Defense Policy Board: Richard
Perle
Policy Profiteers: Right-Wing
Think Tanks & Bush's Foreign Policy
Weapons-Makers Cashing In
on the War on Terrorism
excerpted from the book
How Much Are You Making On
The War Daddy?
A Quick and Dirty Guide to
War Profiteering in the Bush Administration
by William D. Hartung
Nation Books, 2003, paper
The Defense Policy Board:
Richard Perle and His Merry Band of Profiteers
p79
Few Americans heard of the Defense Policy Board (DPB) until Richard
Perle e~ was forced to step down as its chairman in the spring
of 2003. He was charged with abusing his position as a top advisor
to Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld for personal gain. Although
he chose the self-imposed "punishment" of stepping down
from the chairmanship of the Defense Policy Board, he refused
to admit to any wrongdoing, and did not give up his seat as a
regular member of the board. Amidst the alphabet soup of advisory
boards that have been created over the years to provide independent
perspectives to the secretary of defense, the secretary of state,
and the president-from the Defense Science Board (DSB), to the
President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB), to the
State Department's Defense Trade Advisory Group (DTAG)-the DPB
is first among equals in the eyes of the Bush administration.
Under the leadership of Donald Rumsfeld
and Richard Perle, the DSB has been transformed from a nonpartisan
advisory body designed to give the secretary of defense a broader
range of views on pressing security issues into a megaphone for
the rigid policy preferences of the secretary of defense. In the
run-up to the March 2003 U.S. intervention in Iraq, Perle, former
CIA Director R. James Woolsey, former Reagan administration Arms
Control and Disarmament Agency head Kenneth Adelman, former House
Speaker Newt Gingrich, and the other appointees to the thirty-member
DSB were all over the press and television, stumping for Donald
Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz's war.
Perle is one of the most viciously partisan
operatives in Washington, a true believer in neo-conservative
causes who has worked alongside Rumsfeld for more than two decades.
He served on the advisory board of Rumsfeld's favorite right-wing
think tank, Frank Gaffney's right-wing Center for Security Policy
(CSP).
In addition to their CSP connection, both
Perle and Rumsfeld signed the June 1997 founding "statement
of principles" of the Project for the New American Century
(PNAC). This statement, which calls for a return to "a Reaganite
policy of military strength and moral clarity," has become
the de facto gospel for the resurgent neo-conservative movement.
Long before the September 11 attacks were used as a rationale
for shifting toward a doctrine of "preventive war,"
Perle, Rumsfeld and their PNAC pals were touting regime change
and peace through strength as essential elements of a new U.S.
security policy.
On March 17, 2003, veteran investigative
reporter Seymour Hersh reported in the New Yorker that Perle used
his position as chairman of the DPB to solicit $100 million for
his security-oriented investment firm,-Trireme, which was his
own personal version of the Carlyle Group. But unlike the principals
at Carlyle, who at least had the decency to wait until they left
government service to cash in on their connections, Perle was
attempting to capitalize while still serving as an official advisor
to Secretary of; Defense Donald Rumsfeld.
p86
Just as Perle was stepping down as the chairman of DPB, the Washington-based
Center for Public Integrity released a report indicating that
he was not alone among his colleagues on the board in taking an
active role as an arms industry consultant, executive, and investment
advisor while serving as a close advisor to Donald Rumsfeld. The
Center found that nine of the board's thirty members had relationships
with weapons contractors that together had received over $76 billion
in contracts from the Pentagon in the most recent year for which
figures are available. Perle's partners in influence peddling
include his neo-con fellow traveler R. James Woolsey, who runs
the Global Strategic Security practice for Booz Allen Hamilton,
a beltway bandit which bagged $68O million in Pentagon contracts
in Fiscal Year 2002; Jack Sheehan, a retired general who works
for Bechtel, which is currently cashing in on the rebuilding of
Iraq; David Jeremiah, a retired admiral with ties to the Mitre
Corporation, a major Pentagon R&D contractor, which is run
by fellow DPB board member James Schlesinger, who served as defense
secretary prior to Donald Rumsfeld's first go-round at the job
back in the mid-1970s.
p88
... Perle and his DPB partner in crime R. James Woolsey who alleged
links between Al Qaeda and Saddam Hussein. It was Perle and his
colleagues at the DPB who suggested that Saddam Hussein's forces
possessed nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons that posed
an imminent threat to the United States. And it was Perle and
Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith who have pressed
most vigorously for a U.S.-backed puppet government led by the
Iraqi exile Ahmed Chalabi, a high-living, alleged embezzler who
had not stepped inside the country for forty-five years before
the Pentagon dropped him in behind U.S. Iines during the early
stages of "Operation Iraqi Freedom."
