-Caveat Lector-

*Editors Note | At the time Dick Cheney retired as CEO of Halliburton, to run
along side George W. Bush for control of the White House, the company awarded
him a Twenty Million dollar retirement package. They stated at the time that
it was their legal prerogative to increase the size of that package at any
time to any amount they desired. In essence Halliburton can give Dick Cheney
as much money as they want whenever they want as long as it is earmarked;
'retirement package enhancement.' -- ma)


In Tough Times, a Company Finds Profits in Terror War

By Jeff Gerth And Don Van Natta Jr. New York Times

Saturday, 13 July, 2002

WASHINGTON, July 12 -- The Halliburton Company, the Dallas oil services
company bedeviled lately by an array of accounting and business issues, is
benefiting very directly from the United States efforts to combat terrorism.

>From building cells for detainees at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba to feeding
American troops in Uzbekistan, the Pentagon is increasingly relying on a unit
of Halliburton called KBR, sometimes referred to as Kellogg Brown & Root.

Although the unit has been building projects all over the world for the
federal government for decades, the attacks of Sept. 11 have led to
significant additional business. KBR is the exclusive logistics supplier for
both the Navy and the Army, providing services like cooking, construction,
power generation and fuel transportation. The contract recently won from the
Army is for 10 years and has no lid on costs, the only logistical arrangement
by the Army without an estimated cost.

The government business has been well timed for Halliburton, whose stock
price has tumbled almost two-thirds in the last year because of concerns
about its asbestos liabilities, sagging profits in its energy business and an
investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission into its accounting
practices back when Vice President Dick Cheney ran the company. The
government contracts, which the company said Mr. Cheney played no role in
helping Halliburton win, either while he led the company or after he left,
offer the prospect of a long and steady cash flow that impresses financial
analysts.

Since the Sept. 11 attacks, Congress has appropriated $30 billion in
emergency money to support the campaign against terrorism. About half has
gone to the Pentagon, much of it to buy weapons, supplies, and services.
Although KBR is probably not the largest recipient of all the government
contracts related to terror efforts, few companies have longer or deeper ties
to the Pentagon. And no company is better positioned to capitalize on this
trend.

The value of the contracts to Halliburton is hard to quantify, but the
company said government work generated less than 10 percent of its $13
billion in revenue last year.

The government business is "very good, a relatively stable source of cash
flow," said Alexandra S. Parker, senior vice president of Moody's Investors
Service. "We view it positively."

By hiring an outside company to handle much of its logistics, the Pentagon
may wind up spending more taxpayer money than if it did the work itself.

Under the new Army contract, KBR's work in Central Asia, at least for the
next year, will cost 10 percent to 20 percent more than if military personnel
were used, according to Army contract managers. In Uzbekistan, the Army
failed to ascertain, as regulations require, whether its own units, which
handled logistics there for the first six months, were available to work when
it brought in the contractor, according to Army spokesmen.

The costs for KBR's current work in Central Asia could "dramatically
escalate" without proper monitoring, but adequate cost control measures are
in place, according to Lt. Col. Clay Cole, who oversees the contract.

The Army contract is a cost-plus arrangement and shrouded in secrecy. The
contractor is reimbursed for its allowable costs and gets a bonus based on
performance. In the past, KBR has usually received the maximum performance
bonus, according to Pentagon officials. Though modest now, the Army contract
could produce hundreds of millions of dollars for the company. In the
Balkans, for instance, its contract with the Army started at less than $4
million and turned into a multibillion-dollar agreement.

Mr. Cheney played no role, either as vice president or as chief executive at
Halliburton, in helping KBR win government contracts, company officials said.


In a written statement, the company said that Mr. Cheney "steadfastly
refused" to market KBR's services to the United States government in the five
years he served as chief executive. Mr. Cheney concentrated on the company's
energy business, company officials said, though he was regularly briefed on
the company's Pentagon contracts. Mr. Cheney sold Halliburton stock, worth
more than $20 million, before he became vice president. After he took office,
he donated his remaining stock options to charity.

Like other military contractors, KBR has numerous former Pentagon officials
who know the government contracts system in its management ranks, including a
former military aide to Mr. Cheney when he was defense secretary. The senior
vice president responsible for KBR's Pentagon contracts is a retired four-
star admiral, Joe Lopez, who was Mr. Cheney's military aide at the Pentagon
in the early 1990's. Halliburton said Mr. Lopez was hired in 1999 after a
suggestion from Mr. Cheney.

"Brown & Root had the upper hand with the Pentagon because they knew the
process like the back of their hand," said T. C. McIntosh, a Pentagon
criminal investigator who last year examined some of the company's Army
contracts in the 1990's. He said he found that a contractor "gets away with
what they can get away with."

For example, KBR got the Army to agree to pay about $750,000 for electrical
repairs at a base in California that cost only about $125,000, according to
Mr. McIntosh, an agent with the Defense Criminal Investigative Service.

KBR officials did not dispute the electrical cost figures, which were part of
an $18 million contract. But they said government investigators tried to
suggest wrongdoing when there was not any.

"The company happened to negotiate a couple of projects we made more money on
than others," said one company lawyer, who insisted on anonymity. He added,
"On some projects the contractor may make a large or small profit, while on
others it may lose money, as KBR sometimes did on this contract."

Mr. McIntosh said he and an assistant United States attorney in Sacramento
were inclined to indict the company last year after they developed evidence
that a few KBR employees had "lied to the government" in pricing proposals
for electrical repair work at Fort Ord. Mr. McIntosh said the Sacramento
prosecutor said to him, "Let's go for this, it's a winnable criminal case."

