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Good, nice to see an infrastructure being rebuilt after they destroy it etc etc.
And having a quick looksee at who runs/sits on the board of this prestigous company reveals?
"Fluor's former chairman and chief executive officer Philip J. Carroll Jr., oversees restructuring Iraq's oil industry. The 65-year old former oil-industry executive—he spent 37 years with Shell—is chairman of the board advising Thamir Ghadhban, the Iraqi appointed to head Iraq's oil ministry during the U.S. occupation"
....an oil advisor with a huge share percentage in Fluor...ok, just a coincidence.
"Vice president of strategy and government services, Kenneth J. Oscar was acting assistant secretary of the Army before joining Fluor in April 2002. Oscar directed an annual $35 billion procurement budget and managed research, development, production and maintenance of all weapon systems"
...ex military man...no connection there with Dubya then.
"Bobby R. Inman, a board member since 1985, is a retired admiral who served as director of the National Security Agency and deputy director of the Central Intelligence Agency."
Deputy Director of The CIA? So not connected to Daddy Bush and mini-Bush then, nope.
Make of it what you will, I'm just presenting the info.
http://www.publicintegrity.org /wow/report.aspx?aid=65
And if you navigate the frames on the left, you can get a list of the contracts awarded, how much and to whom.
Nice to see
"The Center's investigation focused on the three agencies that awarded most of the Iraq and Afghanistan contracts in 2002 and 2003—the Pentagon, the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development. It found that nearly every one of the 10 largest contracts awarded for Iraq and Afghanistan went to companies employing former high-ranking government officials or individuals with close ties to those agencies or Congress.
In addition, those top 10 contractors were established political donors, contributing nearly $11 million to national political parties, candidates and political action committees since 1990, according to an analysis of campaign finance records."
At least the Roman Empire were honest about annexing nations and using client states as profit machines...
Good, nice to see an infrastructure being rebuilt after they destroy it etc etc.
And having a quick looksee at who runs/sits on the board of this prestigous company reveals?
"Fluor's former chairman and chief executive officer Philip J. Carroll Jr., oversees restructuring Iraq's oil industry. The 65-year old former oil-industry executive—he spent 37 years with Shell—is chairman of the board advising Thamir Ghadhban, the Iraqi appointed to head Iraq's oil ministry during the U.S. occupation"
....an oil advisor with a huge share percentage in Fluor...ok, just a coincidence.
"Vice president of strategy and government services, Kenneth J. Oscar was acting assistant secretary of the Army before joining Fluor in April 2002. Oscar directed an annual $35 billion procurement budget and managed research, development, production and maintenance of all weapon systems"
...ex military man...no connection there with Dubya then.
"Bobby R. Inman, a board member since 1985, is a retired admiral who served as director of the National Security Agency and deputy director of the Central Intelligence Agency."
Deputy Director of The CIA? So not connected to Daddy Bush and mini-Bush then, nope.
Make of it what you will, I'm just presenting the info.
http://www.publicintegrity.org /wow/report.aspx?aid=65
And if you navigate the frames on the left, you can get a list of the contracts awarded, how much and to whom.
Nice to see
"The Center's investigation focused on the three agencies that awarded most of the Iraq and Afghanistan contracts in 2002 and 2003—the Pentagon, the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development. It found that nearly every one of the 10 largest contracts awarded for Iraq and Afghanistan went to companies employing former high-ranking government officials or individuals with close ties to those agencies or Congress.
In addition, those top 10 contractors were established political donors, contributing nearly $11 million to national political parties, candidates and political action committees since 1990, according to an analysis of campaign finance records."