Perle's advice on Iraq has been wrong
on all counts. Professional intelligence analysts in the United
States, the United Kingdom, and around the world have persuasively
argued that there were no operational links between Saddam Hussein
and Al Qaeda prior to the spring 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.
U.S. forces failed to find workable nuclear, chemical, or biological
weapons in Iraq after taking control of the country. U.S. forces
dispatched Saddam Hussein's regime relatively quickly, but it
was far from the "cakewalk" that Perle and company-echoed
by high administration officials and allies like Deputy Defense
Secretary Paul Wolfowitz and Vice President Dick Cheney-claimed
it would be. The Iraqi people have not arisen as one to welcome
U.S. forces as liberators, and more U.S. troops have died in the
occupation phase of the war than were killed in the period leading
up to the collapse of the regime of Saddam Hussein. The costs
of the war- in lives and dollars-are already several orders of
magnitude higher than the neo-con brigades claimed they would
be. And United States forces will be bogged down in Iraq for many
more months to come.
Despite this record of bad advice-which
has undermined the security of our nation and the safety of our
troops-Donald Rumsfeld sang Perle's praises when he stepped down
as chair of the DPB, calling him a man of "deep integrity
and honor," with a "deep understanding of our national
security process." Not only did Rumsfeld fail to acknowledge
that his long-time fellow partisan had done anything wrong, but
his high praise for Perle sounds like it could have been lifted
straight from a letter of recommendation. I wouldn't be surprised
if Rumsfeld's words, or a summary thereof, appear in one of Perle's
future pitch letters for Trireme.
Policy Profiteers:
The role of Right-Wing Think Tanks in Shaping Bush's Foreign Policy
p93
Conservative think tanks and advocacy groups like the American
Enterprise Institute (AEI). the Center for Security Policy (CSP),
the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA), the
National Institute for Public Policy [NIPP] and the Project for
the New American Century have developed both the key outlines
and many of the specific details of the Bush administration's
policies on nuclear weapons, missile defense, and fighting terrorism.
Far from representing a continuation of
Reagan's vision, as they claim to do, these groups represent the
views of unreconstructed neo-conservative hard-liners like Frank
Gaffney, Richard Perle, and John Bolton, men whose most hawkish
instincts were held in check by both Ronald Reagan and George
Herbert Walker Bush. By appointing policy-makers from these groups
to top positions in his administration, and taking their advice
in preference to the advice offered by career professionals in
the military, intelligence, and foreign service communities, George
W. Bush is leading a counter-revolution in Republican thinking
on security issues. His neo-con advisors have all of the zeal
of revolutionaries, but their policy preferences are straight
out of the sixteenth century-they're like feudal lords armed with
nuclear weapons.
If you look beyond the rhetoric to the
substance of his policies, George W. Bush's administration is
radically out of step with the best traditions of every other
Republican administration of the post-World War II era, from Dwight
Eisenhower and Richard Nixon on through to Ronald Reagan and "Poppy"
Bush.
The most dangerous Bush administration
break with the policies of his Republican predecessors has been
in the realm of nuclear weapons policy. Under the sway of neoconservatives
like Frank Gaffney and Dr. Keith Payne of the National Institute
for Public Policy (NIPP), George W. Bush has junked the Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty of 1972, the treaty that was negotiated and signed
by the administration of that old red, Richard Nixon. More ominously,
Team Bush has set the stage for a new, multi-sided nuclear arms
race by advocating the development of a new generation of nuclear
weapons and expanding the range of scenarios in which the United
States might use, or threaten to use, nuclear weapons.
The Bush nuclear doctrine expands the
group of nations that are explicitly acknowledged to be on the
list of potential U.S. nuclear targets, going well beyond major
nuclear-armed states like Russia and China to include nuclear
"wannabes" and non-nuclear nations like Iran, Iraq,
Syria, and North Korea. The Bush policy also broadens the range
of circumstances under which U.S. nuclear weapons may be used.
