So in the last month the cost has gone up, probably because they have more
work to do now that the sanctions have been lifted and legal oil is actually
being shipped out of Iraq.

The first "no bid" contract was awarded to Kellogg Brown & Root in 1992, and
lasted until 1999, where the Clinton administration got an extension on the
contract until 2004. So the current contract for Kellogg Brown & Root which
is the one this article complains the most about was awarded by the Clinton
Administration.
(http://www.bayarea.com/mld/cctimes/news/special_packages/iraq/dispatches/59
72319.htm)


Here is how the system works, which is very similar to other long term
contracts I am personally familiar with:

This no-bid contract thing isn't exactly what it sounds like. There is a
contract which says Halliburton is the primary supplier of X services. They
agree to Y terms. In much the same way a large corporation purchases office
supplies for instance. The terms in Y probably include basics costs for the
services needed.

The State of Kentucky has a contract with Cardinal Office Supplies, they
agreed on terms, but there isn't a limit to what the state can spend, except
of course what the legislature budgets for office supplies, but that is not
something Cardinal has any involvement in.

The state contract stipulates that the state must acquire all office
supplies from Cardinal unless Cardinal does not offer the product, or it is
needed immediately, or a few other things.

The contract with Halliburton is the same way. The Military has had a
contract with them for the past 11 years, a new contract was awarded
recently.

If the Military has to deploy troops tomorrow, they need to have a support
agreement in place to handle it. The contract with Halliburton does just
that. It provides a way for the US Military to deploy and worry about the
important things, like operations on the battle field. If we have to waste
two months with a public bidding process, it gives the enemy time to fortify
defenses, and hell, they can look at the bid and use that to potentially
determine some strategies. That is a big maybe, but it is still possible.

What I find most amusing, when these same contracts were awarded under the
Clinton administration, nobody seems to care, when the same things occurred
under the Clinton administration, nobody seems to care. If the current
administration does exactly the same thing, then it looks fishy.
 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Dana Tierney [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, June 18, 2003 11:01 AM
> To: CF-Community
> Subject: well now
> 
> I was cruising around working on wrting up an explanation for Nick of why
> the Iraqi oil thing smells so much like a conspiracy to me, and I came
> across this little gem, which was so special I just had to post it all on
> its own.
> 
> http://www.khilafah.com/home/category.php?DocumentID=7517&TagID=2
> 
> The source is obviously Arab and a fast check didnt reveal any ownership
> info, but... it's highly interesting, whether you look at it as fact or as
> propaganda.
> 
> Dana
> 
> But I don't make films
> But if I did they'd have a samurai - Bare Naked Ladies
> 
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