a social worker.
Finmeccanica also paid consulting money to Weldon's real estate agent,
who subsequently pled guilty for attempting to destroy bribery
evidence sought by the FBI. Weldon's chief of staff, his wife and
other Weldon aides were given free trips to Italy. The chief of staff
subsequently pled guilty for failing to disclose income funneled to
his wife. Like many other Congressmen, however, Weldon looks as if he
will escape unscathed.

At Finmeccanica promotional events, Weldon was accompanied by Giovanni
Castellaneta, the Italian ambassador to United States and
simultaneously a Finmeccanica vice president. Today Castellaneta sits
on Finmeccanica's Board of Directors on behalf of the Italian
Government. Ambassador Castellaneta is the key figure in Italy's
exchange of forged intelligence for U.S. defense dollars.

According to Italy's La Repubblica, Nicola Pollari, the head of the
Italian spy agency SISMI, had failed to dispel the CIA's misgivings
about the authenticity of the yellowcake papers. Giovanni Castellaneta
then arranged for Pollari to bypass the CIA and meet directly with
then-National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice and Stephen Hadley,
Rice's chief deputy at the time. The meeting took place on Sept. 9,
2002, in the White House, and was confirmed by White House officials.

"It is completely out of protocol for the head of a foreign
intelligence service to circumvent the C.I.A.," former C.I.A. officer
Philip Giraldi told Vanity Fair's Craig Ungar. "It is uniquely
unusual. In spite of lots of people having seen these documents, and
having said they were not right, they went around them."

"To me there is no benign interpretation of this," Melvin Goodman, a
former C.I.A. and State Department analyst said to Ungar. "At the
highest level it was known the documents were forgeries. Stephen
Hadley knew it. Condi Rice knew it. Everyone at the highest level
knew."

Nonetheless, after the White House meeting that Castellaneta arranged
for Pollari, the story of the yellowcake shipments to Saddam was
treated as hard proof despite multiple attempts by America's top spies
to discredit it.

Especially when no WMDs were found, President Bush needed to find a
way he could control to repay the Italians for their help. Bush
pressed for a new fleet of Marine Ones. He demanded the contract be
awarded through an expedited bidding process because of heightened
security concerns. A senior Finmeccanica executive told us that long
before the Navy announced the award in January 2005, he and other
company executives were told that the fix was in.

Finmeccanica hid the payoff by cutting U.S. companies Bell Helicopter
and Lockheed Martin into the deal. Although Lockheed doesn't make
helicopters, it acted as the ostensible lead partner.

"Lockheed pimped itself out," says Lt. Col. Gene T. Boyer, a retired
Army pilot who flew three presidents in Marine One for 10 years. Boyer
thinks the mushrooming of the Marine One fleet is a disgrace. "Many of
the Marine Ones are used just to ferry around Washington VIPs who brag
afterwards that they've flown in the same chopper used by the
president."

Boyer believes that the Pentagon officials and members of Congress who
pushed this contract through should be investigated not just because
of the massive cost overruns, but "because they didn't cover the
country's back."

The ballooning of Finmeccanica's contract from $6.1 billion to $11.2
billion ($400 million per chopper) was predictable given Bush's push
to bypass procedures and sign a deal with Finmeccanica. The massive
cost overruns now compel the Secretary of Defense to re-certify to
Congress that this acquisition program is essential to national
security. It isn't. President Obama needs to appoint an independent,
public commission to examine who drove the Marine One procurement
process, which many officials say (off the record) was the most
secretive, rigged award they've ever seen. Put all officials involved
on the record, and under oath. Rarely does one bloated contract
connect both to military fraud and to the corruption of our
intelligence agencies. Fiscal austerity and our future safety demand a
full accounting.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Adobe® ColdFusion® 8 software 8 is the most important and dramatic release to 
date
Get the Free Trial
http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;207172674;29440083;f

Archive: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/message.cfm/messageid:289156
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/groups/cf-community/subscribe.cfm
Unsubscribe: 
http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=11502.10531.5

Reply via email to