Bush policy-makers advocate using or threatening to use nuclear
weapons in the following scenarios: 1) an attack on a nation that
has used chemical or biological weapons against U.S. troops or
U.S. citizens; 2) a response to an attack on Israel by Iraq or
another Arab state; 3) a military conflict over the status of
Taiwan; 4) a North Korean attack on South Korea; or, 5) a response
to "surprising military developments." _
p103
The Bush administration's policy of "regime change"
in Iraq and beyond was \ prefigured in a series of reports, policy
analyses, forums, op-ed pieces, and media interviews by the principals
of three other think tanks that are also well represented on Team
Bush: the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), the Jewish Institute
for National Security Affairs (JlNSA), and the Project for the
New American Century.
The American Enterprise Institute (AEI)
is where Dick and Lynne Cheney and ultra-right State Department
arms control official John Bolton hung their hats before the inauguration
of the George W. Bush regime in January of 2001. Richard Perle
has long-standing ties to the group as well.
p109
But just as the National Institute for Public Policy complements
CSP's right-wing views on nuclear policy, there is an ideologically
sympathetic think tank that mirrors CSP's hard-line views on U.S.
policy toward the Middle East: the Jewish Institute for National
Security Affairs (JINSA). As with NIPP, CSP has significant overlaps
with JINSA, most notably in the form of Defense Policy Board member
Richard Perle, who serves on advisory panels for both organizations;
Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Douglas Feith, who served
as chair of the CSP board and a member of JlNSA's board before
moving over to the Pentagon; Reagan re-tread Jeane Kirkpatrick,
who is an advisor to both groups; and JINSA advisory board chairman
David Steinmann, who simultaneously serves as a member of CSP's
advisory board.
If it's possible, JINSA may be even more
aggressive in its advocacy for a policy of permanent war than
Frank Gaffney's outfit has been. JINSA advisors like Michael Ledeen,
who handled outreach to Israel for the Reagan administration's
illegal Iran/Contra arms-for-hostages operation in the 1980s,
likes to talk about the coming era of "total war." In
its fervent support for hard-line, pro-settlement, anti-Palestinian
Likud-style policies in Israel, JINSA has essentially recommended
that "regime change" in Iraq should be just the beginning
of a cascade of toppling dominoes in the Middle East. If JINSA
has its way, the Bush administration will use military means,
covert operations, and strong-arm diplomacy to foment "regime
changes" not only in Iraq but also in Iran, Syria, Saudi
Arabia, and Egypt. Why this policy of rampant interventionism
and destabilization would serve the security interests of either
the Israeli or American people is a question that JINSA supporters
have no good answer for. In their skewed worldview, overthrowing
undemocratic Arab regimes is the royal road to democracy-or at
least more pliable, pro-U.S. and Israeli-friendly regimes-in the
Middle East and Persian Gulf.
p111
In keeping with its role as a cheerleader for U.S. intervention
in the Middle East, JINSA chose to honor Deputy Secretary of Defense
Paul Wolfowitz-known as 'Wolfowitz of Arabia" by his critics
for his obsession with overthrowing Saddam Hussein and promoting
his particular vision of "democracy" throughout the
region-to receive the 2002 edition of its Henry M. "Scoop"
Jackson public service award. The corporate sponsor for the affair
was Northrop Grumman, a company that Wolfowitz worked for as a
paid consultant prior to joining Rumsfeld's Pentagon. Wolfowitz's
Northrop Grumman connection stood him in good stead with the JINSA
crowd. JINSA board members Adm. Leon Edney, Adm. David Jeremiah,
and Lieut. Gen. Charles May have also worked for Northrop Grumman
as either board members or paid consultants. But if you're interested
in corporate firepower, the 2002 Jackson awards paled in comparison
with the 2001 ceremonies, which honored Secretary of the Air Force
James Roche (a former VP at Northrop Grumman), Secretary of the
Navy Gordon England (a longtime executive at Lockheed and General
Dynamics), and Secretary of the Army Thomas White (formerly of
Enron). The corporate sponsor for the 2001 gala was Boeing, and
Rudy De Leon, a former top Clinton administration Pentagon official
who now runs Boeing's Washington lobbying operation, served as
the official host.
What are we to make of this vast interlocking
network of ideologues, retired military men, and corporate executives?
