"Phil" wrote in message
news:_UqCb.525744$Fm2.506887@attbi_s04...
"Sandman" wrote in message
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
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"Michael McKelvy" wrote in message
"Sandman" wrote in message
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http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/11/in...ND-PENT.html?h
p
Hey Sand Brain! If you want people to read your ****ing propaganda,
how about posting the article instead of the link to some place
people have to fill out a form.
Sanders is right, here we go again.
" A Pentagon investigation has found evidence of overcharging and
other
violations in billions of dollars worth of reconstruction contracts
for
Iraq
that were awarded to Vice President Dick Cheney's former company,
military
officials said today."
This relates to this item:
http://www.rcfp.org/behindthehomefro...e/2003_11.html
Senator Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn), Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Cal) and Rep.
John
Dingell (D-Mich)have requested that the Pentagon inspector general
investigate the alleged over-pricing of gasoline sent to Iraq by
Halliburton, Reuters reports. Haliburton is working under a contract
from
the Army Corps of Engineers to supply gas to Iraq until local oil
refineries
are brought back up to speed. The company has been accused of
overcharging
the U.S. for the gasoline, but has said that the high price is due to
the
cost of providing security. Haliburton, which was formerly run by Vice
President Dick Cheney, received Iraqi reconstruction contracts without
going
through the normal competitive bidding process.
Any of you who had taken the time to fill out the form and read the
article
would have noticed that it *is* the *Pentagon*, not just a handful of
Senators, which is investigating Halliburton on not just this but other
charges of malfeasance. After all, it's the Pentagon that's getting
slapped
with Halliburton's price-gouging bills. And that means you, me, and
every
other American taxpayer is getting gouged by the Bush/Cheney cronyism.
Had enough yet???
Well, there is a bit of a problem with the whole Bush/Cheney cronyism
angle
and I'll just take a quote from today's New York Times article.
"The officials said Halliburton did not appear to have profited from
overcharging for fuel, but had instead paid a subcontractor too much for
the
gasoline in the first place."--news story, New York Times, Dec. 12
To bad, it appears your dreams of cronyism is again, wrong.
The "subcontractor" was Halliburton's own. The money still went into
Halliburton's pockets, and the Pentagon is in the process of extracting it,
with, by now, Bush's blessing.
Sandman