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June 28, 2005
Halliburton Iraq deals described as contract abuse
By Sue PlemingMon
A top U.S. Army procurement official said on Monday
Halliburton's deals in Iraq were the worst example of
contract abuse she had seen as Pentagon auditors flagged
over $1 billion of potential overcharges by the Texas-based
firm.
Bunny Greenhouse, the Army Corps of Engineers' top
contracting official-turned whistle-blower, said in
testimony at a hearing by Democrats on Capitol Hill that
"every aspect" of Halliburton's oil contract in Iraq had
been under the control of the Office of the Secretary of
Defense.
"I can unequivocally state that the abuse related to
contracts awarded to KBR (Kellogg Brown and Root) represents
the most blatant and improper contract abuse I have
witnessed during the course of my professional career," said
Greenhouse, a procurement veteran of more than 20 years.
Her blistering criticism came as the Democrats released a
new report including Pentagon audits that identified more
than $1.03 billion in "questioned" costs and $422 million in
"unsupported" costs for Halliburton's work in Iraq.
Halliburton's subsidiary KBR is the U.S. military's
biggest contractor in Iraq and has been accused by Democrats
of getting lucrative work there because of its ties to Vice
President Dick Cheney who headed the company from 1995-2000.
Pressed by lawmakers whether she thought the Defense
Secretary's office was involved in the handout and running
of contracts to KBR, Greenhouse replied: "That is true."
"I observed, first hand, that essentially every aspect of
the RIO (Restore Iraqi Oil) contract remained under the
control of the Office of the Secretary of Defense. This
troubled me and was wrong," said Greenhouse.
Halliburton issued a statement strongly rejecting
comments by Greenhouse and others at the hearing, including
a former KBR employee who accused the company of
overcharging for food services provided to troops under a
logistics deal.
"The only thing that's been inflated is the political
rhetoric which is mostly a rehash of last year's elections,"
said spokeswoman Cathy Mann of the hearing.
HALLIBURTON DEFENDS ITSELF
Regarding claims of political influence because of
Cheney, Mann said it was easier to "assign devious motives
than to take the time to learn the truth."
Both the Pentagon and the Army Corps of Engineers, which
was in charge of a sole-source oil contract given to KBR in
Iraq, have denied any special treatment for KBR. The Corps
did not immediately respond to questions.
Democrats called for an urgent hearing and an
investigation into what they said were contracting abuses
involving KBR.
"This testimony doesn't just call for Congressional
oversight -- it screams for it," said Sen. Byron Dorgan
(news, bio, voting record), a Democrat from North Dakota.
What concerned Greenhouse most was that the oil contract,
which had a top value of $7 billion, was given to KBR
without competitive bidding.
She irked her bosses by handwriting her concerns in
official documents for the oil deal but said these were
overlooked, she said.
In one instance, she said Army Corps officials bypassed
getting her signature to grant a waiver for KBR to be
relieved of its obligation to provide cost and pricing data
for bringing fuel into Iraq.
That waiver was granted after a draft Army audit said KBR
may have overcharged the military by at least $61 million to
bring in fuel to Iraq to ease a shortage of refined oil. |