... "everything you need to know about the true nature of the war we are
fighting in Iraq."
Well, not
everything,
but a
lot..
Rolling Stone rolls out
one hell of an article as Matt Taibbi rakes BushCo over the coals.
...This is the
triumphant culmination of two centuries of flawed white-people thinking, a
preposterous mix of authoritarian socialism and laissez-faire
profiteering, with all the worst aspects of both ideologies rolled up into
one pointless, supremely idiotic military adventure -- American men and women
dying by the thousands, so that Karl Marx and Adam Smith can blow each other in
a Middle Eastern glory
hole.But
getting there wasn't easy. To travel to Iraq, would-be contractors needed
permission from the Bush administration, which was far from blind in its
appraisal of applicants. In a much-ballyhooed example of favoritism, the White
House originally installed a clown named Jim O'Beirne at the relevant evaluation
desk in the Department of Defense. O'Beirne proved to be a classic Bush villain,
a moron's moron who judged applicants not on their Arabic skills or their
relevant expertise but on their Republican bona fides; he sent a
twenty-four-year-old who had never worked in finance to manage the reopening of
the Iraqi stock exchange, and appointed a recent graduate of an evangelical
university for home-schooled kids who had no accounting experience to manage
Iraq's $13 billion budget. James K. Haveman, who had served as Michigan's
community-health director under a GOP governor, was put in charge of
rehabilitating Iraq's health-care system and decided that what this war-ravaged,
malnourished, sanitation-deficient country most urgently needed was . . . an
anti-smoking
campaign....
Every time they scratched their asses, they earned; there was so much money
around for contractors, officials literally used $100,000 wads of cash as toys.
"Yes -- $100 bills in plastic wrap," Frank Willis, a former CPA official,
acknowledged in Senate testimony about Custer Battles. "We played football with
the plastic-wrapped bricks for a little
while."...
The Custer Battles show only ended when the pair left a spreadsheet behind after
a meeting with CPA officials -- a spreadsheet that scrupulously detailed the
pair's phony invoicing. "It was the worst case of fraud I've ever seen, hands
down," says Grayson. "But it's also got to be the first instance in history of a
defendant leaving behind a spreadsheet full of evidence of the
crime."But
even being the clumsiest war profit eers of all time was not enough to bring
swift justice upon the heads of Mr. Custer and Mr. Battles -- and this is where
the story of America's reconstruction effort gets really interesting. The Bush
administration not only refused to prosecute the pair -- it actually tried to
stop a lawsuit filed against the contractors by whistle-blowers hoping to
recover the stolen money. The administration argued that Custer Battles could
not be found guilty of defrauding the U.S. government because the CPA was not
part of the U.S. government. When the lawsuit went forward despite the
administration's objections, Custer and Battles mounted a defense that recalled
Nuremberg and Lt. Calley, arguing that they could not be guilty of theft since
it was done with the government's
approval.The
jury disagreed, finding Custer Battles guilty of ripping off taxpayers. But the
verdict was set aside by T.S. Ellis III, a federal judge who cited the
administration's "the CPA is not us" argument. The very fact that private
contractors, aided by the government itself, could evade conviction for what
even Ellis, a Reagan-appointed judge, called "significant" evidence of fraud,
says everything you need to know about the true nature of the war we are
fighting in
Iraq....
According to the most reliable estimates, we have doled out more than $500
billion for the war, as well as $44 billion for the Iraqi reconstruction effort.
And what did America's contractors give us for that money? They built big
steaming shit piles, set brand-new trucks on fire, drove back and forth across
the desert for no reason at all and dumped bags of nails in ditches. For the
most part, nobody at home cared, because war on some level is always a waste.
But what happened in Iraq went beyond inefficiency, beyond fraud even. This was
about the business of government being corrupted by the profit motive to such an
extraordinary degree that now we all have to wonder how we will ever be able to
depend on the state to do its job in the future. If catastrophic failure is
worth billions, where's the incentive to deliver success? There's no profit in
patriotism, no cost-plus angle on common decency. Sixty years after America
liberated Europe, those are just words, and words don't pay the
bills.Also:
And:
Hugh Manatee over on the RI Board has revived this
term, "Wilding".
Remember some years ago
when a female jogger in Central Park was viciously beaten into a coma? The
police squeezed false confessions out of some black kids for it.
But a verb
was invented and used to describe the totally unrestrained and vigorous practice
of pack savagery and barbarism--
"Wilding."
Posted: Sat
- August 25, 2007 at 12:08 AM
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Published On: Nov 04, 2007 08:44 AM
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