Case of the Disappearing Article

By Vicky Davis

March 3, 2007



Yesterday, March 2, 2007, the Washington Post had a rather lengthy article on 
the scandal of outpatient care at Walter Reed.  It was a three-page article 
titled, “Bush Orders Review of Service Members Care” written by William 
Branigin.  

In the article it stated that the man in charge at the point the scandal broke 
was Major General George W. Weightman.  He had only held the command for six 
months.  He was fired by Lt. General Kevin C. Kiley, the man who held the 
position for two years prior to Gen. Weightman’s assignment.   In other words, 
Maj. General Weightman was set up to be the goat - to take the fall.  

Today, after settling in to write a commentary about the article and Major Gen. 
Weightman, naturally, I tried to bring up the article from the Washington Post 
website, but curiously, a different article came up.  Rather than “Bush Orders 
Review of Service Members Care”, the link pulled up the article, “Army 
Secretary Ousted”.

Being a programmer, that sort of thing sets me into debug mode.  Debugging 
computer programs involves testing to find patterns in the errors so that the 
problem can be precisely identified and fixed.   I found the problem fairly 
easily.  Somebody scrambled the indexes (unique identifiers) on the Washington 
Post’s News database.  

Now who would want that to happen and why?   Simple, logical deductive 
reasoning points to the military contracting agency and the contractors they 
are hiring to perform services for the government.  

How is it that I have the audacity to point the finger without conclusive 
proof, you say?  In the mysteriously disappearing article, “Bush Orders Review 
of Service Members Care”, it identifies IAP as being the facilities manager for 
Walter Reed’s outpatient facility and it notes that IAP - which is actually IAP 
Worldwide Services of Cape Canaveral, Fla. was also the contractor who was 
hired to deliver ice to the victims of hurricane Katrina.    This information 
came from a letter Henry Waxman, Chairman of the Committee on Oversight and 
Government Reform sent to General Weightman.  More important than that however 
is that the root cause of the problem was identified.  On page 2 of Waxman’s 
letter, it states the following:   



“It appears that over the past six years, the Defense Department has been 
engaged in a systematic effort to replace federal workers at Walter Reed with 
private companies for a host of functions, including facilities management, 
patient care, and even guard post duty entrance.  This effort occurred under 
the A-76 process, which is shorthand for OMB Circular A-76.



The A-76 process was an element of Vice President Gore’s reinventing government 
initiative.  The idea behind A-76 is to force federal employees to compete with 
the private sector for the jobs being performed by federal employees.  



The process of considering Walter Reed for A-76 competitions began in 2000.  
But the push to privatize support services there accelerated under President 
Bush’s “competitive sourcing” initiative which was launched in 2002.  According 
to OMB, the goal of President Bush’s competitive sourcing initiative was to 
allow the private sector to compete for nearly half of all federal jobs.”





So what’s the problem with contracting out federal jobs to the private sector 
contractors?  After all, corporations do things better and cheaper right?   
WRONG!   If a corporation is producing a product for sale, they will do it as 
cheaply as possible to maximize profits.  The proof is that all manufacturing 
is being moved to China because a Communist slave labor workforce can produce 
products far more cheaply than they can be produced in the United States.  

When a corporation contracts for a service however, maximum profit is achieved 
by bloating charges to the contract, adding paperwork requirements, reducing 
costs by reducing services and in general - gumming up the works - especially 
when they “own” the function as in the case of a facilities management 
contract.  The case of IAP and the traveling ice is classic:  



“Ninety-one thousand tons of ice cubes, that is, intended to cool food, 
medicine and sweltering victims of the storm. The ice would cost taxpayers more 
than $100 million, and most of it never would be delivered.”

…

After a day and a half in Montgomery, he was sent to Camp Shelby, in 
Mississippi. On Sept. 8, he was waved onward to Selma, Ala. And he was 
redirected two days later to Emporia, Va., along with scores of other 
frustrated drivers who had been following similarly circuitous routes.



Kostinec sat for an entire week at Emporia, his trailer burning fuel around the 
clock to keep the ice frozen, as FEMA officials studied whether supplies 
originally purchased for Katrina might be used for Hurricane Ophelia. In the 
end, only three of about 150 ice trucks were sent to North Carolina, he said. 
So Kostinec on Sept. 17 headed to Fremont, Neb., where he unloaded his ice into 
a government-rented storage freezer the next day.



"I dragged that ice around for 4,100 miles, and it never got used," Kostinec 
said. He was pleased to earn $4,500, double his usual paycheck. He was 
perplexed, however, by the government's apparent bungling.



Why wasn’t it delivered?   Because IAP made more money driving it around than 
they did by delivering it.



“Under the contract, the government pays about $12,000 for a 20-ton truckload 
of ice, delivered to its original destination. If the ice is moved farther, the 
price is $2.60 a mile, and a day of waiting costs up to $900, Holland said.”



Was this just a contract snafu?   Don’t get me started on this…. There are no 
mistakes when dealing with this kind of money.  There are only corrupt 
government contracting officials and contract marketing people.   And apologies 
and “Lessons Learned” doesn’t cut it.  The only “Lesson Learned” should be that 
everybody gets the ax when things like this happen.   The fact that the 
contractors are never barred from government contracts and it keeps happening 
over and over and over again reveals the extent of the corruption of 
government.  