It's still ideology first, but the corporate connections are a
close second in motivating these think tanks and their operatives
to seize and sustain their grip on the U.S. government's security
policy apparatus. A veteran intelligence analyst put the relationship
between greed and ideology in its proper perspective in an interview
with Jason Vest for The Nation magazine: 'Whenever you see someone
identified in print or on TV as being with the Center for Security
Policy or JINSA championing a position on the grounds of ideology
or principle-which they unquestionably are doing with conviction-you
are, nonetheless, not informed that they're also providing a sort
of cover for other ideologues who just I happen to stand to profit
from hewing to the Likudnik and Pax Americana lines.
***
Project for the New American Century
p112
No survey of the role of right-wing think tanks in shaping the
Bush administration's foreign and military policies would be complete
without mentioning the Project for the New American Century. In
many ways, the founding of PNAC in 1997 marked the opening salvo
in the formation of the Bush policy of aggressive unilateralism.
The signatories of PNAC's founding statement of principles are
a rogue's gallery of intransigent hardliners, ranging from Iran-Contra
re-tread Eliot Cohen, to ex-Pentagon hawks 1. Lewis Libby, Paul
Wolfowitz, and Donald Rumsfeld, to neo-con standbys Frank Gaffney,
former Reagan drug czar William Bennett, and Norman Podhoretz,
to the president's brother and partner in electoral crime, Jeb
Bush. Add signatory Dick Cheney to the roster, and you have the
bulwarks of the neocon network that is currently in the drivers
seat of the Bush administration's war without end policies all
represented in PNAC's founding document.
The PNAC gang were not satisfied to simply
endorse general notions of "peace through strength."
They wanted to implement a detailed national security policy agenda.
To do so, they issued a report entitled "Rebuilding America's
Defenses: Strategy, Forces, and Resources for a New Century."
The report was written by then PNAC deputy director Thomas Donnelly,
who later left the organization for a more lucrative post at weapons
contractor Lockheed Martin, before moving through the revolving
door again to a post at the American Enterprise Institute. It
drew on the thinking of a hard-right panel of experts that included
Donald and Robert Kagan, Weekly Standard editor William Kristol,
RAND operative Abram Shulsky-whose recent claim to fame has been
heading up a special group of analysts who have been helping Donald
Rumsfeld spin and distort intelligence data to make the case for
war in Iraq-Paul Wolfowitz, and I. Lewis Libby (who is now serving
as Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff). Donnelly promoted
the PNAC report at the time as "a useful road map for the
nation's immediate and future defense plans," but he could
not have known how right he would be. From advocating missile
defense, to weapons in space, to the development of "a new
family of nuclear weapons designed to address new sets of military
requirements," the PNAC "road map" foreshadowed
many of the most troubling initiatives that have been undertaken
by the Bush foreign policy team. But the bread-and-butter of the
PNAC report was a neo-imperial call for an expanded American security
perimeter that would be capable of "multiple constabulary
missions" aimed at preserving a "Pax Americana"
based on a drive to "secure and expand zones of democratic
peace, deter [the] rise of [a] new great power competitor, defend
key regions (Europe, East Asia, Middle East), and exploit [the]
transformation of war."
As Tom Barry and Jim Lobe have pointed
out in their excellent summary of PNAC's agenda, the authors of
the organization's security blueprint were alert to the benefits
for their agenda of a catastrophic attack on the United States,
noting that "the process of transformation is likely to be
a long one, absent some catastrophic or catalyzing event-like
a new Pearl Harbor." For the aggressive unilateralists at
PNAC-many of whom are now firmly ensconced in top jobs in the
administration of George W. Bush-the September 11 terror attacks
were a political godsend, in that they created a climate of fear
and trauma that made it much easier to promote their aggressive,
first strike agenda.
There was no conspiracy relating to 9/11,
but there was a great deal of good old-fashioned opportunism and
exploitation in the wake of the attacks. The neo-cons seized the
political moment to promote their aggressive agenda, and we have
been living with the consequences ever since.
Now the Big Three Weapons-Makers Are Cashing
In on the War on Terrorism
p119
Aside from firms like Halliburton, Bechtel, and the Carlyle Group,
the biggest corporate beneficiaries of the Bush administration's
doctrine of aggressive unilateralism are the "Big Three"
weapons makers-Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Northrop Grumman.