A KBR lawyer said that the government's theory "was novel and unfairly tried
to criminalize what was only a preliminary proposal."

The United States attorney's office in Sacramento declined to discuss its
internal deliberations in the cast. But it dropped the criminal inquiry and
reached a civil settlement in February, in part because of weak contract
monitoring by the Army, according to Mr. McIntosh and a lawyer involved in
the case.

As part of the settlement, KBR paid $2 million but denied any liability.

Last December the Army's Operations Support Command, unaware of the criminal
investigation, found KBR's past contracting experiences to be exemplary as it
awarded the company the 10-year logistical support contract, according to a
command spokeswoman, Gale Smith.

The Army command's lengthy review of bidders did not discover that KBR was
the target of a criminal investigation though it was disclosed in
Halliburton's annual report submitted with the bid, according to Ms. Smith.
She said that if the support command's managers had known of the criminal
inquiry, they would have looked further at the matter but not changed the
award.

KBR's ability to earn the Pentagon's trust dates back decades.

"It's standard operating procedure for the Department of Defense to haul in
Brown & Root," said Gordon Adams, who helped oversee the military budget for
President Bill Clinton.

The company's first military contract was in 1940, to build a Naval air
station in Corpus Christi, Tex. In the 1960's, it built bases in Vietnam. By
the 1990's, KBR was providing logistical support in Haiti, Somalia and the
Balkans.

KBR's military logistics business began to escalate rapidly with its
selection for a $3.9 million contract in 1992, Mr. Cheney's last year at the
Pentagon. Over the last 10 years, the revenues have totaled $2.5 billion,
mostly a result of widening American involvement in the Balkans after 1995.

"We did great things to support the U.S. military overseas -- we did better
than they could support themselves," said Charles J. Fiala, a former
operations officer for KBR. "I was in the Department of Defense for 35 years.
We knew what the government was like."

Robert E. Ayers, another former KBR executive who still consults for the
company, said Mr. Cheney "stayed fairly well informed" on the Balkans
contract.

Stan Solloway, a former top Pentagon procurement official who now heads an
association of contractors, said the company "understood the
military mind-set" and "did a very good job in the Balkans."

But reports in 1997 and 2000 by the General Accounting Office, the audit arm
of Congress, found weak contract monitoring by the Army
contributed to cost increases in the Balkan contract that benefited KBR.

The audit agency's 1997 report concluded that the Army allowed KBR to fly in
plywood from the United States, at a cost of $85.98 a sheet,
because it did not have time to procure it in Europe, where sheets cost
$14.06.

Mr. Ayers, the former KBR executive, had worked on the Balkans contract. "If
the rules weren't stiff and specific," he said, "the contractor could
make money off of overspending by the government."

The contract awarded last December by the Army's Operations Support Command,
is "open ended" with "no estimated value," said Ms. Smith,
the command's spokeswoman. She said that was mainly "because the various
contingencies are beginning to unfold."

KBR won this and most of its other Pentagon contracts in a competition with
other contractors, but KBR is the sole source for the many tasks that
fall under the umbrella contract.

Pentagon officials said the company had recently taken over a wide range of
tasks at Khanabad Air Base in Uzbekistan, from running the dining
operation to handling fuel and generating power for the airfield. The company
employs Uzbeks, paying them in accordance with "local laws and
customs" but operating under United States health and safety guidelines,
according to Halliburton's statement.

For the first six months that American troops were at Khanabad, the
logistical support was provided by the Army's First Corps Support
Command. Mr. Cole, the contract manager for the joint command in Kuwait, said
the contract would initially cost 10 to 20 percent more than if the
Army had done the work itself. He said that he and his staff recommended
using the contractor because "they do a better job of maintaining the
infrastructure." In addition, he said, the contractor should provide long-
term flexibility, an asset in a war with many unknowns, and cost savings by
avoiding Army troop transfers.

Ms. Smith said that the criticisms by the G.A.O. had led the Army to build
additional controls into the contract.

At its base in Cuba, the Navy has followed the same pattern as the Army: use
the military first and augment it with KBR. The Navy's construction
brigade, the Seabees, built the first detention facility for battlefield
detainees at Guantanamo Bay. Then the Navy activated a recently awarded
$300 million, five-year logistic support contract with KBR to construct more
permanent facilities, some 600 units, built mostly by workers from the
Philippines and India, at a cost of $23 million.

John Peters, the Navy Facilities Engineering Command spokesman, said the
permanent camp was "bigger, more sophisticated than what
Seabees do." But the Seabees built the facilities for the troops guarding the
detainees, and in the 1990's the Seabees built two tent cities
capable of housing 20,000 refugees in Guantanamo Bay.

"Seabees typically can perform the work at about half the cost of
contractors, because labor costs are already sunk and paid for," said Daryl
Smith, a Seabees spokesman.

Zelma Branch, a KBR spokeswoman, said the company relied on its excellent
record rather than personal relationships to win its contracts. But hiring
former military officers can help the company understand and anticipate the
Pentagon's needs.

"The key to the company's success is good client relations and having
somebody who could anticipate what the client's needs are going to be," Mr.
Ayers, the former company executive, said.

------------------------
"In little more than a year we have gone from enjoying peace
and the most prosperous economy in our history, to a nation
plunged into war, recession and fear. This is a nation being
transformed before our very eyes."

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