The Great Iraq Swindle: How Bush Allowed an Army of For-Profit Contractors to Invade the U.S. Treasury
How is it done? How do you screw the taxpayer for millions, get away with it and then ride off into the sunset with one middle finger extended, the other wrapped around a chilled martini? Ask Earnest O. Robbins -- he knows all about being a successful contractor in Iraq.
You start off as a well-connected bureaucrat: in this case, as an Air Force civil engineer, a post from which Robbins was responsible for overseeing 70,000 servicemen and contractors, with an annual budget of $8 billion. You serve with distinction for thirty-four years, becoming such a military all-star that the Air Force frequently sends you to the Hill to testify before Congress -- until one day in the summer of 2003, when you retire to take a job as an executive for Parsons, a private construction company looking to do work in Iraq.
Now you can finally move out of your dull government housing on Bolling Air Force Base and get your wife that dream home you've been promising her all these years. The place on Park Street in Dunn Loring, Virginia, looks pretty good -- four bedrooms, fireplace, garage, 2,900 square feet, a nice starter home in a high-end neighborhood full of spooks, think-tankers and ex-apparatchiks moved on to the nest-egg phase of their faceless careers. On October 20th, 2003, you close the deal for $775,000 and start living that private-sector good life.
A few months later, in March 2004, your company magically wins a contract from the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq to design and build the Baghdad Police College, a facility that's supposed to house and train at least 4,000 police recruits. But two years and $72 million later, you deliver not a functioning police academy but one of the great engineering clusterfucks of all time, a practically useless pile of rubble so badly constructed that its walls and ceilings are literally caked in shit and piss, a result of subpar plumbing in the upper floors.
You've done such a terrible job, in fact, that when auditors from the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction visit the college in the summer of 2006, their report sounds like something out of one of the Saw movies: "We witnessed a light fixture so full of diluted urine and feces that it would not operate," they write, adding that "the urine was so pervasive that it had permanently stained the ceiling tiles" and that "during our visit, a substance dripped from the ceiling onto an assessment team member's shirt." The final report helpfully includes a photo of a sloppy brown splotch on the outstretched arm of the unlucky auditor.
When Congress gets wind of the fiasco, a few members on the House Oversight Committee demand a hearing. To placate them, your company decides to send you to the Hill -- after all, you're a former Air Force major general who used to oversee this kind of contracting operation for the government. So you take your twenty-minute ride in from the suburbs, sit down before the learned gentlemen of the committee and promptly get asked by an irritatingly eager Maryland congressman named Chris Van Hollen how you managed to spend $72 million on a pile of shit.
You blink. Fuck if you know. "I have some conjecture, but that's all it would be" is your deadpan answer.
The room twitters in amazement. It's hard not to applaud the balls of a man who walks into Congress short $72 million in taxpayer money and offers to guess where it all might have gone.
Next thing you know, the congressman is asking you about your company's compensation. Touchy subject -- you've got a "cost-plus" contract, which means you're guaranteed a base-line profit of three percent of your total costs on the deal. The more you spend, the more you make -- and you certainly spent a hell of a lot. But before this milk-faced congressman can even think about suggesting that you give these millions back, you've got to cut him off. "So you won't voluntarily look at this," Van Hollen is mumbling, "and say, given what has happened in this project . . . "
"No, sir, I will not," you snap.
". . . 'We will return the profits.' . . ."
"No, sir, I will not," you repeat.
Your testimony over, you wait out the rest of the hearing, go home, take a bath in one of your four bathrooms, jump into bed with the little woman. . . . A year later, Iraq is still in flames, and your president's administration is safely focused on reclaiming $485 million in aid money from a bunch of toothless black survivors of Hurricane Katrina. But the house you bought for $775K is now assessed at $929,974, and you're sure as hell not giving it back to anyone.
"Yeah, I don't know what I expected him to say," Van Hollen says now about the way Robbins responded to being asked to give the money back. "It just shows the contempt they have for us, for the taxpayer, for everything."
Operation Iraqi Freedom, it turns out, was never a war against Saddam Hussein's Iraq. It was an invasion of the federal budget, and no occupying force in history has ever been this efficient. George W. Bush's war in the Mesopotamian desert was an experiment of sorts, a crude first take at his vision of a fully privatized American government. In Iraq the lines between essential government services and for-profit enterprises have been blurred to the point of absurdity -- to the point where wounded soldiers have to pay retail prices for fresh underwear, where modern-day chattel are imported from the Third World at slave wages to peel the potatoes we once assigned to grunts in KP, where private companies are guaranteed huge profits no matter how badly they fuck things up.
And just maybe, reviewing this appalling history of invoicing orgies and million-dollar boondoggles, it's not so far-fetched to think that this is the way someone up there would like things run all over -- not just in Iraq but in Iowa, too, with the state police working for Corrections Corporation of America, and DHL with the contract to deliver every Christmas card. And why not? What the Bush administration has created in Iraq is a sort of paradise of perverted capitalism, where revenues are forcibly extracted from the customer by the state, and obscene profits are handed out not by the market but by an unaccountable government bureaucracy. This is the triumphant culmination of two centuries of flawed white-people thinking, a preposterous mix of authoritarian socialism and laissez-faire profiteering, with all the worst aspects of both ideologies rolled up into one pointless, supremely idiotic military adventure -- American men and women dying by the thousands, so that Karl Marx and Adam Smith can blow each other in a Middle Eastern glory hole.
It was an awful idea, perhaps the worst America has ever tried on foreign soil. But if you were in on it, it was great work while it lasted. Since time immemorial, the distribution of government largesse had followed a staid, paper-laden procedure in which the federal government would post the details of a contract in periodicals like Commerce Business Daily or, more recently, on the FedBizOpps Web site. Competitive bids were solicited and contracts were awarded in accordance with the labyrinthine print of the U.S. Code, a straightforward system that worked well enough before the Bush years that, as one lawyer puts it, you could "count the number of cases of criminal fraud on the fingers of one hand."
There were exceptions to the rule, of course -- emergencies that required immediate awards, contracts where there was only one available source of materials or labor, classified deals that involved national security. What no one knew at the beginning of the war was that the Bush administration had essentially decided to treat the entire Iraqi theater as an exception to the rules. All you had to do was get to Iraq and the game was on.
But getting there wasn't easy. To travel to Iraq, would-be contractors needed permission from the Bush administration, which was far from blind in its appraisal of applicants. In a much-ballyhooed example of favoritism, the White House originally installed a clown named Jim O'Beirne at the relevant evaluation desk in the Department of Defense. O'Beirne proved to be a classic Bush villain, a moron's moron who judged applicants not on their Arabic skills or their relevant expertise but on their Republican bona fides; he sent a twenty-four-year-old who had never worked in finance to manage the reopening of the Iraqi stock exchange, and appointed a recent graduate of an evangelical university for home-schooled kids who had no accounting experience to manage Iraq's $13 billion budget. James K. Haveman, who had served as Michigan's community-health director under a GOP governor, was put in charge of rehabilitating Iraq's health-care system and decided that what this war-ravaged, malnourished, sanitation-deficient country most urgently needed was . . . an anti-smoking campaign.
Town-selectmen types like Haveman weren't the only people who got passes to enter Iraq in the first few years. The administration also greenlighted brash, modern-day forty-niners like Scott Custer and Mike Battles, a pair of ex-Army officers and bottom-rank Republican pols (Battles had run for Congress in Rhode Island and had been a Fox News commentator) who had decided to form a security company called Custer Battles and make it big in Iraq. "Battles knew some people from his congressional run, and that's how they got there," says Alan Grayson, an attorney who led a whistle-blower lawsuit against the pair for defrauding the government.
Before coming to Iraq, Custer Battles hadn't done even a million dollars in business. The company's own Web site brags that Battles had to borrow cab fare from Jordan to Iraq and arrived in Baghdad with less than $500 in his pocket. But he had good timing, arriving just as a security contract for Baghdad International Airport was being "put up" for bid. The company site raves that Custer spent "three sleepless nights" penning an offer that impressed the CPA enough to hand the partners $2 million in cash, which Battles promptly stuffed into a duffel bag and drove to deposit in a Lebanese bank.
Custer Battles had lucked into a sort of Willy Wonka's paradise for contractors, where a small pool of Republican-friendly businessmen would basically hang around the Green Zone waiting for a contracting agency to come up with a work order. In the early days of the war, the idea of "competition" was a farce, with deals handed out so quickly that there was no possibility of making rational or fairly priced estimates. According to those familiar with the process, contracting agencies would request phony "bids" from several contractors, even though the winner had been picked in advance. "The losers would play ball because they knew that eventually it would be their turn to be the winner," says Grayson.