Reinventing Government - Circular OMB A-76



The real problem here stems back to Al Gore and his ‘reinventing’ government 
initiative.  Setting up federal employees to compete with the private sector 
for their jobs was a strategic move to dismantle the government - to make way 
for a “market-based” governing structure - succinctly, a fascist takeover of 
government.  

Federal employees can’t compete with the private sector.  They are governed by 
the civil service system.  When services by federal employees are costed, their 
rates for services include the embedded facilities and overhead charges like 
pension and medical insurance.  Their competition in the private sector has the 
ability to low ball the first bid to get the contract and then raise the prices 
sky high after they ‘own’ the function.  This isn’t even Contracting 101, it’s 
more like the remedial course for dummies.  

Sometime back, I read something in which the author said something to the 
effect, “the real power to govern is in the hands of government employees”.  
And that is the truth.  Under a market-based (fascist) form of government, that 
power is transferred to the private sector corporations whose primary goal is 
profit.   In effect, it turns government into a corporation for profit - with 
citizens transformed into expendable slaves for the corporation.  

This “transformation” away from the American form of government, has been 
obvious as corporations lobby to replace the American people in our labor 
market with cheap imported replacements for maximum profit.   With a 
‘market-based’ government, you get ‘market-based’ propaganda - marketing of 
what they want you to think - rather than what is true.   “Buy my snake oil and 
your problems will be over”.   

In the U.S. today, the snake oil is “shortages of programmers, doctors, 
teachers, accountants, nurses, lawyers, engineers, motel maids, kitchen help - 
name the job and there are “shortages”.    Several years ago, I even heard Clay 
Johnson of the OMB say there was a “shortage” of government workers.  Corporate 
propaganda is why there is such a credibility gap between what government 
officials say about our economy and what we - the American people know to be 
true of the American economy.  Our economy is failing while government 
officials claim the economy is booming.  It's because of the corporate control 
over the non-glamorous, but critically important, administrative functions of 
government.    

Who is it that doesn’t understand that in order to solidify the power of 
government that private corporations now have, they must disempower and 
eliminate American citizens as a factor?    And by extension, who is it that 
doesn’t understand that in order to retain that control, the American military 
must also be replaced with corporate employees?    And that’s the answer to the 
question of what we are doing in Iraq.  We’re eliminating American government 
employees - American soldiers  -  so they can be replaced with private contract 
mercenaries.  And, if you think a little more, you should also be able to 
understand what happened on September 11, 2001 and everything else that has 
occurred in our country since then. 

So you see, outpatient care at Walter Reed is just the tip of the iceberg and 
the Washington Post not only shined a light on it, they set fire to it and the 
whole treacherous, treasonous scheme is about to meltdown - as long as we 
continue to apply the heat.    

 And the best for last, I just happened to have copied the entire Washington 
Post article, "Bush Orders Review of Service Members Care" for my files so the 
scrambling of the Washington Posts story indexes did nothing except to give me 
the best opening possible for the commentary I intended to write. 

  

More Info: 

 Privatizing War 
How affairs of state are outsourced to corporations beyond public control. 

By Ken Silverstein 
The Nation, July 28, 1997 

 

With little public knowledge or debate, the government has been dispatching 
private companies -- most of them with tight links to the Pentagon and staffed 
by retired armed forces personnel -- to provide military and police training to 
America's foreign allies. The government has also vastly expanded the use of 
private firms to support its own overseas military operations, including 
top-secret antidrug actions in Latin America, intelligence gathering and 
military assistance programs for U.S. clients. 

 

But based on the testimony of those who will speak -- and most agreed to talk 
only on background or not for attribution -- it is clear that dozens of 
companies, ranging from a $1 billion high-tech giant like SAIC to small-scale 
operations run by retired Green Berets, are offering military training and 
related assistance to foreign governments at the bidding of the United States. 
"The [private training] programs are designed to further our foreign policy 
objectives," says a former high-level official at the Defense Intelligence 
Agency (D.I.A.). "If the government doesn't sanction it, the companies don't do 
it. 

 

  But while this soldier-of-fortune element occupies a niche, it has had more 
and more difficulty landing anything beyond small-scale consulting contracts on 
counterterrorism or deals to provide protection for visiting V.I.P.s. For 
projects of scale, the freelance warriors have lost out badly to well-connected 
corporations stocked with elite government and military retired officials. As 
one Pentagon staffer told me, "Privatization is another way to reward the 
alumni." It's the revolving door all over again: 



  § At M.P.R.I., twenty-two corporate officers are former high-ranking military 
figures. These include Gen. Carl Vuono, U.S. Army Chief of Staff during the 
invasion of Panama and the Gulf War; Gen. Ed Soyster, former head of the 
D.I.A.; and Gen. Frederick Kroesen, former commander of the U.S. Army in 
Europe. 
   

  § Vinnell is owned by B.D.M., a Beltway megacompany controlled by the Carlyle 
Group, an investment firm headed by former Secretary of State James Baker, 
former White House budget chief Richard Darman and former Secretary of Defense 
Frank Carlucci. B.D.M.'s president, Philip Odeen, headed the Pentagon task 
force on reshaping the military for the twenty-first century. 
   

  § Board members at SAIC have included two former defense secretaries, William 
Perry and Melvin Laird, and two former C.I.A. chiefs, John Deutch and Robert 
Gates. 

Click the HERE for the rest of the article

http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/silver.htm

http://www.channelingreality.com/The_Coup/Contracting/case_of_the_disappearing_article.htm

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