PDA

View Full Version : Haliburton's Benefits - Thanks Dick Cheney




catch&release
03-17-2004, 05:31 PM
U.S. Withholds 15 Pct of Halliburton Bill
1 hour, 56 minutes ago Add Top Stories - Reuters to My Yahoo!


By Sue Pleming

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon (news - web sites) said on Wednesday it would withhold payment on 15 percent of meal bills from Texas firm Halliburton (NYSE:HAL - news) under a logistics contract in Iraq (news - web sites) that is under military auditors' scrutiny.


A Pentagon spokeswoman said the withholding would amount to about $300 million this month not paid to Halliburton, the oil services company once run by Vice President Dick Cheney (news - web sites) that is the U.S. military's biggest contractor in Iraq.

The withheld funds cover meals provided by Halliburton unit Kellogg Brown and Root to troops in Kuwait and Iraq. If $300 million were withheld, the total expected to be billed by Halliburton for meals would be about $2 billion.


Military auditors and Halliburton have been at loggerheads for months over pricing for meals and whether billing should be based on estimates or the actual number of soldiers at the dining table on any given day.


The company agreed earlier this year to withhold $176.5 million in billing for food while KBR prepared a response to issues reported by the Defense Contract Audit Agency.


"This shows that the system is working," said Pentagon comptroller Dov Zakheim of the decision to partially withhold payment while auditors examined pricing.


Military auditors are looking into whether KBR overcharged for some of its services in Iraq and Kuwait, where its contracts cover tasks from serving hot meals and doing laundry to delivering mail and building bases for U.S. troops.


A Pentagon spokeswoman said "a 15 percent withholding will be taken on all claims for reimbursement until such time as the final prices are negotiated."


DEFICIENCIES


She said the contracting officer involved with KBR had asked the company to present a rebuttal to the DCAA's recommendation, adding that the officer said the 15 percent would be withheld at the end of this month.


The 15 percent will amount to about $300 million, the spokeswoman said.


Last week, military auditors said Halliburton had shown "systemic deficiencies" in its cost estimates for billions of dollars of work in Iraq.


Halliburton and its unit KBR are the U.S. military's biggest contractor there, holding contracts that could eventually total nearly $18 billion, including one to help rebuild Iraq's oil industry.


Under its logistics contract with the U.S. military to support troops in Iraq and other conflict zones, auditors have been looking into the company's pricing for meals to troops.


Auditors are also examining whether KBR overcharged for fuel brought into Iraq via a subcontractor. Criminal investigators at the Pentagon are looking into this issue.


The company did not immediately reply to e-mailed questions over the Pentagon's decision.


Halliburton has defended its work in Iraq and says it is doing the best job possible under difficult circumstances.




Fish Factor
03-18-2004, 11:42 AM
March 3, 2004

As published in The Washington Post on March 3, 2004.

PILING ON HALLIBURTON

THE WASHINGTON POST

By: DAVE LESAR – Groucho Marx once said that "politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedies." That may overstate the case some, but right now Groucho looks less like a comic and more like a political analyst.

Compliance with government contracting is a daunting task replete with potential points for differing interpretation. Halliburton has been working with the military since World War II and understands the process as well as anyone. In the best of circumstances, auditors are going to ask very specific questions and companies are going to respond with answers to those questions. The two sides do not always agree, but the process ensures that everyone understands both the questions and the answers. We have always worked with the auditors and we will continue to work with them. At times we have disagreed on issues that were subject to audit, but we have always been able to work through these issues. The process normally works well because it balances the government's need to deliver products and services at the best value and the company's need to be fairly paid for its work.

In the 2004 campaign season, Halliburton apparently is no longer entitled to answer questions before being accused of mismanagement, profiteering or misuse of funds. Halliburton is under the most intense public scrutiny of any corporation in America today. The primary reason for the attacks on our integrity seems to be that the vice president of the United States used to hold my job. Some of these critics are not content to rage about the Iraq war. They are intent on creating a new and continuing war against Halliburton, even ignoring the truth about our work supporting the troops in Iraq and around the world.

Examples include a very public charge of "war profiteering" on fuels shipped into Iraq from Kuwait. Missing in the first headlines, and generally unreported since, is the fact that the contracts were approved by our client, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Meanwhile, Halliburton actually suggested that Turkey be used as an alternative fuel source, a recommendation that saved millions in taxpayer dollars. Numerous investigations have been launched following the media reports. We are confident that it will be proven that Halliburton delivered the fuel at the best price on the best terms, even under emergency wartime conditions.