To make such deals legal, someone in the military would simply sign a piece of paper invoking an exception. "I know one guy whose business was buying weapons on the black market for contractors," says Pratap Chatterjee, a writer who has spent months in the Mideast researching a forthcoming book on Iraq contracts. "It's illegal -- but he got military people to sign papers allowing him to do it."
The system not only had the advantage of eliminating red tape in a war zone, it also encouraged the "entrepreneurship" of patriots like Custer and Battles, who went from bumming cab fare to doing $100 million in government contracts practically overnight. And what business they did! The bid that Custer claimed to have spent "three sleepless nights" putting together was later described by Col. Richard Ballard, then the inspector general of the Army, as looking "like something that you and I would write over a bottle of vodka, complete with all the spelling and syntax errors and annexes to be filled in later." The two simply "presented it the next day and then got awarded about a $15 million contract."
The deal charged Custer Battles with the responsibility to perform airport security for civilian flights. But there were never any civilian flights into Baghdad's airport during the life of their contract, so the CPA gave them a job managing an airport checkpoint, which they failed miserably. They were also given scads of money to buy expensive X-ray equipment and set up an advanced canine bomb-sniffing system, but they never bought the equipment. As for the dog, Ballard reported, "I eventually saw one dog. The dog did not appear to be a certified, trained dog." When the dog was brought to the checkpoint, he added, it would lie down and "refuse to sniff the vehicles" -- as outstanding a metaphor for U.S. contractor performance in Iraq as has yet been produced.
Like most contractors, Custer Battles was on a cost-plus arrangement, which means its profits were guaranteed to rise with its spending. But according to testimony by officials and former employees, the partners also charged the government millions by making out phony invoices to shell companies they controlled. In another stroke of genius, they found a bunch of abandoned Iraqi Airways forklifts on airport property, repainted them to disguise the company markings and billed them to U.S. taxpayers as new equipment. Every time they scratched their asses, they earned; there was so much money around for contractors, officials literally used $100,000 wads of cash as toys. "Yes -- $100 bills in plastic wrap," Frank Willis, a former CPA official, acknowledged in Senate testimony about Custer Battles. "We played football with the plastic-wrapped bricks for a little while."
The Custer Battles show only ended when the pair left a spreadsheet behind after a meeting with CPA officials -- a spreadsheet that scrupulously detailed the pair's phony invoicing. "It was the worst case of fraud I've ever seen, hands down," says Grayson. "But it's also got to be the first instance in history of a defendant leaving behind a spreadsheet full of evidence of the crime."
But even being the clumsiest war profiteers of all time was not enough to bring swift justice upon the heads of Mr. Custer and Mr. Battles -- and this is where the story of America's reconstruction effort gets really interesting. The Bush administration not only refused to prosecute the pair -- it actually tried to stop a lawsuit filed against the contractors by whistle-blowers hoping to recover the stolen money. The administration argued that Custer Battles could not be found guilty of defrauding the U.S. government because the CPA was not part of the U.S. government. When the lawsuit went forward despite the administration's objections, Custer and Battles mounted a defense that recalled Nuremberg and Lt. Calley, arguing that they could not be guilty of theft since it was done with the government's approval.
The jury disagreed, finding Custer Battles guilty of ripping off taxpayers. But the verdict was set aside by T.S. Ellis III, a federal judge who cited the administration's "the CPA is not us" argument. The very fact that private contractors, aided by the government itself, could evade conviction for what even Ellis, a Reagan-appointed judge, called "significant" evidence of fraud, says everything you need to know about the true nature of the war we are fighting in Iraq. Is it really possible to bilk American taxpayers for repainted forklifts stolen from Iraqi Airways and claim that you were just following orders? It is, when your commander in chief is George W. Bush. font size="3">There isn't a brazen, two-bit, purse-snatching money caper you can think of that didn't happen at least 10,000 times with your tax dollars in Iraq. At the very outset of the occupation, when L. Paul Bremer was installed as head of the CPA, one of his first brilliant ideas for managing the country was to have $12 billion in cash flown into Baghdad on huge wooden pallets and stored in palaces and government buildings. To pay contractors, he'd have agents go to the various stashes -- a pile of $200 million in one of Saddam's former palaces was watched by a single soldier, who left the key to the vault in a backpack on his desk when he went out to lunch -- withdraw the money, then crisscross the country to pay the bills. When desperate auditors later tried to trace the paths of the money, one agent could account for only $6,306,836 of some $23 million he'd withdrawn. Bremer's office "acknowledged not having any supporting documentation" for $25 million given to a different agent. A ministry that claimed to have paid 8,206 guards was able to document payouts to only 602. An agent who was told by auditors that he still owed $1,878,870 magically produced exactly that amount, which, as the auditors dryly noted, "suggests that the agent had a reserve of cash."
In short, some $8.8 billion of the $12 billion proved impossible to find. "Who in their right mind would send 360 tons of cash into a war zone?" asked Rep. Henry Waxman, chairman of the House Oversight Committee. "But that's exactly what our government did."
Because contractors were paid on cost-plus arrangements, they had a powerful incentive to spend to the hilt. The undisputed master of milking the system is KBR, the former Halliburton subsidiary so ubiquitous in Iraq that soldiers even encounter its customer-survey sheets in outhouses. The company has been exposed by whistle-blowers in numerous Senate hearings for everything from double-charging taxpayers for $617,000 worth of sodas to overcharging the government 600 percent for fuel shipments. When things went wrong, KBR simply scrapped expensive gear: The company dumped 50,000 pounds of nails in the desert because they were too short, and left the Army no choice but to set fire to a supply truck that had a flat tire. "They did not have the proper wrench to change the tire," an Iraq vet named Richard Murphy told investigators, "so the decision was made to torch the truck."
In perhaps the ultimate example of military capitalism, KBR reportedly ran convoys of empty trucks back and forth across the insurgent-laden desert, pointlessly risking the lives of soldiers and drivers so the company could charge the taxpayer for its phantom deliveries. Truckers for KBR, knowing full well that the trips were bullshit, derisively referred to their cargo as "sailboat fuel."
In Fallujah, where the company was paid based on how many soldiers used the base rec center, KBR supervisors ordered employees to juke the head count by taking an hourly tally of every soldier in the facility. "They were counting the same soldier five, six, seven times," says Linda Warren, a former postal worker who was employed by KBR in Fallujah. "I was even directed to count every empty bottle of water left behind in the facility as though they were troops who had been there."
Yet for all the money KBR charged taxpayers for the rec center, it didn't provide much in the way of services to the soldiers engaged in the heaviest fighting of the war. When Warren ordered a karaoke machine, the company gave her a cardboard box stuffed with jumbled-up electronic components. "We had to borrow laptops from the troops to set up a music night," says Warren, who had a son serving in Fallujah at the time. "These boys needed R&R more than anything, but the company wouldn't spend a dime." (KBR refused requests for an interview, but has denied that it inflated troop counts or committed other wrongdoing in Iraq.)
One of the most dependable methods for burning taxpayer funds was simply to do nothing. After securing a contract in Iraq, companies would mobilize their teams, rush them into the war zone and then wait, citing the security situation or delayed paperwork -- all the while charging the government for housing, meals and other expenses. Last year, a government audit of twelve major contracts awarded to KBR, Parsons and other companies found that idle time often accounted for more than half of a contract's total costs. In one deal awarded to KBR, the company's "indirect" administrative costs were $52.7 million, and its direct costs -- the costs associated with the actual job -- were only $13.4 million.
Companies jacked up the costs even higher by hiring out layers of subcontractors to do their work for them. In some cases, each subcontractor had its own cost-plus arrangement. "We called those 'cascading contracts,' " says Rep. Van Hollen. "Each subcontractor piles on a lot of costs, and eventually they would snowball into a huge payout. It was a green light for waste."
In March 2004, Parsons -- the firm represented by Earnest O. Robbins -- was given nearly $1 million to build a fire station in Ainkawa, a small Christian community in one of the safest parts of Iraq. Parsons subcontracted the design to a British company called TPS Consult and the construction to a California firm called Innovative Technical Solutions Inc. ITSI, in turn, hired an Iraqi outfit called Zozik to do the actual labor.
A year and a half later, government auditors visited the site and found that the fire station was less than half finished. What little had been built was marred by serious design flaws, including concrete columns so shoddily constructed that they were riddled with holes that looked like "honeycombing." But getting the fuck-ups fixed proved problematic. The auditors "made a request that was sent to the Army Corps, which delivered it to Parsons, who then asked ITSI, which asked TPS Consult to check on the work done by Zozik," writes Chatterjee, who describes the mess in his forthcoming book, Baghdad Bonanza. The multiple layers of subcontractors made it almost impossible to resolve the issue -- and every day the delays dragged on meant more money for the companies.
