----------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

March 21, 2003
Pentagon Adviser Is Also Advising Global Crossing
By STEPHEN LABATON


ASHINGTON, March 20 - Even as he advises the Pentagon on war matters,
Richard N. Perle, chairman of the influential Defense Policy Board, has been
retained by the telecommunications company Global Crossing to help overcome
Defense Department resistance to its proposed sale to a foreign firm, Mr.
Perle and lawyers involved in the case said today.

Mr. Perle, an assistant defense secretary in the Reagan administration, is
close to many senior officials, including Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld, who appointed him to lead the policy board in 2001. Though the
board does not pay its members and is technically not a government agency,
it wields tremendous influence in policy circles. And its chairman is
considered a "special government employee," subject to federal ethics rules,
including one that bars anyone from using public office for private gain.

Mr. Perle and his lawyer said yesterday that his involvement with Global
Crossing did not violate the ethics rules.

According to lawyers involved in the review and a legal notice that Global
Crossing is preparing to file soon in bankruptcy court, Mr. Perle is to be
paid $725,000 by the company, including $600,000 if the government approves
the sale of the company to a joint venture of Hutchison Whampoa, controlled
by the Hong Kong billionaire Li Ka-shing, and Singapore Technologies
Telemedia, a phone company controlled by the government of Singapore.

Lawyers said today that Mr. Perle had been helping Global Crossing for
several weeks. They said he was brought in as a prominent Republican with
close ties to the current officials. He has taken on a particularly
important role, they said, since the company recently pulled back its
request for the government to clear the sale in the face of opposition from
the Defense Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Those agenci
es have said that the proposed deal presents national security and law
enforcement problems, because it would put Global Crossing's worldwide fiber
optics network - one used by the United States government - under Chinese
ownership.

Mr. Perle and his lawyers were preparing to file an affidavit dated March 7
and a legal notice dated today, March 20, that said he was uniquely
qualified to advise the company on the matter because of his job as head of
the Defense Policy Board.

But after a reporter raised questions today about whether Mr. Perle was
using his job at the Defense Policy Board for the benefit of a client, they
said the references to his job should not have been in the legal papers and
would be deleted before they were filed in the bankruptcy proceeding.

In the March 7 affidavit, Mr. Perle said, "As the chairman of the Defense
Policy Board, I have a unique perspective on and intimate knowledge of the
national defense and security issues that will be raised by the CFIUS review
process that is not and could not be available to the other CFIUS
professionals." The company used similar language in its legal notice.

CFIUS refers to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, a
government group that includes representatives from the Defense Department
and other agencies. It has been considering the deal and has the power to
block it. "CFIUS professionals" refers to the other lawyers and lobbyists
who have been trying to get the committee to approve the deal.

Mr. Perle, in an interview late this afternoon, said that he had not noticed
the language in the affidavit and that it was an erroneous reference because
the Defense Policy Board has nothing to do with reviewing the sale of
American companies to foreign investors.

"It was drafted by the lawyers, and I frankly didn't notice it," he said.

Shortly after that interview, Mr. Perle called back and said that he
remembered that the language concerning the Defense Review Board had
appeared in an earlier draft of the affidavit and that he had struck it out
because it was incorrect.

"You have a draft that I never signed," he said.

After consulting with a company lawyer, Mr. Perle called back and in a third
conversation said that he had taken the phrase out of the affidavit "because
it seemed inappropriate and irrelevant" but that someone put it back in the
document and he signed it without noticing it.

"This was a clerical error, and not my clerical error," he said.

An adviser involved with one of the parties in the case said tonight that
Mr. Perle had not read the affidavit closely and that he had, in fact,
signed it but that it would be changed before it was filed.

Mr. Perle said he did not seek an ethics opinion as to whether he could work
on the Global Crossing matter, because he said it posed no legal problems.

"I've abided by the rules," he said. "The question, I should think, is have
I recommended anything to the secretary or discussed this with the
secretary, and I haven't," he said, referring to Mr. Rumsfeld. "The
alternative is if you are on the board, you can't have any action before the
Defense Department. That isn't the rule. If that were the rule, I'd have to
make a choice between being on an unpaid advisory board and my business."

Mr. Perle said that he was not engaged in lobbying with senior officials at
the Defense Department and that his role was to advise Global Crossing on
the process of gaining approval. He said his sole discussions with Pentagon
officials had been over what assurances they would need to satisfy
themselves that a deal would not pose any national security problems.

"I'm not using public office for private gain because the Defense Policy
Board has nothing to do with the CFIUS process," he said.

But other lawyers and advisers to the companies involved in the deal said
that Mr. Perle had been brought in precisely because he has access to top
officials. They noted that Mr. Perle's fee was largely contingent on the
deal's being approved, an unusual arrangement in Washington legal circles.
And they noted that he was retained after Global Crossing, which has a
history of using well-connected lobbyists, had realized that many of the
other lawyers and lobbyists had strong Democratic ties but no solid
Republican ones.

Among others who have been retained to gain approval of the proposed deal
are Thomas F. McLarty III, the former Clinton chief of staff; Stuart E.
Eizenstat, a former deputy Treasury secretary, and lawyers at Skadden, Arps,
Slate, Meagher & Flom and Dewey Ballantine.

Mr. Perle, who as chairman of the Defense Policy Board has been a leading
advocate of the United States' invasion of Iraq, spoke on Wednesday in a
conference call sponsored by Goldman Sachs, in which he advised participants
on possible investment opportunities arising from the war. The conference's
title was "Implications of an Imminent War: Iraq Now. North Korea Next?"



Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company | Privacy Policy


Reply via email to