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Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers.

RetiredRoyal

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Another fantastic show. It goes into how contractors are basically raping the american public for the contract jobs that military folks would normally do over in Iraq.

I can't believe they would contract out mess hall, turning chow time into a 1 to 2 hour wait in line, no water treatment, civilians contractors repairing military equipment, vehicles and aircraft, civilians driving military convoys and of course, Blackwater. One section told that the food contractor, KBR, was charging the military $45 for a six pack of coke that was produced and purchased on that side of world. Cans had Arabic writing on them. They also were accused of having no water treatment on something like 61 of 63 shower sites.

So much for downsizing only to find you don't have enough troops to be mission capable.

Didn't Howard Hughes almost get jailed on the false accusation of war profiteering?

http://iraqforsale.org/index.php
 
I had bought a pirated copy of this DVD from Mazim's DVD's, and enjoyed it very much. Still got it. Ah another called Uncle Saddam is good too, and another Iraqi produced one which I can't think of the name too. A US one called Gunner's Palace is not bad also.

At our FOB (Union III) in Baghdad, we never had to queue for meals, but the disgusting KBR scumbags paid less that $500US per month to the poor slaves in the DFAC. Yes it was slave labour, all were TPNs from India or Pakistan, or similar 3rd world hellhole.

To see Coke, Fanta, Sprite, and Gatorades (no Pepsi products that I can remember) turned me off to no end, and ya we were told $20US per meal was the going rate.

Everything from the Fire Brigade to laundry, to you name it, these wankers had a hand or finger in it. As rotten as the bloated bodies in the 50C heat and sun, which flowed down the Tigris after some local ethnic cleansing.

However if you stayed away from the burger line, and stuck to roasts, turkey, and ham with fake mash and veggies, it was not too bad. We on average, only got 6 meals a week there, and the rest was even more pathetic with our own cooks. No seconds in our Mess, ha! Guaranteed!

As far as I am concerned KBR were criminals and did a shitty job from running the MWR to to testing our water.

One big 'Jabba the Hutt' company sucking, burping, and farting every red cent is terrible and nothing but profiteering in every sense of the word. There should be more competition and sharing the fun with other companies.

The footage was real, and reminds me so much of how it was. I easily recognised many landmarks. Only thing missing is the smell, of what always stunk like ass or garbage, or worse. I rate it an overall 9/10.

If you have not watched this on cable, rent it or better yet, buy it. A must have IMHO anyways.


Cheers,

Wes
 
RetiredRoyal said:
I can't believe they would contract out mess hall, turning chow time into a 1 to 2 hour wait in line, no water treatment, civilians contractors repairing military equipment, vehicles and aircraft, civilians driving military convoys and of course, Blackwater. One section told that the food contractor, KBR, was charging the military $45 for a six pack of coke that was produced and purchased on that side of world. Cans had Arabic writing on them. They also were accused of having no water treatment on something like 61 of 63 shower sites.

So much for downsizing only to find you don't have enough troops to be mission capable.

Didn't Howard Hughes almost get jailed on the false accusation of war profiteering?

http://iraqforsale.org/index.php

RetiredRoyal said:
Another fantastic show. It goes into how contractors are basically raping the american public for the contract jobs that military folks would normally do over in Iraq.

Except for the small problem that there arent enough soldiers to do any of these jobs. There are also jobs with very few people in the military trained to do them but a high demand for like PSD.

RetiredRoyal said:
I can't believe they would contract out mess hall, turning chow time into a 1 to 2 hour wait in line, no water treatment, civilians contractors repairing military equipment, vehicles and aircraft, civilians driving military convoys and of course, Blackwater. One section told that the food contractor, KBR, was charging the military $45 for a six pack of coke that was produced and purchased on that side of world. Cans had Arabic writing on them. They also were accused of having no water treatment on something like 61 of 63 shower sites.

So much for downsizing only to find you don't have enough troops to be mission capable.

Didn't Howard Hughes almost get jailed on the false accusation of war profiteering?

http://iraqforsale.org/index.php

Doesn't the Canadian army also contract out chowhalls?  This is not something new. This is my third year in Iraq and I have NEVER waited more than a few minutes to get into a chowhall. I can only think of a couple times where I even had to wait and that was only to have IDs checked.

Most of the interviewed people have no idea what they are talking about.  They are speculating on wages that they really know nothing about. The KBR worker signing him in at the internet cafe is likely not making anywhere near 6 figures.
 
As there is to any story, exaggerated or not, there is always some underlying truth to the matter. The only way the public will ever know the real extent of the allegations, is if the senate holds a public inquiry and seeing the way, the senate is becoming more disillusioned with the war, that may happen sooner than you think.
 
