Be INFORMED

Tuesday, February 06, 2007

Soldiers In Iraq: Troop Surge Is A Lost Cause

Original Article

    Army 1st Lt. Antonio Hardy: "To be honest, it's going to be like this for a long time to come, no matter what we do. I think some people in America don't want to know about all this violence, about all the killings. The people back home are shielded from it; they get it sugar-coated."

    Sgt. 1st Class Herbert Gill: "What is victory supposed to look like? Every time we turn around and go in a new area there's somebody new waiting to kill us. Sunnis and Shiites have been fighting for thousands of years, and we're not going to change that overnight."

"Once more raids start happening, they'll (insurgents) melt away. And then two or three months later, when we leave and say it was a success, they'll come back."

The problem, many soldiers say, is that as long as the majority of Iraqis oppose the presence of American troops, a trend that's only accelerated since the 2003 invasion, no amount of bullets or bodies will solve the problem.

   Pvt. 1st Class Zach Clouser:"We can go get into a firefight and empty out ammo, but it doesn't accomplish much. This isn't our war - we're just in the middle."    Common Dreams 

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Hearings Mark Tougher Oversight of War Contracts

Original
By Stephanie Kirchgaessner
The Financial Times    Monday 05 February 2007

  Executives from government contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan, including KBR and Compass of the UK, face a rocky ride in Washington this week as Henry Waxman, new chairman of the House of Representative's chief investigative committee, begins hearings on allegations of "waste, fraud and abuse."

  The hearings, which open tomorrow, are expected to mark the beginning of a new phase in which contracting practices are subject to tougher oversight.

  Mr. Waxman has been a dogged critic of the Bush administration's handling of billions of dollars of US taxpayers' money in Iraq reconstruction contracts.

  The committee has called on the chief executives of Blackwater, a security contractor, KBR, a subsidiary of Halliburton, and Compass, food services group, among others, to answer questions.

  The hearing will feature the testimony of family members of four Blackwater employees who were killed in Falluja in 2004, and whose bodies were burned and dragged through the streets. The families are suing Blackwater for wrongful death.

  Mr. Waxman is likely to focus his line of inquiry on allegations that Halliburton wrongly entered into a subcontracting arrangement with ESS, a division of Compass that ran a dining facility in Iraq, which in turn used Blackwater to provide it with security services.

  Halliburton controls a $16 billion (£8 billion) contract in Iraq, known as Logcap, which provides logistical support to US troops.

  Under the provisions of the contract, Halliburton can use only the US military - not private security companies such as Blackwater - to provide armed protection to its contractors.

  In response to questions from Congress, the Department of Defense in July said that KBR had "no knowledge" of Blackwater having been hired by any of its subcontractors.

  But in a memo Mr. Waxman subsequently received from Compass, the company admitted that ESS had used Blackwater and the US security group had been deployed by other subcontractors.

  Mr. Waxman in December said, in a letter to Donald Rumsfeld, former defence secretary, that the security subcontract raised "serious questions" about the oversight exercised by Halliburton and the Pentagon regarding the tiering of subcontractors, and whether it was "proper" for Halliburton to bill the government for the services. The pervasive use of multiple tiers of sub-contractors has, according to Mr. Waxman, contributed to "exorbitant overhead fees" on government contracts.

  Compass said Steve Murray, the director of contracting at ESS, would testify at the hearing, scheduled for Wednesday, in spite of the fact that the committee had invited Richard Cousins, chief executive. Blackwater and KBR declined to answer questions about whether the chief executives of the groups would appear.

Paul Bremer, the former chief of the Coalition Provisional Authority, is set to make his first appearance before Mr. Waxman's committee tomorrow.

 

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