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A Look at Your Tax Dollars at Work in Baghdad

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by wnes, May 16, 2006.

  1. wnes

    wnes Contributing Member

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    http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2006/05/15/america_in_baghdad.php

    America In Baghdad
    David Phinney
    May 15, 2006

    [David Phinney is a Washington, D.C.-based journalist and broadcaster whose work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, The New York Times and on ABC and PBS. He can be contacted at: phinneydavid@yahoo.com.]

    Secret contract deals, fraud, ineptitude and shoddy work costing billions of dollars have been a centerpiece of our troubles in Iraq since the eve of the 2003 invasion.

    Suspicions of favoritism began with Halliburton and its small $2 million task order to extinguish possible oil well fires that Saddam Hussein might ignite to dispirit coalition forces. The contract quickly steamrolled into a no-bid multi-billion deal to repair Iraq’s oil infrastructure once the March 2003 invasion was complete.

    As the war dragged on, we found that Halliburton was not alone. Dozens of politically-connected U.S. corporations soon received what appeared to be sweetheart deals resulting in poor performance, little oversight and inflated salaries. The Coalition Provisional Authority and Washington officials created a “free-fraud zone,” according to Frank Willis, a former CPA advisor.

    More than three years later, it’s clear that contracts large and small were regularly agreed to with little written record, proper competition or follow-through to ensure that work was performed.

    This is not news. The contracting process, paid for with billions of dollars in U.S. taxpayer money and seized Iraqi assets controlled by the CPA, has been repeatedly found to be so lacking in accountability that it’s difficult to determine how the money was spent. Transparency International predicts the Iraq debacle may be found as “the biggest corruption scandal in history."

    What is news is that the Bush administration continues to follow the same dysfunctional contracting methods and lack of transparency with one of its most recent and visible projects in Baghdad—the building of the new U.S. embassy.

    When the U.S. State Department awarded the $592-million embassy deal last summer, officials reasoned they needed to keep the contract secret because of their concerns for the safety of work crews. Others believe it has more to do with keeping the lid on an overpriced, behind-the-scenes political deal with a building contractor that has been accused repeatedly of coercing low-paid laborers from poor Asian countries to work in Iraq against their better judgment.

    Keep the contract secret? It’s a joke.

    After all, the project is rising up like an 800-pound gorilla in Baghdad’s Green Zone. The Green Zone is the safe zone—relatively speaking—and anything that takes place there is for all to see. Construction cranes tower over the 104-acre construction site as 700 non-Iraqi laborers toil below to build a fortress-like structure with all the makings of a high-tech Fort Apache on steroids. How could anyone miss it?

    Located along the Tigris River, the sprawling embassy site is the size of Rome’s Vatican City and two-thirds of Washington’s national mall. When completed in June 2007, the facility will boast of its own Marine base, a helicopter pad, 15-foot thick walls, six apartment buildings and 1,000 residents. The price tag may well reach $1 billion. When all is said and done, it will be the largest embassy ever built to wave the U.S. flag.

    But the company now building what may be the most lasting monument to the U.S. occupation isn’t American. It isn’t even Iraqi. It is a well-connected Kuwaiti firm partially owned by Muhammad I. H. Marafie, a member of one of Kuwait’s most powerful mercantile families.

    The war in Iraq has been very, very good to Marafie’s company. On the eve of the 2003 invasion, the fledgling firm was valued at somewhere around $35 million. Now, thanks to war contracting, First Kuwaiti General Trading and Contracting appears to be nudging the $2 billion mark.

    Along the way, First Kuwaiti whipped up a bit of controversy as a leading supplier of low-paid laborers recruited from poor Asian countries to build and operate U.S. military camps in Iraq—frequently as a subcontractor to Halliburton’s multibillion support services agreement.

    First Kuwaiti, as well as other Middle Eastern companies under U.S. contracts in Iraq, has been accused repeatedly of pressuring its workers to take jobs in war-torn Iraq against their wishes. Once there, those workers are said to have often endured pay of just dollars a day, lousy food, bad medical care, crammed housing and 12-hour work days, seven days a week. Some who have witnessed such brutal conditions liken it to modern-day slavery.

    First Kuwaiti’s general manager, Wadih al-Absi, calls such accusations lies. But the accusations come from workers in Nepal, the Philippines, former Halliburton supervisors and even those well acquainted with the company’s upper management. None of these people know each other, but they have the same complaints of poor treatment and labor trafficking.

    The list of companies that competed for the embassy contract includes the most accomplished engineering companies in the United States and boast of established track records for building secure embassies and large-scale construction projects. Some are skeptical about the State Department’s hard work to keep the project a secret for the better part of a year.

    The hardest thing for them to swallow about the contract is that one award-winning American company, Framaco, offered to do the job for as much as $70 million less than First Kuwaiti.

    The contract for the U.S. embassy “was political,” said one competitor.

    Why political? Because Kuwait was the only country bordering Iraq that was willing to allow the staging of land troops for the 2003 invasion, whisper other disgruntled contractors.

    The State Department intervened before on behalf of other Kuwaiti firms. After the invasion, the U.S. ambassador to Kuwait, Richard Jones, pressured Halliburton to buy overpriced fuel from the unknown Kuwaiti firm Altanmia Commercial Marketing Company, according to official documents.