Gunner's Palace - I got it. Pretty good. My wife doesn't understand it.... he hehe
 
AP: Troops sickened at Iraq bases using KBR water

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Dozens of U.S. troops in Iraq fell sick at bases using "unmonitored and potentially unsafe" water supplied by the military and
a contractor once owned by Vice President Dick Cheney's former company, the Pentagon's internal watchdog says.

North Dakota Sen. Byron Dorgan has led Democratic inquiries into contracting abuses in Iraq. A report obtained by The Associated Press said soldiers experienced
skin abscesses, cellulitis, skin infections, diarrhea and other illnesses after using discolored, smelly water for personal hygiene and laundry at five U.S. military
sites in Iraq. The Defense Department's inspector general's report, which could be released as early as Monday, found water quality problems between March
2004 and February 2006 at three sites run by contractor KBR Inc., and between January 2004 and December 2006 at two military-operated locations.

It was impossible to link the dirty water definitively to all the illnesses, according to the report. But it said KBR's water quality "was not maintained in accordance
with field water sanitary standards" and the military-run sites "were not performing all required quality control tests." The report said KBR took corrective steps
and was providing adequate water quality by November 2006. But military units at the two sites they controlled were still failing to perform required quality control
tests and maintain appropriate records by that time.

"Therefore, water suppliers exposed U.S. forces to unmonitored and potentially unsafe water," at the military sites by late 2006, the report said.

The problems did not extend to troops' drinking water, but rather to water used for washing, bathing, shaving and cleaning. Water used for hygiene and laundry
must meet minimum safety standards under military regulations because of the potential for harmful exposure through the eyes, nose, mouth, cuts and wounds.

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The KBR sites were Camp Ar Ramadi, Camp Q-West and Camp Victory. The military sites were Logistics Support Area Anaconda and Camp Ali. The inspector
general's study confirmed AP reports on the contaminated water in early 2006 and provided additional details on the scope of the problem at the Iraq bases.
In January that year, interviews and internal company documents disclosed the problems at Ar Ramadi and showed that KBR employees could not get the
company to inform base residents.

Halliburton Co., then KBR's parent company, disputed the allegations even though they were made by its own employees and documented in company e-mails.
In March 2006, the AP obtained an internal Halliburton report that, in one instance, the company missed contamination that could have caused "mass sickness
or death" at Ar Ramadi. The report said the event at Ar Ramadi could have been prevented if KBR's reverse osmosis units on the site had been assembled,
instead of relying on the military's water production facilities.

Halliburton is the oil services conglomerate that Cheney once led. Congressional Democrats long have complained that KBR has benefited from its former ties
to Cheney. KBR, responding to the inspector general's report, said its water treatment "has met or exceeded all applicable military and contract standards."
The company took exception to many of the inspector general's assertions. "KBR's commitment to the safety of all of its employees remains unwavering,"
the company said in a statement to the AP. KBR provided water treatment to U.S. troops under a large-scale defense contract that also included housing and
food to soldiers in Iraq, Afghanistan, Kuwait, Djbouti and Georgia.

The military has "taken the appropriate measures to correct the problem and ensure we provide the appropriate oversight of the system," said Navy Capt.
James Graybeal of the U.S. Central Command, which oversees U.S. troops in the Middle East.

North Dakota Sen. Byron Dorgan, who has led Democratic inquiries into contracting abuses in Iraq, said the inspector general has backed up what those
earlier hearings uncovered. "KBR was not doing its job" and U.S. forces had water that did not meet Army standards, Dorgan said. "I think it's outrageous
that KBR tried to deny that there was a problem, especially when it turned out that there were dozens of U.S. troops reporting water-related illnesses," he said.

The inspector general investigated the 2006 reports at Dorgan's request. The inspector general's report said some troops noticed problems with the water.
Between October 2004 and May 2005, troops at Camp Ar Ramadi said bathwater was discolored and had an unusual odor. The report said KBR failed to treat
the nonpotable water and monitor water quality during the same period.

At Camp Q-West, KBR inappropriately delivered chlorinated wastewater for showers and latrines without informing military preventive medicine officials, the
report said. "KBR did not monitor or record the quality of water at point-of-use containers before April 2006, even though the ... contract required the company
to do so," the report added. Medical records for troops at Camp Q-West indicated 38 cases of illnesses commonly attributed to problem water. These include skin
abscesses, cellulitis, skin infections and diarrhea. Doctors diagnosed 24 of the cases in January and February 2006, the same period when medical officials warned
of a rise in bacterial infections at the base. In addition, military medical records -- tied to no particular base in Iraq -- showed 26 cases of food and waterborne
diseases, including hepatitis, giardiasis (an intestinal illness caused by a microscopic parasite) and typhoid fever.

Article on link
 
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