Another report addressed the possibility that two former Halliburton employees received kickbacks from a Kuwaiti contractor. Missing from the debate on that subject is the fact that the activities of one or two rogue employees were caught by Halliburton internal auditors. As a result, taxpayers didn't lose a penny.

Recently two other former employees said that Halliburton has engaged in a variety of overcharging practices that are costing the taxpayers millions of dollars. If the goal of their statements and news events was anything more than political grandstanding, we could have again demonstrated why the "facts" they used to make these claims were wrong -- not just misinterpreted, but wrong.

One phone call to Halliburton would have eliminated their incorrect statement that we bought monogrammed towels in Iraq for $7.50 each. Some monogrammed towels were used at one site to limit the disappearance of towels. They cost $3 each. In another claim, critics say Halliburton paid $7,500 per month for lease vehicles. Our records indicate no such lease payment for any one vehicle. Indeed, every example cited in their public statement has a logical factual explanation or can be refuted outright. So please, in the future, make that call to us.

We support aggressive government oversight, and our approach is to not pick fights with elected officials. We have served both Democratic and Republican administrations for more than 60 years. We are proud of our record and of our employees who serve the military. We receive contracts to make omelets and build infrastructure because of our unique skill sets. In short, we get government contracts because of what we know, not who we know.

When we are operating in a war zone under intense time pressures we will of course make some mistakes. But our commitment at Halliburton is that when we make a mistake, we say so and we fix it. Our hope is that we take politics out of the equation. I can assure you, however, that regardless of how political the field becomes, Halliburton will continue to deliver what our soldiers need to feel a little closer to home.

The writer is chairman and CEO of Halliburton C

snakebit67
03-18-2004, 08:52 PM
Touche:D

Swamp Monster
03-19-2004, 07:22 AM
Heavon forbid the dems actually listen to someone that actually does the work and knows how to do it...lol. Instead they get their education form the media, can you say puppets? Lets see Haliburton is succesfull, so to the socialists they must be evil.

It's funny that Senator Fienstein (sp) husband and his company got some precious gov't contracts but ofcourse you don't see any dems crying about that. Flip-flop, flip-flop, flip-flop, flip-flop, flip-flop.

Swamp Monster
03-19-2004, 07:44 AM
Here's a link, just incase someone thinks I'm making it up.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/898280/posts


Here is even more....
http://www.publicintegrity.org/wow/bio.aspx?act=pro&ddlC=45

Whats that I hear?......
flip-flop,flip-flop,flip-flop,flip-flop,flip-flop,flip-flop...thats not a happy beach goer either folks but a dem talking out of both sides of their mouth!

What do you call a democrat with integrity and back bone?
>
>
>
>
An afterthought!

TC-fisherman
03-19-2004, 08:45 AM
Lets see Haliburton is succesfull, so to the socialists they must be evil.

Lets see halibuton is a big company, so to the fascists they must be good.

It's funny that Senator Fienstein (sp) husband and his company got some precious gov't contracts but ofcourse you don't see any dems crying about that

Did his company bid on the contract or was it awarded without a bidding competeting like cheney's company haliburton?

Has his company been caught ripping off US Taxpayers then as punishement been given new contracts?

I am surprised none of the fascists have said "whats good for Halliburton is good for America"

Swamp Monster
03-21-2004, 10:08 AM
TC, if you think the Haliburton contract is the first gov't contract that has been found to have incorrect billing, than your living under a rock. It's only a big deal to the media because of Cheney's past ties...thats it. If it weren't for those ties, you wouldn't here to much about it, but the dems, due to there lack of solid issues, need to run with it.

dogjaw
03-21-2004, 10:19 AM
Originally posted by Swamp Monster
TC, if you think the Haliburton contract is the first gov't contract that has been found to have incorrect billing, than your living under a rock. It's only a big deal to the media because of Cheney's past ties...thats it. If it weren't for those ties, you wouldn't here to much about it, but the dems, due to there lack of solid issues, need to run with it.
YEP

TC-fisherman
03-21-2004, 11:18 AM
incorrect billing
Thanks for the laugh:)

are the words "fraud" and "theft" not in your vocabulary?

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The US Defense Department has launched a criminal investigation into allegations that a subsidiary of US energy and services group Halliburton has overcharged the military for oil delivered to Iraq (news - web sites), a defense official said

The criminal probe comes on the heels of another damaging imbroglio over allegedly overpriced meals served by Halliburton to the US military in Iraq and Kuwait, which forced the company last week to suspended 140 million dollars worth of disputed invoices.

Please note the word "criminal" as in crime not "incorect billing"

link to article (http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=1520&ncid=1520&e=18&u=/afp/20040224/pl_afp/us_iraq_halliburton_040224144558)