[Organize] A request of the group (Was [profiteers] Bechtel pulling out of Iraq!)
Carol Urner
curner at qwest.net
Wed Nov 8 17:14:12 EST 2006
Welcome Jacqui. I remember you from the Bio-democracy event in Philadelphia
back in 2005 where you led a workshop on the Carlyle group and war
profiteers.
I welcome your suggestion that we introduce ourselves, and I assume also
note where we see ourselves and our organizations fitting into the effort to
build a network of those seeking to expose and restrain, convert or put out
of business the “merchants of death.”
I am Carol Urner, co-chair of the DISARM! Dismantle the War Economy
Committee of U.S. Section, Women’s International League for Peace and
Freedom. WILPF and WRL formed about the same time over 90 years ago to put
an end to war. Stopping the war profiteers has been a major concern of WILPF
since its earliest days. Ellen Barfield, a WRL Board member, is the other
co-chair and we have a committee of ten active, energetic and committed
women spread across the country. About 20 of our Branches are now actively
involved in the DISARM program.
Since 1999 both national and international WILPF have been evolving a
Mil-Corp manual on those war profiteers promoting the nuclear weapons
industry. Frida Berrigan and Felicity Hill researched and designed the core
on The Dirty Dozen: Partners in Mass Destruction. The initial emphasis was
on the nuclear weapons industry. In the U.S. section we developed a 200 page
manual for WILPF members and anyone else ready to study, research and
actively engage these profiteers in their own communities. We have gradually
expanded it as a manual for tracking any war profiteer, but the emphasis is
on the nuclear and space industries. During the past year we have also begun
researching the bio-defense industry, which involves our universities and is
already out of control and growing at breath taking speed. The manual also
includes a research-study-action guide, hundreds of web links, background
material on detrimental effects of the military industry, on conversion to a
peace economy and on contrasting future visions of those pushing for war and
those working for a world at peace.
WILPF Branches and members have been involved in watch dogging
Lockheed-Martin, TRW, Raytheon, Vandenberg Air Force Base, General Dynamics
at Bath Iron Works, Lawrence Livermore labs, Alliant Tech and the University
linked Bio-defense industry. They have worked in many ways: local and
federal legislatures, city councils and local hearings, citizens
inspections, blockage involving civil disobedience, attempts at dialogue,
public comments in the NEPA process and more.
Our wider DISARM program is built around the Mil-Corp effort, and also works
on related disarmament issues in Congress and on treaty issues in the United
Nations.
We want to work with all others on this list serve to develop a network that
allows each of us to work at what we do best, but also gives us a central
point for sharing and finding ways to work together. This list serve can be
the beginning, but I hope we will also evolve a website where we can all
post and also find and link to each other’s websites. I hope it can invite
both WIKI postings and link to relevant articles and materials on our
various websites.
We in WILPF also want to share with the wider network what we have learned
and the tools we have developed, and we look forward to learning from and
cooperating with other organizations involved in the effort.
As for myself, I began work on disarmament and human rights when on the
Chicago AFSC staff in the mid-1950s. I was very active in the women’s peace
movement and then in WILPF during 1961-66, but in 1966 my husband and I
(with our children in tow) moved overseas where we worked in developing
countries for 35 years. Now I’m back in the U.S. and working fulltime on
demilitarization, with most of my energies channeled through WILPF. I am a
77 year old Quaker and pacifist and welcome those of younger generations
now assuming leadership in the disarmament and human rights movements.
In peace, Carol Urner
_____
From: jacqui [mailto:j1_cunliffe at yahoo.com]
Sent: Monday, November 06, 2006 12:06 PM
To: Eileen Olsen; david meieran; profiteers at lists.riseup.net; organize
Subject: A request of the group (Was [profiteers] Bechtel pulling out of
Iraq!)
Hello everyone.
I understand this is a new list serve that I recently joined and I am
wondering if there is any interest in expanding our dialogue by sharing some
personal/professional/academic information about ourselves so that we might
become more familiar with each other and gain a better understanding about
the composition of our group. It is my impression that many of you may
already know each other and that I am akin to the new kid on the block. At
any rate, it might prove useful to us all to introduce ourselves.
If there is a positive response to this query, I would be happy to begin. I
look to this list serve as a way to become reconnected to my previous
efforts in social/anti-war activism and would like to use it as a vehicle to
share knowledge regarding the creative ways we have come to gather insight,
inspiration, and energy as e work to gather information regarding the
marketing of American power and politics. I am resurfacing after a hiatus
taken to complete my doctoral dissertation and feel this list serve could be
an important way to reclaim my former enthusiasm and also to redefine my
areas of interest.
Hope to get to know you!