Sometimes the government simply handed out money to companies it made up out of thin air. In 2006, the Army Corps of Engineers found itself unable to award contracts by the September deadline imposed by Congress, meaning it would have to "de-obligate" the money and return it to the government. Rather than suffer that awful fate, the corps obligated $362 million -- spread out over ninety-six different contracts -- to "Dummy Vendor." In their report on the mess, auditors noted that money to nobody "does not constitute proper obligations."
But even obligating money to no one was better than what sometimes happened in Iraq: handing out U.S. funds to the enemy. Since the beginning of the war, rumors have abounded about contractors paying protection money to insurgents to avoid attacks. No less an authority than Ahmed Chalabi, the head of the Iraqi National Congress, claimed that such payoffs are a "significant source" of income for Al Qaeda. Moreover, when things go missing in Iraq -- like bricks of $100 bills, or weapons, or trucks -- it is a fair assumption that some of the wayward booty ends up in the wrong hands. In July, a federal audit found that 190,000 weapons are missing in Iraq -- nearly one out of every three arms supplied by the United States. "These weapons almost certainly ended up on the black market, where they are repurchased by insurgents," says Chatterjee. font size="3">For all the creative ways that contractors came up with to waste, mismanage and steal public money in Iraq, the standard remained good old-fashioned fucking up. Take the case of the Basra Children's Hospital, a much-ballyhooed "do-gooder" project championed by Laura Bush and Condi Rice. This was exactly the sort of grandstanding, self-serving, indulgent and ultimately useless project that tended to get the go-ahead under reconstruction. Like the expensive telephone-based disease-notification database approved for use in hospitals without telephones, or the natural-gas-powered electricity turbines greenlighted for installation in a country without ready sources of natural gas, the Basra Children's Hospital was a state-of-the-art medical facility set to be built in a town without safe drinking water. "Why build a hospital for kids, when the kids have no clean water?" said Rep. Jim Kolbe, a Republican from Arizona.
Bechtel was given $50 million to build the hospital -- but a year later, with the price tag soaring to $169 million, the company was pulled off the project without a single bed being ready for use. The government was unfazed: Bechtel, explained USAID spokesman David Snider, was "under a 'term contract,' which means their job is over when their money ends."
Their job is over when their money ends. When I call Snider to clarify this amazing statement, he declines to discuss the matter further. But if you look over the history of the Iraqi reconstruction effort, you will find versions of this excuse everywhere. When Custer Battles was caught delivering broken trucks to the Army, a military official says the company told him, "We were only told we had to deliver the trucks. The contract doesn't say they had to work."
Such excuses speak to a monstrous vacuum of patriotism; it would be hard to imagine contractors being so blithely disinterested in results during World War II, where every wasted dollar might mean another American boy dead from gangrene in the Ardennes. But the rampant waste of money and resources also suggests a widespread contempt for the ostensible "purpose" of our presence in Iraq. Asked to cast a vote for the war effort, contractors responded by swiping everything they could get their hands on -- and the administration's acquiescence in their thievery suggests that it, too, saw making a buck as the true mission of the war. Two witnesses scheduled to testify before Congress against Custer Battles ultimately declined not only because they had received death threats but because they, too, were contractors and feared that they would be shut out of future government deals. To repeat: Witnesses were afraid to testify in an effort to recover government funds because they feared reprisal from the government.
The Bush administration's lack of interest in recovering stolen funds is one of the great scandals of the war. The White House has failed to litigate a single case against a contractor under the False Claims Act and has not sued anybody for breach of contract. It even declined to join in a lawsuit filed by whistle-blowers who are accusing KBR of improper invoicing in Fallujah. "For all the Bush administration claims to do in the war against terrorism," Grayson said in congressional testimony, "it is a no-show in the war against war profiteers." In nearly five years of some of the worst graft and looting in American history, the administration has recovered less than $6 million.
What's more, when anyone in the government tried to question what contractors were up to with taxpayer money, they were immediately blackballed and treated like an enemy. Take the case of Bunnatine "Bunny" Greenhouse, an outspoken and energetic woman of sixty-three who served as the chief procurement executive for the Army Corps of Engineers. In her position, Greenhouse was responsible for signing off on sole-source contracts -- those awarded without competitive bids and thus most prone to corruption. Long before Iraq, she had begun to notice favoritism in the awarding of contracts to KBR, which was careful to recruit executives who had served in the military. "That was why I joined the corps: to stop this kind of clubby contracting," she says.
A few weeks before the Iraq War started, Greenhouse was asked to sign off on the contract to restore Iraqi oil. The deal, she noticed, was suspicious on a number of fronts. For one thing, the company that had designed the project, KBR, was the same company that was being awarded the contract -- a highly unusual and improper situation. For another, the corps wanted to award a massive "emergency" contract to KBR with no competition for up to five years, which Greenhouse thought was crazy. Who ever heard of a five-year emergency? After auditing the deal, the Pentagon found that KBR had overcharged the government $61 million for fuel. "The abuse related to contracts awarded to KBR," Greenhouse testified before the Senate, "represents the most blatant and improper contract abuse I have witnessed during the course of my professional career."
And how did her superiors in the Pentagon respond to the wrongdoing highlighted by their own chief procurement officer? First they gave KBR a waiver for the overbilling, blaming the problem on an Iraqi subcontractor. Then they dealt with Greenhouse by demoting her and cutting her salary, citing a negative performance review. The retaliation sent a clear message to any would-be whistle-blowers. "It puts a chill on you," Greenhouse says. "People are scared stiff."
They were scared stiff in Iraq, too, and for good reason. When civilian employees complained about looting or other improprieties, contractors sometimes threatened to throw them outside the gates of their bases -- a life-threatening situation for any American. Robert Isakson, a former FBI agent who worked for Custer Battles, says that when he refused to go along with one scam involving a dummy company in Lebanon, he was detained by company security guards, who seized his ID badge and barred him from the base in Baghdad. He eventually had to make a hazardous, Papillon-esque journey across hostile Iraq to Jordan just to survive. (Custer Battles denies the charge.)
James Garrison, who worked at a KBR ice plant in Al Asad, recalls an incident when Indian employees threatened to go on strike: "They pulled a bus up, got them in there and said, 'We'll ship you outside the front gate if you want to go on strike.' " Not surprisingly, the workers changed their mind about a work stoppage.
You know the old adage: You don't pay a hooker to spend the night, you pay her to leave in the morning. That maxim also applies to civilian workers in Iraq. A soldier is a citizen with rights, a man to be treated with honor and respect as a protector of us all; if one loses a limb, you've got to take care of him, in theory for his whole life. But a mercenary is just another piece of equipment you can bill to the taxpayer: If one is hurt on the job, you can just throw it away and buy another one. Today there are more civilians working for private contractors in Iraq than there are troops on the ground. The totality of the thievery in Iraq is such that even the honor of patriotic service has been stolen -- we've replaced soldiers and heroes with disposable commodities, men we expected to give us a big bang for a buck and to never call us again.
Russell Skoug, who worked as a refrigeration technician for a contractor called Wolfpack, found that out the hard way. These days Skoug is back home in Diboll, Texas, and he doesn't move around much; he considers it a big accomplishment if he can make it to his mailbox and back once a day. "I'm doing a lot if I can do that much," he says, laughing a little.
A year ago, on September 11th, Skoug was working for Wolfpack at a base in Heet, Iraq. It was a convoy day -- trucks braved the trip in and out of the base every third day -- and Skoug had a generator he needed to fix. So he agreed to make a run to Al Asad. "If I would've realized that it was September 11th, I never would've went out," he says. It would turn out to be the last run he would ever make in Iraq.
An Air Force vet, Skoug had come to Iraq as a civilian to repair refrigeration units and air conditioners for a KBR subcontractor called LSI. But when he arrived, he discovered that LSI had hired him to fix Humvees. "I didn't know jack-squat about Humvees," he says. "I could maybe change the oil, that was it." (Asked about Skoug's additional assignment, KBR boasted: "Part of the reason for our success is our ability to employ individuals with multiple capabilities.")
Working with him on his crew were two other refrigeration technicians, neither of whom knew anything about fixing Humvees. Since Skoug and most of his co-workers had worked for KBR in Afghanistan, they were familiar with cost-plus contracting. The buzz around the base was that cost-plus was the reason LSI was hiring air-conditioning guys to work on unfamiliar military equipment at a cost to the taxpayer of $80,000 a year. "They was doing the same thing as KBR: just filling the body count," says Skoug.
