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Yonivore
09-20-2003, 06:07 AM
...I don't have enough of you rabid Demoncrats snapping at my heels. Let's throw more fuel on the fire.

The Halliburton smear
Quote:Rich Lowry at Townhall.com
September 18, 2003

The Democrats have discovered the enemy in the ongoing Iraq war. And it is Halliburton.

Nothing quite so angers Democrats about the current situation in Iraq than that Halliburton is making money there. Dennis Kucinich, the out-to-lunch leftist who sounds ever more mainstream given the leftward drift of the rest of the Democratic field, wants the United Nations in Iraq so there will be "no more Halliburton sweetheart deals." Bob Graham huffs, "I will not support a dime to protect the profits of Halliburton in Iraq." John Edwards vows "to stop this president from giving billions of dollars in American taxpayer money to companies like Halliburton in unbid contracts."

The Texas oil-services giant formerly headed by Dick Cheney, who still gets deferred compensation from the firm, has achieved iconic status. Halliburton is the equivalent of Dow, the maker of a key ingredient to napalm, during the Vietnam War -- the focus of supposed corporate evil during wartime. It is the equivalent of Mena Airport, the Arkansas site that obsessed anti-Clinton conspiracy theorists during the 1990s -- the focus of dark speculation about the mercenary scheming of a U.S. president.

Behind the Democratic outrage is the implicit, and sometimes explicit, charge that Bush waged war in Iraq to fatten the bottom line of one corporation. As The New York Times has put it, Halliburton's Iraq contract "undermines the Bush administration's portrayal of the war as a campaign for disarmament and democracy, not lucre." But to have risked his presidency -- not mention American lives -- on the war in order to benefit Halliburton, Bush would have to be a psychopath. That the Halliburton charge has become a chief Democratic critique of the war is another sign of the party's descent into unhinged ravings.

As journalist Byron York has reported, it's not really true that the company got its work without competitive bidding. In the 1990s, the military looked for ways to get outside help handling the logistics associated with forgn interventions. It came up with the U.S. Army Logistics Civil Augmentation Program, or LOGCAP. The program is a multiyear contract for a corporation to be on call to provide whatever services might be needed quickly.

Halliburton won a competitive bidding process for LOGCAP in 2001. So it was natural to turn to it (actually, to its wholly owned subsidiary Kellogg Brown & Root) for prewar planning about handling oil fires in Iraq. "To invite other contractors to compete to perform a highly classified requirement that Kellogg Brown & Root was already under a competitively awarded contract to perform would have been a wasteful duplication of effort," the Army Corps of Engineers commander has written.

Then, in February 2003, the Corps of Engineers gave Halliburton a temporary no-bid contract to implement its classified oil-fire plan. The thinking was it would be absurd to undertake the drawn-out contracting process on the verge of war. If the administration had done that and there had been catastrophic fires, it would now be considered evidence of insufficient postwar planning. And Halliburton was an obvious choice, since it put out 350 oil-well fires in Kuwait after the first Gulf War.

The Clinton administration made the same calculation in its own dealings with Halliburton. The company had won the LOGCAP in 1992, then lost it in 1997. The Clinton administration nonetheless awarded a no-bid contract to Halliburton to continue its work in the Balkans supporting the U.S. peacekeeping mission there because it made little sense to change midstream. According to Byron York, Al Gore's rnventing-government panel even singled out Halliburton for praise for its military logistics work.

So, did Clinton and Gore involve the United States in the Balkans to benefit Halliburton? That charge makes as much sense as the one that Democrats are hurling at Bush now. Would that they directed more of thr outrage at the people in Iraq who want to sabotage the country's oil infrastructure, rather than at the U.S. corporation charged with helping repair it.

Okay class, I hope you read the entire article. You will be asked to support your Demoncratic Talking Points. ?Let every nation know, whether it wishes us well or ill, that we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and the success of liberty.? - - President John Fitzgerald Kennedy

?We will make no distinction between those who committed these acts and those who harbor them.? - - President George W. Bush
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Billybob
09-20-2003, 11:11 AM
"rabid democrats?" Yonivor, will the labels never cease? Does it bring you comfort to think of people with differing opinions as inferior, or crazy?

But as to the editorial you posted:

I think you have to look at the fact that Vice President Dick Cheney still has over 400,000 shares of stock in Halliburton. Then perhaps you can see how much money Halliburton AND Enron made rebuilding Kuwait after Daddy Bush's war. Not to mention the Carlysle Group, a venture capital organization who's board members include Bush Sr, John Makor (from Britain), and many Reaganites. They deal in BIG defense contracts, and have also profitted greatly from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

I think it's absolutely horrific that this country gets to profit from the destruction of another. And this fact totally destroys the notion that America is taking these actions for the benefit of the people we're invading. In case you hadn't noticed also, the Bush administration is made up of heavy-duty businessmen; people who are used to only caring about the bottom line, PROFIT.

But you're saying that Bush and Cheney, knowing that they and thr families would profit greatly from these ventures (they may be rich already, but they are STILL heavily involved in business ventures to make MORE), would still choose thr actions based on non-selfish goals? Don't you know how much money drives this country? And by the way, much of wall street's (minor, but better than before) economic success is attributed to the defense industry and the MAJOR profits they're reaping.

It doesn't take a document saying "THEY INVADED IRAQ FOR MONEY" to see evidence of this. When you ask for proof, Yonivor, I'm not sure what you mean. How about understanding the people in the Bush administration, knowing thr backgrounds, and the shady deals they've been involved with before. But you seem to turn your blinders on, and forget (or maybe you never knew) many of these facts. WHY?
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Billybob
09-20-2003, 02:35 PM
Carlysle group member John MAJOR (ex Prime Minister of Britain)
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