The top civilian contracting official for the
Army Corps of Engineers, charging that the Army granted the Halliburton
Company large contracts for work in Iraq and the Balkans without
following rules designed to ensure competition and fair prices to the
government, has called for a high-level investigation of what she
described as threats to the "integrity of the federal contracting
program." The official, Bunnatine H. Greenhouse, said that in at least
one case she witnessed, Army officials inappropriately allowed
representatives of Halliburton to sit in as they discussed the terms of
a contract the company was set to receive. Her accusations offer the
first extended account of arguments that roiled inside the military
bureaucracy over contracts with the company. In an Oct. 21 letter to
the acting Army secretary, Ms. Greenhouse said that after her repeated
questions about the Halliburton contracts, she was excluded from major
decisions to award money and that her job status was threatened. In
response, Army officials referred her accusations to the Pentagon's
investigations bureau for review and promised to protect her position
in the meantime. Ms. Greenhouse, 62, is a veteran of military
procurement and serves the Corps of Engineers as the principal
assistant responsible for contracting - the top civilian overseeing the
agency's contracts. She also has chief responsibility for reviewing
adherence to Pentagon rules intended to shield awards from outside
influence and promote competition. [more ]
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