Thanks to low troop levels, all the military repair guys had been pressed into service to fight the war, so Skoug was forced to sit in the military storeroom on the base and study vehicle manuals that, as a civilian, he wasn't allowed to check out of the building. That was how America fought terrorism in Iraq: It hired civilian air-conditioning techs to fix Humvees using the instruction manual while the real Humvee repairmen, earning a third of what the helpless civilians were paid, drove around in circles outside the wire waiting to get blown up by insurgents.
After much pleading and cajoling, Skoug managed to convince LSI to let him repair some refrigeration units. But it turned out that the company didn't have any tools for the job. "They gave me a screwdriver and a Leatherman, and that's it," he recalls. "We didn't even have freon gauges." When Skoug managed to scrounge and cannibalize parts to get the job done, he impressed the executives at Wolfpack enough to hire him away from LSI for $10,000 a month. The job required Skoug, who had been given no formal security training, to travel regularly on dangerous convoys between bases. Wolfpack issued him an armored vehicle, a Yugoslav-made AK-47 and a handgun, and wished him luck.
For nearly a year, Skoug did the job, trying at each stop to overcome the hostility that many troops felt for civilian contractors who surfed the Internet and played pool and watched movies all day for big dollars while soldiers carrying seventy-pound packs of gear labored in huts with broken air conditioning the civilian techs couldn't be bothered to repair. "They'd have the easiest thing to fix, and they wouldn't do it," Skoug says. "They'd write that they'd fixed it or that they just needed a part and then just leave it." At Haditha Dam, Skoug witnessed a near-brawl after some Marines, trying to get some sleep after returning from patrol, couldn't get a group of "KBR dudes" to turn down the television in a common area late at night.
Toward the end of Skoug's stay, insurgent activity in his area increased to the point where the soldiers leading his convoys would often drive only at night and without lights. Skoug and his co-workers asked Wolfpack to provide them with night-vision goggles that cost as little as $1,000 a pair, but the company refused. "Their attitude was, we don't need 'em and we're not buying 'em," says Thomas Lane, a Wolfpack employee who served as Skoug's security man on the night of September 11th.
On that evening, the soldiers leading the convoy refused to let Skoug drive his own vehicle back to Heet without night-vision goggles. So a soldier took Skoug's car, and Skoug was forced to be a passenger in a military vehicle. "We start out the front gate, and I find out that the truck that I was in was the frickin' lead truck," he recalls. "And I'm going, 'Oh, great.' "
The bomb went off about a half-hour later, ripping through the truck floor and destroying four inches of Skoug's left femur. "The windshield looked like there was a film on it," he says. "I find out later it was a film -- it was blood and meat and stuff all over the windshield on the inside." Skoug was loaded into the back of a Humvee, his legs hanging out, and evacuated to an Army hospital in Germany before being airlifted back to the States.
When Skoug arrived, it was his wife, Linda, who had to handle all his affairs. She was the one who arranged for an air ambulance to take him to Houston, where she had persuaded an orthopedic hospital to admit him as a patient. She had to do this because almost right from the start, Wolfpack washed its hands of Russell Skoug. The insurance policy he had been given turned out to be useless -- the company denied all coverage, beginning with a $72,597 bill for his stay in the German hospital. Despite assurances from Wolfpack chief Mark Atwood that he would cover all Skoug's expenses, neither he nor the insurance company would pay for the $16,000 trip in the air ambulance. Nobody paid for the operations Skoug had in Houston -- as many as three a day, every day for a month. And nobody paid for his subsequent rehab stint in another Houston hospital -- despite the fact that military law requires every company contracting with the government to fully insure all of its employees in the war zone.
Now that he's out, sitting at home on his couch with only partial use of his left hand and left leg, Skoug has a stack of unpaid medical bills almost three inches tall. As he speaks, he keeps fidgeting. He apologizes, explaining that he can't sit still for very long. Why? Because Skoug can no longer afford pain medication. "I take ibuprofen sometimes," he says, "but basically I just grin and bear it."
And here's where this story turns into something perfectly symbolic of everything that the war in Iraq stands for, a window into the soul of for-profit contractors who not only left behind a breathtaking legacy of fraud, waste and corruption but, through their calculating, greed-fueled hijacking of this generation's broadest and most far-reaching foreign-policy initiative, pushed America into previously unknown realms of moral insanity. When I contact Mark Atwood and ask him to explain how he could watch one of his best employees get blown up and crippled for life, and then cut him loose with debts totaling well over half a million dollars, Atwood, safe in his office in Kuwait City and contentedly suckling at the taxpayer teat, decides that answering this one question is just too much to ask of poor old him.
"Right now," Atwood says, "I just want some peace."
When Linda Skoug petitioned Atwood for help, he refused, pointing out that he had kept his now-useless employee on the payroll for four whole months before firing him. "After I have put forth to help you all out," he wrote in an e-mail, "you are going to get on me for your husband not having insurance." He even implied that Skoug had brought the accident upon himself by allowing the Army to place him at the head of the convoy: "He was not even suppose [sic] to be in the lead vehicle to begin with."
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the story of the Iraq War in a nutshell. In the history of balls, the world has never seen anything like the private contractors George W. Bush summoned to serve in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Collectively, they are the final, polished result of 231 years of natural selection in the crucible of American capitalism: a bureaucrat class capable of stealing the same dollar twice -- once from the taxpayer and once from a veteran in a wheelchair.
The explanations that contractors offer for all the missing dollars, all the myriad ways they looted the treasury and screwed guys like Russell Skoug, rank among the most diabolical, shameless, tongue-twisting bullshit in history. Going back over the various congressional hearings and trying to decipher the corporate responses to the mountains of thefts and fuck-ups is a thrilling intellectual journey, not unlike tackling the Pharaonic hieroglyphs or the mating chatter of colobus monkeys. Standing before Congress, contractors and the officials who are supposed to monitor them say things like "As long as we have the undefinitized contract issue that we have . . . we will continue to see the same kinds of sustension rates" (translation: We can't get back any of the fucking money) and "The need for to-fitnessization was viewed as voluntary, and that was inaccurate as the general counsel to the Army observed in a June opinion" (translation: The contractor wasn't aware that he was required to keep costs down) and "If we don't know where we're trying to go and don't have measures, then we won't know how much longer it's going to take us to get there" (translation: There never was a plan in place, other than to let contractors rip off every dollar they could).
According to the most reliable estimates, we have doled out more than $500 billion for the war, as well as $44 billion for the Iraqi reconstruction effort. And what did America's contractors give us for that money? They built big steaming shit piles, set brand-new trucks on fire, drove back and forth across the desert for no reason at all and dumped bags of nails in ditches. For the most part, nobody at home cared, because war on some level is always a waste. But what happened in Iraq went beyond inefficiency, beyond fraud even. This was about the business of government being corrupted by the profit motive to such an extraordinary degree that now we all have to wonder how we will ever be able to depend on the state to do its job in the future. If catastrophic failure is worth billions, where's the incentive to deliver success? There's no profit in patriotism, no cost-plus angle on common decency. Sixty years after America liberated Europe, those are just words, and words don't pay the bills.
Matt Taibbi is a writer for Rolling Stone.
© 2007 Rolling Stone
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58 Comments so far
Show AllX Onassis:
Thanks for the response. I wasn't sure if anyone would notice the syntactical mayhem inspired by wickness in high places.
Leaving someone "breathless" was not the intent of the post but it was a great film leaning in the direction of free-form.
The bullet/projectile reality is more dire than most suppose. DU type materials released (thousands of tons presently) pose a long term threat to the planet and human genome, especially if they continue unload the toxic nano-particles on innocent bystanders.
Great reference to the Galatic Council, which leads us to the mythical "death star". If you have not had the chance, check out Leuran Moret's essay on depleted uranium:
http://www.mindfully.org/Nucs/2006/DU-Europe-Moret26feb06.htm
Fantastic writing Mr. Taibbi.
But as a reminder, the process described here is greased by the same old cancer. Campaign donations and lobbyists. Blackwater was little more than a cop training facility until Prince gave Bush campaign money and hired sleazy K street suits in Gucci shoes. I hear the K street boys are so greedy and aroused by the Washington cash flow they drool on their shiny shoes. Members of Congress then lick and polish lobbyist loafers as part of their constitutional oath of office, that is, if they have time between visits to the men's room toilet for bible training and ambiguous sexual encounters !
But, excuse my imagination. When the poor citizens of New Orleans were dying, hired Blackwater guns were wandering the big easy looking for "bad guys" to the tune of $73 Million for that gig alone. Their Iraq contracts have passed the $500 Million mark well on their way to a $Billion. Nice return on the campaign donation investment.