Jacqui Cunliffe
Speaker for War Resisters League (Carlyle Group)
Eileen Olsen <eileen_mccabe_olsen at yahoo.com> wrote:
One of the interesting things about this article is how it lavishly covers
the challenges to Bechtel, and largely ignores its lapses of judgement and
its derision of its Iraqi employees. When Iraqi managers of plants
submitted lists of power generation plant parts to be replaced, Bechtel
responded by buying air conditioners. It imported its own workers instead
of providing employment to Iraqis, exacerbating local security conditions.
By focusing on its own goals and punch list, it helped create the problems
that impeded their own success, and prevented the timely repair of critical
infrastructure for Iraqis. Somehow, it's difficult to have any sympathy for
Bechtel. And what about this undisclosed profit? As a taxpayer, paying
this profit, I demand a right to know what it is!
Eileen
david meieran <david at heartofdarkness.org> wrote:
Bechtel pulling out after 3 rough years of rebuilding work
- David R. Baker, Chronicle Staff Writer
Wednesday, November 1, 2006
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2006/11/01/
MNGMIM3RAG1.DTL
Bechtel Corp. went to Iraq three years ago to help rebuild a nation
torn by war. Since then, 52 of its people have been killed and much
of its work sabotaged as Iraq dissolved into insurgency and sectarian
violence.
Now Bechtel is leaving.
The San Francisco engineering company's last government contract to
rebuild power, water and sewage plants across Iraq expired on
Tuesday. Some employees remain to finish the paperwork, but
essentially, the company's job is done.
Bechtel's contracts were part of an enormous U.S. effort to put Iraq
back on its feet after decades of wars and sanctions. That rebuilding
campaign, once touted as the Marshall Plan of modern times, was
supposed to win the hearts of skeptical Iraqis by giving them clean
water, dependable power, telephones that worked and modern
sanitation. President Bush said he wanted the country's
infrastructure to be the very best in the Middle East.
But Bechtel -- which charged into Iraq with American "can-do" fervor
-- found it tough to keep its engineers and workers alive, much less
make progress in piecing Iraq back together.
"Did Iraq come out the way you hoped it would?" asked Cliff Mumm,
Bechtel's president for infrastructure work. "I would say,
emphatically, no. And it's heartbreaking."
The violence that has gripped Iraq drove up costs and hamstrung the
engineers who poured into the country after the U.S.-led invasion.
Bechtel's first reconstruction contract, awarded shortly after Saddam
Hussein's overthrow in April 2003, assured the company that it would
have a safe environment for its workers. But, by the end, dozens of
Bechtel's employees and subcontractors had been killed, some of them
kidnapped, others marched out of their office and shot. Forty-nine
others were wounded.
Bechtel responded by hiring more guards, driving armored cars and
fortifying its camps. Those steps ate up money that otherwise would
have brought electricity and clean water to Iraqis.
The size of Bechtel's contracts also shrank over time, as U.S.
officials diverted money from reconstruction and toward security.
Instead of the nearly $3 billion originally budgeted, Bechtel finally
received about $2.3 billion, a figure that includes money the company
spent on projects as well as its undisclosed profit.
Mumm directed Bechtel's work from a bare-bones trailer in Baghdad. He
is proud of his people for finding ways to work despite the threat of
imminent death. Of 99 projects that the U.S. government directed
Bechtel to complete, the company finished 97, abandoning only two for
security reasons, the company says.
But Mumm's pride is mixed with frustration. Many of those completed
projects later fell victim to collapsing security, which made
maintenance dangerous and, in some cases, resulting in damage to
plants and equipment.
He once hoped the new Iraqi government would turn into a steady
Bechtel client, bringing the company lucrative new contracts in a
country where virtually every road, power plant and waterworks needs
repair.
"Had Iraq been a calmer place while we were there, amazing things
could have been done," he said.
The U.S reconstruction push in Iraq is winding down. About $18
billion in funding that Congress approved three years ago was
supposed to be spent or committed to specific projects by the end of
September. Two of the U.S. government agencies that have overseen the
work are scheduled to close shop early next year. The United States
and other countries are discussing another round of aid, but if it
comes, Iraqi ministries are supposed to take the lead on rebuilding.
"That's really an under-told story -- we've stopped the
reconstruction," said Frederick Barton, co-director of the Post-
Conflict Reconstruction Project at the Center for Strategic &
International Studies think tank. "There are some things we're still
finishing up, but we're wrapping up, and we're stepping back. It's
really a tragedy."
What exactly did Bechtel accomplish in its three years in Iraq?
-- The company helped repair 14 electrical generation units, built
four new ones and created 25 substations around Baghdad.
-- It restored eight sewage plants and built one.