New York Times columnist Paul Krugman
was right on target when he suggested that rather than "leave
no child behind," the slogan that Bush stole from the liberal
Children's Defense Fund while he was running for president, Bush's
true motto should be "leave no defense contractor behind."
Boeing and Lockheed Martin's contracts
have jumped by billions of dollars annually to service the Bush
administration's narrow, militarized approach to fighting terrorism.
In contrast, Bush's signature educational reform bill-The Leave
No Child Behind Act-is already underfunded by nearly $10 billion
per year. The assistance originally promised to struggling school
districts in inner cities, rural areas, and low- and moderate-income
suburbs has long since been swallowed up by war costs and tax
cuts.
In fiscal year 2002, the last year for
which full statistics are available, Lockheed Martin ($17 billion),
Boeing ($16.6 billion), and Northrop Grumman ($7.8 billion) received
more than $41 billion in Pentagon contracts. They now get one
out of every four dollars the Pentagon doles out for everything
from rifles to rockets, MREs (meals-ready-to-eat) to missiles.
The Big Three's share of Pentagon research, development, procurement,
supply, and service contracts is likely to increase in the years
to come, as they use their unprecedented political clout to grab
more than their fair share of the military budget pie. This is
especially true for Northrop Grumman, which recently acquired
TRW, a major military space and Star Wars contractor that had
$2 billion n Pentagon contracts in its own right in 2002.
Each of the Big Three is also wired into
numerous other sources of federal contracts beyond the Pentagon.
The three firms have contracts for everything from airport security
and domestic surveillance to a major Lockheed Martin/Northrop
Grumman contract to upgrade the weapons and communications systems
for the U.S. Coast Guard, which is now part of the newly formed
Department of Homeland Security. All three are also major contractors
with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).
Lockheed Martin and Boeing are partners in the U.S. Space Alliance,
a NASA-funded effort to privatize the launching of commercial
satellites. Lockheed Martin is also a major contractor for the
Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration
(NNSA), which is in charge of developing, testing, and producing
nuclear weapons for the Pentagon and the military services. Lockheed
Martin has a $2 billion-per-year Department of Energy contract
to run Sandia National Laboratories, a nuclear weapons design
and engineering facility based in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Lockheed
Martin also works in partnership with Bechtel to run the Nevada
Test Site, where new nuclear weapons are tested either via underground
explosions-currently on hold due to U.S. adherence to a long-standing
moratorium on nuclear testing-or computer simulations. All these
additional sources of taxpayer money-from the Department of Homeland
Security, NASA, and the Department of Energy's nuclear weapons
complex, to nonmilitary and space agencies like the Internal Revenue
Service that contract with companies like Lockheed Martin for
information processing services-mean that the $41 billion that
the Big Three are getting from the Pentagon each year is just
the down payment on the federal largesse that is being lavished
on these firms.
To put this all in some perspective, Lockheed
Martin, which receives well in excess of $20 billion per year
in total federal contracts, gets more taxpayer money in an average
year than is spent on the largest federal welfare program, TANF
(Temporary Assistance for Needy Families)-a program that is meant
to provide income support to millions of women and children living
below the poverty line. This was also true in the Clinton/Gore
era, but the margin between Lockheed Martin's corporate welfare
and programs like TANF will only expand in the Bush era.
The Big Three are uniquely well-positioned
to benefit from the Bush administration's massive military buildup,
in significant part due to the Clinton administration's decision
to approve and subsidize a huge wave of post-Cold War mergers
among military industry firms. Due to pro-merger policies promoted
by Clinton's second Defense Secretary, Bill Perry, weapons makers
were able to acquire dozens of formerly independent weapons contractors.
For example, Lockheed Martin is a merger of Lockheed and Martin
Marietta, engineered by former Martin Marietta CEO Norman Augustine,
who arranged to have the taxpayers pick up the tab for at least
$855 million in consolidation costs related to the merger, ranging
from the costs of dismantling and moving equipment to golden parachutes
for top executives and board members that cost taxpayers a cool
$31 million, including $8.2 million for Augustine himself. One
of the more ironic results of this process was that Lamar Alexander,
a former Martin Marietta board member who ran for the Republican
presidential nomination in 1996 on a platform of taming "big
government" and cutting taxes, was on the receiving end of
a $236,000 payment from Lockheed Martin to compensate him for
the fact that
he was forced to step down from the board
of the merged company. Just as agricultural subsidies have been
used at times to pay off agribusiness corporations for not growing
crops, Alexander-who announced his candidacy dressed in a flannel
shirt, trying to come across as a regular guy- was essentially
paid off for not coming to Lockheed Martin board meetings.