And if you think these Blackwater dudes are mother and apple pie types, think again. They are the new corporate heart of darkness. One of the new toys they enjoy shooting at Iraqi freedom fighters or civilians are "blended-metal" bullets. These new projectiles make traditional hollow-points banned by the Geneva/Hague Conventions look friendly. Enclosed are a few military website posts on the new bullet of choice:
Some say such bullets are legal:
" expanding point ammunition is legally permissible in counterterrorist operations not involving the engagement of the armed forces of another State."
yet they are effective:
"A recent report surfaced that one of our contractors in Iraq had the opportunity to use this bullet, and the subsequent shot that an Iraqi gunman received in his buttocks ripped him a new one...literally."
" But really I heard a description that on impact they made a little bitty hole in front, but a hole in back so big, you could wiggle your head around in it with getting any blood on your ears. That was from a sharp-shooter at the time. So, they are shooting people in the back, and boasting about the frontal abdominal wounds. "
" Scary for the enemy! or as the article put it, deflagrate inside the target, in dynamic fashion! shoot to kill or wound has a whole new meaning."
Fortunately there are not enough of these high-tech bullets to go around, but conventional ammo is being burned up faster than it can be manufactured.
Crunching bullet numbers shows it takes American forces an average of 250,000 bullets to kill just one Iraqi or Afghan freedom fighter or unfortunate civilian.
GlobalSecurity.org. says, based on GAO figures, US forces have expended around six billion bullets between 2002 and 2006.
"How many evil-doers have we sent to their maker using bullets rather than bombs? I don't know," says director John Pike.
As Mr. Pike explains: "If they don't do body counts, how can I?
But the bottom line is that American ammunition producers are working overtime
just to keep up and reaping record profits. In some cases, the US is buying bullets from Israel to keep our Middle Eastern oil crusade in holy motion.
These ammo numbers are also good news to a typical contractor in Lewistown, Idaho where
the local ATK (Alliant Techsystems) ammo plant "is having such a difficult time finding workers that it is considering
creating internships with the University of Idaho, Lewis-Clark State College and Washington State University" says the AP.
The Lewistown ATK spokesman says "volumes are very good. Business is at an all-time high."
The Idaho ammo people also say the company would still produce abundant ammunition for the military if the war in Iraq were to end.
"We pull out, but we still leave a lot of troops so we will still be doing fine."
And just last week, in a Wall Street conference call, ATK CEO, Daniel Murphy got to the point, explaining to investors that bullets and the like are a repeat business.
'The consumable nature of our core products align ATK closely with America's future funding priorities.
Plainly said, war and preparation for war are the foundation of our profit and the future looks bright for ATK which has become the country's biggest bullet maker."
ATK also makes heavy artillery depleted uranium shells and cluster munitions. Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Malaysia, Chile, Israel, Pakistan, India, Greece and Turkey have
been eager customers for these quality ATK high-volume killing products.
So all tolled, it's happy times for the Military Industrial Complex and the Wall Street investor class.
As for the dead, wounded, maimed, crippled combatants and civilians, orphans and the innocent, those numbers are not included in the elegant corporate annual reports.
Praise the Lord and pass the ammo! Privatized war crimes are the future. The government transfer of wealth from the many taxpayers to the few insiders has never been better.
wishfulthinker, I'm not sure it was as much a motivation as a fringe benefit.
For Labor Day
Join in the battle
Wherein no man can fail
For who so fadeth and dieth
Yet his deed shall still prevail
William Morris
I think it would be of greater interest for the judiciary committee to subpenoa those who misprotected, misdelivered and misearned those iraq contract/rebuilding dollars. Corruption at the highest levels will continue no matter what new law you legislate unless those involved are prosecuted. Follow the trail. P.S just in case the administration uses military secrecy as a motion to dislodge the case the judiciary could hold a closed door hearing. One just like a citizen would get if accused of such treason. Now that's patriotism.
Hey matt.
I could not have said it better myself.
"The Bush administrations lack of interest in recovering stolen funds is one of the great scandals in this war".
Can someone tell John Conyers and our judiciary committee to stop being afraid of using the tools they've been given. The founding fathers divided our government into the executive, legislative and judicial branches so that it would be harder for a dictatorial regime to arise. Well one would think our judicial branch of government would be free from coercive forces.
milesofmusic, great post.
Exposing the crime of 9/11 will be tricky. Consider the JFK assassination and the still present dispute about conspiracy assertions. Evidence, including numerous deaths of witnesses and the destruction of autopsy records, is lost. Records that were supposed to be sealed for 35 years (for what purpose?) are no longer being talked about.
I talked with a friend who, like everyone else at that time saw the Zapruder recording, and she said, yes, she saw his head snap back when hit, but didn't think about it. My own son, a very smart man, argues that if you hit the neck, the head snaps back. Well, he did take a shot in the neck, and grabbed his throat. But the next and mortal shot went in the head, taking off the back of his head, not a neck shot. That's when his head snapped back. Total whitewash by the Warren Commission. The whole country saw that film. I could only conclude that people were afraid to face that the assassination was a conspiracy because then they would have to face that we are not a free country. They would rather pretend we are, and I think that holds true today.
The American people are afraid. They don't want to know the truth. They want to live in their cocoon. Well, it's running out of oxygen.
Ephraim:
i wrote:
yeah, but here is the thing; while all you good conscience "good" amercians pontificate, scratch your balls and rub your chin whiskers about the sheer dismay you feel about your government, the war goes on each day. the outrages are not in the past they are current and daily.
i laughed my ass off to hear that haliburton and kbr and the other myriad of war profiteering cockroaches that suck in the hard earned tax dollars are now taking their companies offshore to avoid paying american taxes. what a joke. the rip off is now complete, sheer profit - cost plus of course.
what a bunch of fucking idiots and fools that you all have become.
if you had a shred, and i mean a shred, of decency you would be out in the street fighting the new war of independence. from the corporations who now own and run your quickly overrun country.
bush is not destroying the united states - he has destroyed the united states and you "good" americans do not have the courage, the will or the balls to fight and reclaim your country - it must be of no value to you.
it must be worthless!
you responded:
Well, milesofmusic, we can riot in the streets and get mowed down by the thousands. Would that satisfy your demands that we show some "decency" and stop scratching our balls? Where do you live, on Mount Olympus? To me, it's a measure of how far we've fallen that all we seem able to do now is take cheap potshots at each other, when none of us is responsible for all the war crimes BushCo has committed, except collectively.
OK then, mea culpa! Mea culpa! It's all MY fault for not storming the White House singlehandedly and trying to mete out justice with whatever I could bring to hand. I could have been shot dead in 4 seconds but now free of guilt. And milesofmusic would have to blame everyone else!
If we knew what the hell to DO we'd do it. Meanwhile, since you seem to know, why don't you stop rubbing your chin whiskers and pontificating like the self-appointed scourge of America, and get rolling!
respectfully, i respond:
let me ask you: how in the hell would the great american republic have ever gotten started if the people who lived under the tyranny of the british government had your opinion.
you would still be colony.
do you think that your own government would "mow you down by the thousands"? that is interesting. the corrupt marcos regime in the phillipines would not do it, the kgb would not do it - but you have the feeling that your government would. as i say, that is interesting.
certainly your government showed no mercy to the folks who worked at world trade center and it is only reasonable to presume that the people who would do something like that would have no qualms about other citizen massacres.
don't you ever wonder why there was no investigation into 9/11 - i don't count the totally discredited government investigation. don't you wonder why guilliani told peter jennings at ten o'clock in the morning of 9/11 that he had left the nyc disaster bunker in building 7 because he was informed by the fdny that the building was coming down! it fell around five o'clock into its own footprint, faster than freefall, without ever having been hit by anything, not even the debris from buildings 1 and 2. how on earth could he have known this?
now he is running for the presidency! ouch!
do you know that several of the alledged hijackers are alive and well living all over the mideast, three of them have been on the bbc saying things like: i have never even been to the us. certainly they did not die that day, did they!
there was never any plane in pennsylvania! there was no plane at the pentagon. the very idea that any plane could attack "the most heavily fortified building in the world" is foolish, to say the least.