-- A canal bringing drinking water to Basra, Iraq's second-largest
city, was dredged and its pumps restored. Seventy small water
treatment plants were installed in rural areas.
-- Airports in Baghdad and Basra were repaired to handle civilian
flights. The country's international shipping port -- Umm Qasr -- was
dredged and its grain elevator refurbished.
-- Baghdad telephone switching stations knocked out during the war
were restored, and the country's phone network was reconnected to the
outside world.
-- War-damaged bridges on key highways were rebuilt.
-- Almost 1,240 schools were refurbished with new paint, fans and in
many cases new windows and doors to replace those looters had stolen.
But many of these accomplishments were undone as security evaporated.
For example, Bechtel added 1,280 megawatts to the nation's power grid
and improved the reliability of another 480 megawatts. In the United
States, that much energy could light more than 1.3 million homes.
But Iraq's entire power system this summer produced 4,400 megawatts,
just 442 megawatts more than before the invasion. The country needs
about 9,000 megawatts to satisfy demand.
In some cases, the power plants have had trouble getting stable fuel
supplies. In others, repaired plants were cut off from the national
grid by sabotaged power lines. A series of coordinated attacks Oct.
20, for example, severed Baghdad from power generated in the rest of
the country, leaving the city's 7 million residents with only a few
hours of electricity each day.
"Infrastructure is assumed by the terrorists, correctly, to be a
target," said Michael Izady, a professor at Pace University who has
trained U.S. forces in Iraq. "They're not stupid. You just hit the
power grid, and you have 120 degrees outside. Ask any American what
they'd do after two days of that. Tempers run really high."
Making matters worse, Iraqi workers haven't maintained some of the
repaired electrical plants.
U.S. government auditors blame the problem on a lack of funding and
the attitudes of Iraqi workers, who in the past rarely did
maintenance unless something broke. Auditors visited one plant where
new control systems had been bypassed, the blades of new turbines
already had oil residue building up on them, and a fire had broken
out -- a problem, since the fire extinguishing system was missing key
parts.
Similar problems plagued water and sewage projects.
At Baghdad's Kerkh sewage plant, Bechtel spent $5.7 million repairing
equipment that hadn't worked in months, maybe years. But the plant's
location, on the edge of the city, became increasingly dangerous --
turf for Hussein loyalists and criminal gangs. In November 2004,
insurgents issued flyers telling the plant's Iraqi workers to stay
home or die, according to Bechtel. Not long after, a power failure
hit the plant, and the staff didn't turn on the backup generator. The
plant stopped working.
"We'd get it completed, and then the Iraqis would all flee, and it'd
get mortared," Mumm said. "It would operate for a while, then the
same thing would happen. ... As we sit here today, I don't know if
Kerkh is running or not."
Some places became too dangerous for Western and Iraqi employees
alike. One of the projects Bechtel couldn't complete was a water
treatment plant in Baghdad's Sadr City, a poor, crowded neighborhood
dominated by Shiite militias. Bechtel's top project supervisors and
the project's subcontractor fled to avoid assassination.
Violent intimidation also stopped another project -- a state-of-the-
art children's hospital in which first lady Laura Bush had taken a
personal interest.
The project, in Basra, was supposed to cost $50 million. The U.S.
Agency for International Development assigned Bechtel the job in
August 2004, with a completion date of Dec. 31, 2005. But Bechtel
later warned its government supervisors that the hospital would take
far more money and time to complete. The project was suspended this
summer. Bechtel says the hospital now would cost $98 million. Federal
auditors, who blamed USAID for not reporting the project delays and
costs to Congress, say the figure is probably higher.
Basra had been quiet immediately after Hussein's fall. Its Shiite
population suffered greatly under Hussein and was happy to be rid of
him. But the calm was short-lived, as Shiite militias started to
exert more and more control over the city.
Bechtel's hospital site security manager was murdered. The site
manager received death threats and resigned. Bechtel's senior Iraqi
engineer quit after his daughter was kidnapped. Twelve employees of a
subcontractor in charge of the hospital's electricity and plumbing
were killed in their offices. Eleven workers of another company
supplying the project's concrete also died.
As the human cost of reconstruction rose, why didn't Bechtel pull out?
Mumm said the company constantly reviewed security and was convinced
that it could keep its people safe.
"We didn't stay under duress," he said. "I think all of our people
got in it, got involved in it, and no one wants to leave a job half-
done."
He says the work hasn't been for naught. Even electrical or sewage
plants that have broken down after Bechtel left can be revived if the
country finds a way to quell the violence. If Iraq eventually
stabilizes, the people Bechtel worked with may provide another
opportunity to work in the country.
"Those people will be there, and I think they'll think favorably of
us," Mumm said.
E-mail David R. Baker at dbaker at sfchronicle.com.
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