The regulatory change that allowed firms
like Lockheed Martin to add merger consolidation costs to their
Pentagon contracts was pushed through by William Perry and John
Deutch, then top deputies to Clinton's first defense secretary,
former Wisconsin Congressman Les Aspin. As Patrick Sloyan of Newsday
pointed out in a series of articles on the Clinton administration's
merger subsidies, both Perry and Deutch had worked as paid consultants
to Martin Marietta before coming to the Pentagon, and therefore
needed to receive waivers from the normal conflict-of-interest
rules to work on an issue that would so obviously benefit their
former employer.
The rationale that Perry presented for
the mergers was that it was the only way to force the industry
to downsize, so that the Pentagon wouldn't be stuck with the tab
for extra overhead generated by inefficient firms running half-empty
factories. However, other experts, like former Reagan Pentagon
official Lawrence J. Korb of the Council on Foreign Relations,
asserted that the Pentagon had plenty of leverage to force consolidation
without providing additional subsidies to the big weapons-makers.
Korb also pointed out that the alleged savings from reduced overhead
might never occur, because once merger mania had created a few
giant contractors in the place of the dozens that had existed
prior to the merger boom, these mega-companies would have even
greater leverage to hold up the Pentagon-and the taxpayers-for
higher prices on tanks, ships, and planes.
Korb's argument has been borne out by
the realities of the costs of major weapons systems. Lockheed
Martin's F-22 is coming in at over $200 million a copy-the most
expensive fighter plane ever built. Aircraft carriers and attack
subs built by subsidiaries of General Dynamics and Northrop Grumman
still cost about $2 billion per copy, the equivalent of the entire
military budget of some Third World countries.
As Harvey Sapolsky and Eugene Gholz of
the Massachusetts Institute for Technology have demonstrated,
the Clinton/Gore merger subsidies failed to close down a single
major production line for a combat aircraft, or fighting ship,
or armored vehicle The companies were able to use their connections
in the Pentagon and on Capitol Hill to keep Cold War relics funded,
either through regular appropriations or congressional add-ons
that come on top of what the Pentagon has requested. So, while
Perry and Clinton may have had good intentions in subsidizing
consolidation costs, in reality all they ended up doing was giving
extra money to companies like Lockheed Martin and Boeing, which
swallowed up its rival McDonnell Douglas during the merger boom.
While companies fared well under the Clinton/Gore
merger subsidy policy, factory workers did not. Rep. Bernie Sanders
(I-VT) rightly described the merger payments as "payoffs
for layoffs." Companies were basically given an incentive
to lay off workers in the name of "efficiency" without
being held accountable to pass the resulting savings to the Pentagon.
So tens of thousands of workers lost their jobs and the Big Three
collected their government subsidies.
Both Bill Perry and John Deutch took jobs
on the boards of major defense firms when they left the Clinton
Pentagon-Deutch, who had also served as Clinton's CIA Director,
took a seat on the board of Raytheon; Perry took seats at both
Boeing and United Technologies. Perry also started his very own
Carlyle Group-style defense and high-tech investment advisory
firm with former Pentagon colleagues like Paul Kaminski.
While it is true that companies like Boeing
and Lockheed Martin have produced some of the most effective weapons
systems in history, from the Boeing B-52 bomber to the Lockheed
Martin F- 16 combat aircraft, they generally function best when
they have to compete for scarce government dollars while being
kept under close scrutiny by independent auditors and technical
experts. Under the stewardship of Donald Rumsfeld and George W.
Bush, these companies are now being offered more money with less
scrutiny.
The Pentagon budget has jumped from $300
billion to $400 billion and beyond in two short years, and the
new Department of Homeland Security has additional tens of billions
in contracts to tempt the Big Three.
p143
In a period of ever-expanding military budgets, the Big 4 Three
continue to appropriate funds that could be used for education,
environmental protection, health care, and to build the nonmilitary
industries that are needed to create the well-paying jobs of the
future.
We need to take our country back, not
simply from the Bush junta, but from the corporate profiteers
who all too often have the leaders of both major parties in the
palms of their hands.
How
Much Are You Making On The War Daddy?
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