9/11 is the american rubicon. once the government (or the illuninati, international bankers, whoever it is who really runs the world) put this behind themselves they were confident that they controlled the media, and therefore all the discussion thereafter. they then used this media control to lie to the american public and build the froth leading up to the wars in the mideast.
here we are today with an isolated president who is a draft dodger himself, who did not even serve his proper time in the coast guard after his daddy had gotten him deferred. cheney will tell you today that he dodged the draft in vietnam because he had "other priorities". wonder what they were?
so Ephraim, to you i say, the time has come. if not now - when? if not us - who?
i believe, still, in my heart and my soul, that the typical american citizen is fair, decent and,like me, finds the current situation unacceptable. it is not the lack of will but rather the lack of an organizational model that keeps the people from uniting behind a movement to clean up the government.
understanding and exposing the crime of 9/11 is a crucial starting point.
so, Ephraim, start there!
to start there, start here: http://www.journalof911studies.com/
God bless the United States!
jjpeter August 31st, 2007 2:01 pm "I just wish georgie would get recorded in the AirForce 1 bathroom, getting a hummer from a secret serviceman, so we can impeach him."
How about Mr. Cheney's sexual exploits? He's always in an "undisclosed location". The list of visitors to his house / office is "classified". Who can we get to out him?
Whatever happened to the DC Madame? Did Cheney's Blackwater Boys get to her?
Sent my e-mail to Conyers. Am hopeful, but not optimistic.
emails sent to Conyers and Pelosi....What I usually get back is a form letter, basically a polite "brush off."
I took part in a street demonstration for the first time since the Viet Nam war...it felt good to get the peace signs and horn honks of the people going by...but there should have been many more demonstrating.
JJPETER said, ""This was about the business of government being corrupted by the profit motive to such an extraordinary degree that now we all have to wonder how we will ever be able to depend on the state to do its job in the future. If catastrophic failure is worth billions, where's the incentive to deliver success?" EXCELLENT observation.
This article is so important. I've read about most of these misdeeds as separate events, but he puts it all together. If only we could get CONYERS to read this! I'll write the letter, too.
Add this kind of war profiteering to the equally chilling Eric Prince & co. who finance the mercenaries to do the JOB of "war." Keep in mind he calls himself a born again Christian, too. I find that paradox the smirking metaphor of the antiChrist... that one can KILL for PROFIT and think they emulate Christ? It does bring to mind a discussion I had years ago with a Jesuit (now oil man!) who explained CALVINISM as the root religious doctrine of the U.S. This pro-capitalist creed sees in prosperity PROOF of God granting worthiness upon the individual. Thus more $ = more approval from God. (This god of course simulating mammon, hardly the FATHER Jesus depicted.) On the reverse side of that same nifty coin is the indication that those who suffer, i.e. the poor, deserve their lot in life. This philosophy explains why so many enter churches, ensconced in their own comfort zones and could CARE LESS about the fate of their less privileged neighbors, and while hardly knowing the extent to which these disgusting war crimes (profiteering) are progressing, still remain essentially mute and indifferent to others pain. So here we have a most convenient (pseudo) truth... to keep the complacent exactly that. And the angelic hierarchy cries...
The French know what to do. They march in the streets, yelling, and they GO ON STRIKE! A strike is our most powerful weapon and we don't even think about it. I tried to persuade a utility company employee (who admitted she felt upset about where we are headed) to stay home on September 11, and she said, "I can't do that. I never even played hooky in school" I told her maybe it's time to stop being such a good girl. Americans are well trained and very afraid.
Rabblerowzer, tune out and watch TV is exactly what they want you to do. They win.
Ephraim,
Well articulated!
Well, milesofmusic, we can riot in the streets and get mowed down by the thousands. Would that satisfy your demands that we show some "decency" and stop scratching our balls? Where do you live, on Mount Olympus? To me, it's a measure of how far we've fallen that all we seem able to do now is take cheap potshots at each other, when none of us is responsible for all the war crimes BushCo has committed, except collectively.
OK then, mea culpa! Mea culpa! It's all MY fault for not storming the White House singlehandedly and trying to mete out justice with whatever I could bring to hand. I could have been shot dead in 4 seconds but now free of guilt. And milesofmusic would have to blame everyone else!
If we knew what the hell to DO we'd do it. Meanwhile, since you seem to know, why don't you stop rubbing your chin whiskers and pontificating like the self-appointed scourge of America, and get rolling!
Folks have been writing since the beginning of this illegal,bloody war that the "contractors" and administration were looting the treasury. That's only part of what this is about. The prize is Iraq's capitulation to Production Service Agreements seizing control of Iraqi oil for Western oil companies. That is one "benchmark" the Iraqi's have not met! Thankfully! Another thing people should consider is this: The Republican Party, for 30 years, have ridiculed and criticized government involvement at every level of society from local, regional to federal. One of Reagan's favorite slogans was, "I"m from the government and here to help you." Ha, Ha, Ha! Snicker, snicker, snicker!
Since they have controlled the Federal government we have seen continual scenarios of incompetence, stupidity and outright fraud. Katrina, Iraq, health care, infrastructure collapse, higher education, etc. etc. Has any Republican controlled government at any level attempted to correct a single problem? No! Do their policies make things worse? Yes!
This obvious ineptness is not accidental, it is deliberate and a self-fulfilling prophecy that "government is the problem." What better way to have their slogan come true than to do nothing in a crises, produce destructive programs and wars. Getting rid of this diabolical, vicious and murderous party would take a real bloody revolution and I'm not sure the American people are up to such a challenge. I believe the public will just sit back , falsely expecting an "election" to correct the problems. Forget about it! Elections are rigged to continue the same scroundels in office. If we wait long enough, things will eventually implode into grinding poverty, lawlessness and total chaos. Perhaps then, people will wake up--too late--way too late!
'The consumable nature of our core products align ATK closely with America's future funding priorities.
Plainly said, war and preparation for war are the foundation of our profit and the future looks bright for ATK which has become the country's biggest bullet maker."
ATK also makes heavy artillery depleted uranium shells and cluster munitions. Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Malaysia, Chile, Israel, Pakistan, India, Greece and Turkey have
been eager customers for these quality ATK high-volume killing products.
So all tolled, it's happy times for the Military Industrial Complex and the Wall Street investor class.
As for the dead, wounded, maimed, crippled combatants and civilians, orphans and the innocent, those numbers are not included in the elegant corporate annual reports.
Praise the Lord and pass the ammo! Privatized war crimes are the future. The government transfer of wealth from the many taxpayers to the few insiders has never been better.
how sober can you get?
is it just me, or is it a little hard to breathe after reading that?
i have it on good authority that the Galactic Council has decided the time has come to convene the Delegations to decide which black hole the remains of Earth will be towed to after their spherical bomb goes off.
Probably the only hope is that low- and mid-level MP's and FBI ignore their politically-appointed superiors' desire to look the other way, and start making some arrests.
There are different sorts of leadership, and an anthropological distinction is drawn between "power" and "role." When the titled leaders are unable to police infractions, operate within the law themselves, etc. then they, simply put, have the titled role -- but not genuine leadership.
yeah, but here is the thing; while all you good conscience "good" amercians pontificate, scratch your balls and rub your chin whiskers about the sheer dismay you feel about your government, the war goes on each day. the outrages are not in the past they are current and daily.
i laughed my ass off to hear that haliburton and kbr and the other myriad of war profiteering cockroaches that suck in the hard earned tax dollars are now taking their companies offshore to avoid paying american taxes. what a joke. the rip off is now complete, sheer profit - cost plus of course.
what a bunch of fucking idiots and fools that you all have become.
if you had a shred, and i mean a shred, of decency you would be out in the street fighting the new war of independence. from the corporations who now own and run your quickly overrun country.
bush is not destroying the united states - he has destroyed the united states and you "good" americans do not have the courage, the will or the balls to fight and reclaim your country - it must be of no value to you.
it must be worthless!
.
We live in a Republican-Fascist dictatorship, and anyone who believes they will ever relinquish control is deluded. George W. Bush has made himself dictator without being challenged by Democrats, and he has no intention of ever relinquishing control. Even if Bush allows it, elections are easily rigged by a fascist government, especially when there is no opposition.
We are a nation ruled by racist, fascist thugs backed up by millions of racist, fascist thugs ready, willing and able to kill anyone who stands in their way. Ignorance is bliss for the rest of us. Apathy and indifference is the American Way.
"When evil rises, men hide," Proverbs.
We, the little people live in a lawless society made lawless by lawmakers who make themselves exempt from the law. Plutocrats rule by Mammon and the Media, brainwashing morons into thugs, and we can't stop legally. They won't allow a peaceful revolution, and we're too afraid to fight fire with fire. So, let's turn on, tune out, kick back, and watch TV.
.
