06/20/06 "AlterNet"-- - I suppose it's old news at this
point that the Bush administration lied us into the Iraq
war and that the cost of this mess will be fully
realized by the next generation when Bush leaves office
with the biggest budget deficit in U.S. history.
And, while Democrats have been complaining for years
about the GOP-led Congress abandoning its oversight of
the executive branch's wrongdoing, a vote that took
place in the Senate last week shows how the Republican
desire to ignore fraud and abuse extends right into
killing legislation that would help stop defense
contractors from ripping off the American people.
In an effort to stop companies like Halliburton and
its subsidiaries from cheating our troops and stealing
from Americans, Senator Byron Dorgan (D-ND), introduced
S.AMDT.4230 and attached it to the Defense
Authorization bill currently being debated in the
Senate. The bill was intended to improve contracting "by
eliminating fraud and abuse and improving competition in
contracting and procurement."
"I think when you are at war, when a massive quantity
of money is being pushed out the door, that we ought to
decide to get tough on those who would be engaged in war
profiteering," said Dorgan in fighting for his amendment
last week. "I dare say that never in the history of this
country has so much money been wasted so quickly. And,
yes, there is fraud involved, there is abuse involved,
and it is the case that there is a dramatic amount of
taxpayers' money that is now being wasted."
Dorgan's bill -- cosponsored by 17 Democrats and
called the Honest Leadership and Accountability in
Contracting Act of 2006 -- was
tabled by a roll call vote of
55-43, effectively rejecting the amendment. Every
single Senate Republican voted against the measure to
make the contracting process honest and impose penalties
on those who break the law.
And just what were the stern rules that the
GOP didn’t think their buddies at Halliburton should
have to live with? The text of the legislation spelled
out that Bush and Cheney's defense-contractor buddies
would be in trouble if they did any of the following:
- "Executes or attempts to execute a scheme or
artifice to defraud the United States or the entity
having jurisdiction over the area in which such
activities occur."
- "Falsifies, conceals, or covers up by any trick,
scheme, or device a material fact."
- "Makes any materially false, fictitious, or
fraudulent statements or representations, or makes
or uses any materially false writing or document
knowing the same to contain any materially false,
fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry."
- "Materially overvalues any good or service with
the specific intent to excessively profit from the
war or military action."
The measure called for those found guilty of
violating the law to be imprisoned for up to 20 years
and be subject to a fine of up to $1,000,000 -- a drop
in the bucket for these guys -- or a percentage of their
ill-gotten gains.
And Senate Republicans still saw fit to reject
penalizing companies engaging in overt war profiteering
and fraud despite Dorgan spending a considerable amount
of time on the Senate floor trotting out example after
example of the hideous abuse that has been occurring in
Iraq.
"What we have discovered is pretty unbelievable,"
said Dorgan last week. "We have direct testimony from
physicians, Army doctors, and others about providing
nonpotable water for shaving, brushing teeth that is in
worse condition as water than the raw water coming out
of the Euphrates River."
"Let me describe some of the firsthand eyewitness
issues in Iraq," Dorgan continued. "Brand new $85,000
trucks that were left on the side of the road because of
a flat tire and then subsequently burned. 25 tons,
50,000 pounds, of nails ordered by Kellogg, Brown & Root
(KBR), the wrong size, that are laying in the sands of
Iraq. 42,000 meals a day charged to the taxpayers by
Halliburton and only 14,000 are actually served."
After telling the amazing tale of the KBR Halliburton
subsidiary ordering hand towels for soldiers embroidered
with the "KBR" logo, to allow them to double the price
of the towels, Dorgan told one Halliburton
whistleblower's story of his company serving food
date-stamped "expired" to American troops rather than
throwing it away.
"[Halliburton was] serving food at a cafeteria in
Iraq for the soldiers, and a man named Roy who was the
supervisor in the food service kitchen said that the
food was date-stamped 'expired,''' said Dorgan. "In
other words, it had a date stamp, which meant the food
wasn't good anymore, and he was told by superiors that
it doesn't matter. Feed it to the troops. It doesn't
matter that they had an expired date stamped -- feed it
to the troops."
But apparently the support-the-troops types on the
Republicans side of the aisle only support them until
their major contributors are caught feeding them
possibly-tainted food before they go into battle -- at
that point, I guess the love is gone.
The best the Republicans could offer in response to
Dorgan was a lame statement by Senator John Warner
(R-VA), Chairman of the Armed Services Committee, who
said that his committee is on the case and that "the
organization is now in place to try to monitor the
situations the Senator has enumerated."
There was no mention from Warner of where the hell
his committee -- and the GOP -- have been for the last
four years with all of this going on.
I'll leave you with one other Dorgan horror story in
which he describes a massive amount of money paid to
four contractors to install air-conditioning in a
Baghdad building.
"The contract goes to a subcontractor, which goes to
another subcontractor, and a fourth-level
subcontractor," said Dorgan "And the payment for
air-conditioning turns out to be payments to four
contractors, the fourth of which puts a fan in a room.
Yes, the American taxpayer paid for an air-conditioner
and, after the money goes through four hands, there is a
fan put in a room in Iraq."
I guess that's fiscal conservatism Republicans can
truly embrace.
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