    That fuel, intended for domestic use in Iraq, resulted in ongoing disputes about overcharges of possibly several hundred million dollars. Jones then returned to Washington to serve as the senior adviser and coordinator for Iraq at the State Department. He was in that position when First Kuwaiti was awarded the embassy contract.

    As for the allegations against First Kuwaiti of labor trafficking and harsh treatment of its laborers, the State Department prefers to not offer any definitive statements on the question: Is this the kind of company American taxpayers want to pay to build their embassy in Iraq, the country where the U.S. has already spent $250 billion and counting to show the Iraqi people how to run a country right?

    “Our people are investigating the issues,” said State Department spokesman Justin Higgins after U.S. Ambassador John Miller, head of the Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking of Persons, left for the Middle East in late January to investigate allegations of labor trafficking by unnamed companies.

    The U.S. Army did begin investigating the allegations last summer following similar inquires and in April, the Pentagon issued a new order to crack down on labor trafficking by contractors working in Iraq and Afghanistan. The directive also notes that inspections of military contractors and subcontractors in Iraq has revealed deceptive hiring practices, excessive recruiting fees that indebt workers for months if not years, substandard living conditions that include crammed sleeping quarters and poor food and the circumventing of Iraqi immigration procedures. No companies were named for wrongdoing or exonerated.

    So, in the end, it appears that the State Department secrets are perhaps more for the security of those who inked the contract.
     
  2. Cohen

    Cohen Contributing Member

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    No-bid for deals like this are disgusting on their surface, but there isn't much meat in the article about what our tax dollars have actually purchased.

    As for the embassy, our fed gov has lost it's collective mind. It's neither Republicanish nor Democratish to want to spend $.6 to $1 B on an embassy in...Iraq. WHAT A WASTE.

    For comparative purposes, this is what the average State receives from the Federal government in a year ... for education. Disgusting. Someone lost perspective here?
     
  3. bigtexxx

    bigtexxx Contributing Member

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    lol, wnes, as Cohen said, not a lot of meat to that article...


    so where do your tax dollars in China go to? Running prisons for political prisoners? Hush money to keep people from spilling the beans about bird flu or toxic chemical spills? lol
     
  4. mc mark

    mc mark Contributing Member

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  5. plcmts17

    plcmts17 Member

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  6. pgabriel

    pgabriel Educated Negro

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    troops gotta eat, vehicles need gas, and that's before you get into ammunition and the usual things we think about it. what a mess.
     
  7. wnes

    wnes Contributing Member

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    Hmm, good question. You got me. I really should ask the U.S. government how my tax dollars end up in China. Maybe in the same way as your tax dollars being funneled to support unemployed workers in Germany, I guess?

    Like the Gitmo and the US-run Gulags in Eastern Europe?

    Anthrax mystery, hello? Exxon spills in Alaska and the Gulf Coast, hello hello?

    I am sure the troops are pround of you.
     
  8. Cohen

    Cohen Contributing Member

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    Are you equating political prisoners to suspected terrorists/enemy combatants? :eek:
     
  9. wnes

    wnes Contributing Member

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    You've got to ask bigtexxx what he meant by 'political prisoners.' A term such as this very much depends on a person's POV. I know bus-bombing fellows are called freedom fighters by certain policy maker in the U.S.
     
  10. Cohen

    Cohen Contributing Member

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    Being a bit disingenuous? I think we all know what is meant by Chinese Political Prisoners, and they are not bus-bombing fellows.
     
  11. wnes

    wnes Contributing Member

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    Oh really, you *know* them? Start a thread of you own on Chinese political prisoners then.
     
    #11 wnes, May 16, 2006
    Last edited: May 16, 2006
  12. CreepyFloyd

    CreepyFloyd Member

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    america has a rich history of political prisoners and there are all kinds of political prisoners in the US today...one of the guys at Guantanamo is an al-Jazeera cameraman
     
  13. insane man

    insane man Member

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    ask khaled al masri what he thinks about these prisons. holiday trips to macedonia are sure dead giveaways that one is a terrorist.
     
  14. Cohen

    Cohen Contributing Member

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    Ok, I'll play ... how many Chinese political prisoners have bombed buses?
     
  15. wnes

    wnes Contributing Member

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    Start your own thread and stop posting for bigtexxx, cohen.
     
  16. Cohen

    Cohen Contributing Member

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    Seems like you had no problem discussing prisoners in this thread. Why the sudden aversion? Can't answer the question, eh?
     
  17. wnes

    wnes Contributing Member

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    Tell me how U.S. tax dollar has anything to do China's prison system, then I'll bother to respond.
     
  18. Cohen

    Cohen Contributing Member

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    You made a statement in this thread. If you don't choose to defend it, that's fine. Just don't try to rationalize why you can't defend it. The real reason is obvious.
     
  19. wnes

    wnes Contributing Member

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    No, it wasn't me who tried to divert the topic with a reference to prisoners. If bigtexxx or you are serious about the prison system comparison between the U.S. and PRC, start a thread and we can have a debate. I actually have some interesting stats to show.
     
  20. Dreamshake

    Dreamshake Contributing Member

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    Riiiiiiight. Im sure somewhere in your life you used the term in your own patriotic way: "Guilty until proven otherwise". A show of how great America is. Unless your a republican, on the sack of Bush and his, no lawyers, no warrants, and no trials.

    Its funny you use the word suspected. Being that they are not afforded trials in many instances, suspected is all you can EVER use.
     

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