In Jan. of 1979, I got out of the Coast Guard, and went to work for my Father. He was in the Tug/Barge Transportation Business. In 1977 he chartered a Off Shore Oil Supply Vessel and contracted to Conoco out of Gran Isle, La. I went down to mangage that vessel. Contracting in the Oil business was very policical and alot of business was "Cost plus 10 - 20 percent". We were chartered on a daily rate and we did well. However another company got delivery on a new vessel and we were called to be given 24 hours notice that we were being let go due to a slow down. The other new vessel arrive, and it was rumored that the forman was driving a new car a few days later. That was common practice in the Oil business, and the Iraq war is the same just done on a much larger scale. I was threaten never to give reports to Govt. Agencies, or to file lawsuits. I thought of notifing "60 Minutes", but someone asked me "Do yo want to get yourself killed?". I was glad in 1981 to leave the Gulf of Mexico area and vowled never to return. When it comes to ethic's in the South like that, they don't know what that is.
I sent my letter
In REsponse to:
KEM PATRICK August 31st, 2007 5:41 pm
I honestly hate to be a wet blanket, but I wonder if the E-mails would give them your address for a later pick-em up. Paranoid Kem
Yeah.. I think they probably would know who I am by now. I have sent so many letters to Chabot..... He certainly is on the Bush side...
I think that if folks are afraid writing and speaking out against this administration because they are afraid of booted military thugs or agents in sunglasses and snazzy business suits or perhaps just men in black in the dark of night throwing you into a van never to be seen again.... then our country IS lost...and THEY have won...
WATCH V for Vendetta again.
Ironically.. After I saw that movie. I was sitting in the theatre looking behind my shoulder afraid that the local police were going to come and arrest me...
I hear from Conservatives who tell me that my "paranoia" about my freedoms being taken away are bunk. HOW am I any less free? They ask me...
I speak out ASSUMING that my freedoms to speak are STILL intact BECAUSE I have to. I have to live that OR they WILL be taken away.... The minute you stop speaking out.. THe minute you are afraid they will Find you and throw you in Gitmo etc...and you become silent.... that is when THEY have won....
Don't let THEM do that to you! EVER.. The only strength we have is our dissent... Do not be afraid.... Fear is the mindkiller
I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear... And when it is gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear is gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain." FRANK HERBERT DUNE
Also.. read this other article...
The Necessary Embrace of Conspiracy
by Robert Shetterly
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/08/31/3521/
One has to wonder how the Bushites can get away with all of this brazen rot that is every where all the time. I believe a large share of our citizens are so pre-occupied with keeping themselves and their kids up with this rat race our society has become they do not even bother to inform themselves or worry about the destruction of our nation. Also, many people may be getting overwhelmed with the vast amount of outright fraud and incompetance and are choosing to not think about it in order to feel that they have some future ahead. Congress, of course has their own fat salaries, perks, and re-election to worry about so thay prefer to ride along and become a "frontrunner". It is all so encouraging to contemplate.
Thank you Kathy, actually the vets who were contamined with Agent Orange had similar symptoms as the Gulf War vets. Different poison but everyone who is contaminted gets sick with several diseases. DU is more likely to eventually cause cancers however. Of course some DU was used in Vietnam but the government has never admitted it. DU was first tested in weapons in the mid 60s. I understand the navy used it in shells fired from the NJ battleship in Vitetnam.
This is from my blog, "Nice Doggy."
http://lynnporter.wordpress.com
Iraq for sale: The War Profiteers
Available from Netflix, this 2006 documentary paints an outrageous picture of how Haliburton and other corporations are getting rich off the privatization of the Iraq war. There are now over 100,000 private contractors in Iraq, doing jobs that soldiers used to do, like providing food, at much higher salaries.
It's a giant ripoff of the American taxpayers. The corps get cost-plus contracts that guarrantee them a profit as a percentage of what they spend, so they spend as much as possible, of our money. Flatbed trucks have been sent on dangerous convoys across the desert empty, with civilian drivers not trained to fight, some of whom have been killed, just to drive up profits.
One contractor, whose job was to run water purification plants, talked about how the water was full of parasites and disease, water that Marines showered in and drank, and when he brought it up with his company he was told to mind his own business. He said many of the Marines are likely to come back with parasites in their bodies or diseases in their blood, and they won't even know they need to get checked, because no one in power is going to tell them.
This scandal has been reported on the news — the documentary includes clips from network news programs — and the issue has been raised by a few members of Congress, but so far Congress has done nothing about it, probably because the contractors have been generous in their campaign donations. The boards of these corporations are full of high ranking retired military officers with good Washington connections. Most of the contracts are granted with no competitive bidding.
I can only wish that more people would see this documentary, and do something about it.
Lynn Porter
Good observation, wcdevins. But I think Cheney needs an article about his Halliburton connections to do the subject justice. He's claimed to have signed a promise to donate his stock option profits to charity (which are getting juicier every year he's in office), but what's to stop him from returning to Halliburton after his "public service" and getting ROYALLY rewarded for that public service?
Soul crushing article and responses, yet sending it to my Republican pals and neighbors is pointless - they'll ignore it or claim it's liberal media propaganda. Taibbi fails to mention that Cheney himself set up the first contracts for Halliburton/KBR, a company that was still paying him while he was in office. Can you (or Pelosi) say "Conflict of interest?" So the fish again stinks from the head down.
BTW - Mtn Goat only appears when the subject is him paying taxes which help the poor, disenfranchised, and undereducated.
We have to keep our army of for profit contractors fit and in fightiing form.
damon13, he's a Marine. I don't think Marines get drafted.
leomanBK, I too am a health practitioner.But before my treatment, let me ask a question of utmost importance. Were you drafted?
KEM, Leoman isn't an Iraq vet or a young man. he's a Vietnam vet. Didn't have DU in Vietnam, but did have Agent Orange.
LEOMAN BK, You have just described the symptoms of radiation poisoning. Have the doctors had you testd for DU contamination by any chance. I'm a vet also and know how difficult it is to deal with the VA rules and with the government. Over 500,000 of the First Gulf War ground personnel vets are now permanently disabled, they are still young people too. My well wishes to you and good luck to you.
leomanBk, I am so sorry. I am an energy healing practitioner, and if you grant me permission I will do energy treatments to help you. It would be remote, I don't need anything but your permission. I already know who you are on an energetic level.
Kathy
This is Taibbi at his snarky best !!!
Where the hell is MntGoat? Or as I will call him from now on, "One trick pony". That kid has got nothing except for his slick reganomics.
If people of conscience choose not to act for fear that 'they' will target them for termination then the game is up already and we might as well all chain ourselves to our TV's for the duration, sucking up all the bowdlerized movies we have time for. 'All that is necessary for the triumph of evil, is that good people do nothing.' Ring a bell?
God forbid that I or anyone else who cares about more than acquiring an iPhone ASAP should be so timid as to do no more than grouse with other malcontents while watching the neighborhood skies for black helicopters. We're all being humped frantically by 'our betters', ladies and gents. If you're not terribly sore yet you sure ought to be.
I'm a Viet Nam Marine Corps veteran, now disabled by PTSD the V.A. refuses to accept is war-related, despite the testimony of three of their shrinks that, Yup, the war didn't help THIS guy's head out a bit.
The government trimming expenses by abandoning anyone who lacks the income to make large campaign contributions. I eke out survival on $900/month from SS Disability (THEY finally agreed that I was nuts, but only after two years of denying my claim ... because Congress said that they could, then forcing me to enlist a legal specialist to navigate the swamp of rules, regulations, jukes and jives erected to defend the Treasury from MY claim for $660 from it per month. He got 1/3 of the award of the benefits accumulated since filing the claim. That's about $3,000 for about 30 minutes work by him and one hour by his para-staff. Attorneys like him make a fortune from people like me who are forced by the government to enlist their services.
But, if you suckup to the Republican lowerarchy it only takes a day-and-a-half to collect $15,000,000. On the basis of a scribbled 'bid', no experience and no accountability.
Anybody else feeling fucked lately?
I had to fight for a year, despite living with M.E., a withering condition that combines CFS and fibromyalgia, to get state welfare (federally funded) to simply pull most of my cracked, broken and rotting teeth
that had gotten that way because America's poor and disabled don't merit basic dental care ... ever, and replace them with dental appliances. I ultimately had to appeal to a state senator to prod a local 'community dental center' to proceed with the work so I could eat again.
While pallots with $12,000,000,000 in CASH are flown to Iraq for undocumented distribution to all the waiting Republicans with their hands out, wearing big goofy grins.
Gee Whiz, getting to steal without needing guns!
