http://toogoodreports.com/column/general/hackworth/081401.htm



When The Cannons Shoot,
There's Brown & Root Services

By
Col. David H. Hackworth
  
Toogood Reports [Tuesday, August 14, 2001; 12:01 a.m. EST]
URL: http://ToogoodReports.com/

Candidate George Bush told the voters that if they got him into the White
House, he'd get our troops out of the Balkans. He promised to use our forces
for national security rather than as punching bags and border guards for the
ex-Yugoslavians.

During a recent visit to that very troubled spot, Bush did a 180 when he told
the troops at Camp Bondsteel, "There's still a lot of work to be done. ...
Our goal is to hasten the day when peace is self-sustaining, when local,
democratically elected authorities can assume full responsibility, and when
NATO forces can go home."

Why the about-face?

Perhaps it was part of his campaign plan. After all, LBJ used a similar ploy
when he told us we weren't going to Vietnam during his bid for the top job in
1964.

Or perhaps Bush's European power pals warned him they'd rain on his defense
shield if he pulled out of Kosovo and Bosnia and didn't help defuse the
ever-multiplying cluster-bombs in Macedonia. Meaning, play the Balkan game,
and we'll support Star Wars.

Or maybe the porkers at the Military-Industrial-Congressional Club pointed
out that our NATO grunts better keep the peace in the Balkans — or say
goodbye to those billions of bucks we spend annually to defend a Europe
searching for a reason to make NATO go away.

Or did the folks at Texas-based Halliburton Corp. convince the prez that the
Balkans were good for business? Its recent financial report brags:

"Revenues and operating income at Brown & Root Services (B & R) were
significantly higher than the prior year's quarter resulting from increased
activity levels supporting the U.S. Army in the Balkans."



Vice President Dick Cheney's former company is hauling in dough by the dump
truck just like the good ol' days when good ol' boy LBJ steered the
construction biz in Vietnam to Halliburton subsidiary B & R. Now the company,
which has scored billions since we first stuck our boots into the Balkans,
continues to benefit from the 12 major bases it has built there.

Take Camp Bondsteel, Kosovo's $350-million-plus base with annual operating
costs, including redundant B & R maintenance and services, of close to $50
million:

*The air-conditioned Tactical Operations Center, with its Video
Tele-Conferencing, big screens and other high-tech gizmos, is as sexy as the
Pentagon's War Room. Price tag: a half-million dollars.

*The gyms showcase the best from the West, such as Hammer Strength equipment.
Other morale builders include: free videos and movies, Anthony's Pizza,
Burger King, free sandwich shops — and the ever-popular cappuccino bar, the
perfect place to chill before refereeing the restless natives. Cost for these
goodies: more than a million dollars to build.

*The troops' living quarters — six men to a hut — have three showers per
unit and air conditioning. There's 180 of these little jewels at $107,000 a
pop.

*The "top notch" two main dining facilities, at about a million to build and
maintain,
•  are staffed by all local hires. Not only do our peacekeepers not
have to worry about dishpan hands — which might impact their ability to
direct traffic — from KP duty, the thousand-plus Kosovars who keep the place
spick-and-span with a vengeance also clean the troops' huts up to three times
a day.

*And Bondsteel's $35 million hospital will be one of Europe's premier
facilities when completed.

"B & R has been renovating everything," a sergeant there reports. "They
pulled out all the shower panels and replaced them with new ones ... the old
ones were more serviceable than ones you find in soldiers' quarters in the
U.S. All they needed, at most, was a paint job."

The longer we stay in the Balkans at four-star camps like Bondsteel, the more
dependent the locals will become and — contrary to Bush's goal — the less
likely anything good will come from our wearing out our forces — except for
those who have a vested interest in perpetuating NATO.

Almost 30 million Americans live below the poverty line. Maybe we should
declare most of the state of Maine, the Appalachians and East Los Angeles war
zones for openers and send B & R there. Wouldn't our tax dollars be better
spent?

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