HHS refuses to purchase 'scooters' for people like me whose bodies are so worn out that walking a few blocks in the neighborhood for anything: shopping, recreation, enjoying being outside; results in hours of agony that night as our bodies scream in protest; nice scoots run about $2,000. The HHS avoids this egregious expense with its 'in home restriction' that humane senators and congressmen have petitioned it for years to abolish. Only if you can't make it from one end of your home to the other without a wheelchair, will you be approved ... and then for a state-of-the-art electronic chair that runs about $6,000. Millions of aging people like me, don't have too much trouble getting around in our 'homes'. This isn't too shocking when you consider that, on the income our generous federal government gives us for all our lives' expenses, the majority of us live in low-income housing like mine that are no more than 25' in length and about 15' across. It's not a great challenge. In its penurious Republican wisdom, HHS subsidizes the theft of BILLIONS by its favorites by declaring that if we can do that, then we are physically fit.
King George, Inc., has so shredded America's social safety net that it is practically impossible not to fall through it. The thing, by now, is composed principally by holes ... and false bottoms ( like the ballyhooed assistance available through Medicaid for the poor ... which now requires that medical services first be billed before they will be paid, get it? First, you walk into the office of some greedy Republican medical practitioner and ask to be healed and then they're overjoyed to heap thousands of dollars worth of care on you, on the off-chance the government will reimburse them ... sure thing. If doctors and dentists and hearing aid purveyors believe in anything, they believe in $ up front or the ironclad assurance thereof. Otherwise, NO TICKY, NO LAUNDRY. Which means, in reality, that you never get the chance to incur the debts that would, allegedly, activate Medicaid coverage there for. Isn't that sly? Because of it, and the collateral fact that Medicaid now pays purveyors something like 60 cents on the dollar for their services billed, that I've not been able to hear SHIT for years; I've never been able to get the massage that my twisted, spasm-riddled muscles need to stop screaming and possibly even repair themselves.
So, what I have to keep suicide at bay is undermedication with opiates supplied by the VA, according to their authoritarian formulation that 40 mg of methadone each day is adequate to manage any and all pain ... whether it actually does or not, being perfectly irrelevant. And this results from Bush, Inc.'s pseudoreligious War On Drugs, which costs the Treasury billions each year and is effective only for cramming America's increasingly privatized prison system ... and making the acquisition of medical marijuana (which is, btw, an incredibly effective pain reliever) nigh on to impossible, even in states like mine (Washington) in which voters have legalized its use, because the fed, in the form of our latter day Inquisition, the DEA (aka, the Drug Thugs) disregards the will of the people of every state in its maniacal effort to prevent and punish the use of this wonder drug, even by the chronic and terminally ill who are authorized to acquire and use it without fear of government retribution. Washington state's MMJ law is rendered a nullity by the fed's reign of terror.
Anyone else disturbed yet?
I, WE, live under a tyranny that makes the depradations of the average drug cartel look whimsical by comparison.
There are aliens among us, and, god help us all, they are in charge.
Thank you for giving us the live 'one-click' to make it so easy, kathyodat. 4 more voters just let Rep. Conyers know we support his initiating impeachment proceedings.
And now I return to helping murder the idea of allowing unlimited personal fortunes, so we can stop relying on the least scrupulous amongst us to resist the tempting carrot of limitless fortune we have all chosen to keep hanging in front of them so far.
Well, at least its Rolling Stone, so some punk music nerd on crack will be motivated to vote? Rolling Stone has a wider audience than (pick yer media), so at least this story is being told? What a buzz kill for guys looking for CD and music server reviews. Its the ghost of gonzo's present.
Haven't you always known this was the case?
Emails pleading Pelosi to set HR333 free!
Conyers, let it out of Committee!
Jerold Nadler, just do something.
I sent it before I wrote the blog Kathy, what the heck, maybe I'll get to meet all of you swell people in person.
Kem, I'm not worried about Conyers. And surely you don't think "they" don't know who you are by now? Go ahead, please send the email.
that's what war is really about: MONEY! But what goes around comes around. Bush and his crooks will get what they deserve. they need to be put on death row and hung. and that would be too good for them.
I honestly hate to be a wet blanket, but I wonder if the E-mails would give them your address for a later pick-em up. Paranoid Kem
I've been saying for years that if Congress would cancel all the American "contracts" in Iraq instead of cutting troop funds, the war would be over. The American mercenaries have nearly as many personnel in Iraq as the American armed forces and they cost the taxpayers a hell of a lot more. Furthermore, under current law, they can't be prosecuted for any crimes against Iraqis, and they were involved in the Abu Ghraib torture.
The other shoddy work being done in Iraq by American contractors is unconscionable. However, those of us who want to see America out of Iraq because it was an illegal invasion in the first place may wish them to continue, at least with the huge embassy and the military bases that Bush intends to leave in Iraq. If they're uninhabitable, so be it.
I will, until my dying day, believe that this administration has spread faeces all over everything it's ever touched -- Iraq, the Constitution, the Presidency, every agency and company that supports them, and every single department in the government. If faeces and urine are literally coming through the walls and ceilings of the buildings being constructed in Iraq by American companies, I'm not surprised. That they're costing us billions also does not surprise me.
Your e-mail may not be responded to, nor read BUT it will be counted -- so send many e-mails.
Your response may not be responded to, nor read BUT it will be conted. So - e-mail often.
The Loonitary Dicktator does nothing for free. Although surely hidden via a tangled web of fake companies, off-shore PO Boxes, dummy corporations, ghost accounts et al, one wonders just how much is being skimmed into the secret Bush family coffers...
Yes Mendo Chuck, Peter DeFazio answers my questions. It took a couple of phone calls, but it got done. Not that I was satisfied with his response, but it was a response. Regarding my call for impeachment, he pointed out that the Democrats have granted Bush authority for what we now want to impeach him for. Good point. Makes them accessories in crime. Isn't that why that man in Texas will be executed? For sitting in a getaway car, not knowing a murder was taking place, but now will die for it? Except the Democrats knew what they were doing. They need to pay.
And Conyers is accepting emails from anyone, not just his own district. A sort of poll, you might say. So I wouldn't expect a response, just a hope for action. He's volunteering to buck Pelosi, who has threatened to dump him off the Judiciary committee chairmanship if he initiates impeachment hearings, so give him credit for courage and support him. I always understood Conyers' dilemma, and he is redeeming himself with me if he goes through with this.
Yeah I keep sending emails and they go unanswered. Probably unread also would be my guess . . . When was the last time anyone here actually heard back from a politician and the answer was actually directed to your original question? Can someone step forward here???
This whole thing is beginning to sound more and more like those original folks way back in 1773 when they were beginning to talk about that other King George that wasn't listening to them.
Read a history book and just change the dates and see what you think.
To bad there isn't a boat in the Boston Harbor that has a load of tea.
Email Sent . . . We'll see
Boy, this puts "Ocean's 11 and 12" combined to shame. Hell, it even makes the robberbarons of the Progressive Era in America look like altar boys.
I've already sent my email kathy, I pray everyone else does as well...
The story said that if Conyers gets sufficient public support he will open impeachment proceedings. Go for it!
And impeachment is off the table? This administration is stealing us blind and destroying our country and our Constitution and Congress is sucking it's thumb and trying to look busy.
I read that Conyers is asking for public input on impeachment. His office requested emails in support. I went to his official website and this is a bonafide email address, so it's a real request from his office. Let's give an avalanche of response.
JOHN.CONYERS@MAIL.HOUSE.GOV
"This was about the business of government being corrupted by the profit motive to such an extraordinary degree that now we all have to wonder how we will ever be able to depend on the state to do its job in the future. If catastrophic failure is worth billions, where's the incentive to deliver success?"
Wow, success? Wait for the IraKi surge report, and W demanding billions more for this cluster fuck of all cluster fucks.
I just wish georgie would get recorded in the AirForce 1 bathroom, getting a hummer from a secret serviceman, so we can impeach him.
This article is not easy reading, especially since we've had "clues" from the very beginning of this administration. It's heart-breaking for this senior mom and greatgrandmother. Many people I know have been hurt here in Michigan especially. Remember when Haveman was chosen to replace a very competent man and somehow believed he would soon be found out and kicked out.
I plan to forward this article to everyone I know, and to our members of Congress for sure.
Thank you, Matt Taibbi, for your hard work and honesty.
This is precicely the reason we are going to have a depression, this is only a smidgen of the money wasted and stolen. Those most guilty? ___ Our 'free' press.
Excuse me for noticing, but what if in hindsight we took all the money we have given to this clusterfuck of contractors and simply paid off the enemy to quit? I'm sure Iraqis know how to take a bribe. It would have probably been cheaper.
You know, we are used to hearing about someone like Ferdinand Marcos or other dictators in third world countries (of course!), who embezzled huge amounts of their countries' resources and put it in a Swiss bank account and then retired happily somewhere. But lo, this is what our very own administration is doing. They are happily bleeding our country dry and feasting on their ill-gotten gains.
Three Hundred Thousand Dollars Per Second.
That's what 'the surge is working' really means.