Halliburton has made billions out of US military deployments
The US Army has awarded defence
contractor Halliburton more than $9 million in bonuses for some of its
work supporting the military in Kuwait and Afghanistan. But the Army
said performance-based bonuses had not been paid yet to Halliburton's
Kellogg Brown and Root (KBR) unit for dining services for US troops in
those countries. Military auditors have criticised those services as
too costly and have asked the Texas-based company to justify its
billing. Halliburton and its subsidiaries have particularly been under
scrutiny for over-billing some of its military contracts in Iraq. The
Pentagon has also been criticised for extending undue favours to the
firm, once headed by US Vice-President Dick Cheney. "Dining facilities
costs questioned by the Defence Contract Audit Agency have not been
included in Award Fee Boards but are scheduled to be addressed later,"
an army statement said on Thursday. Army Field Support Command in Rock
Island, Illinois, said award fee boards held over recent months rated
KBR's performance as "excellent" to "very good" for more than a dozen
"task orders" in Kuwait and Afghanistan supporting troops. Much of
Halliburton's work for the US military is on a cost-plus basis, which
means the company can earn up to 2% extra depending on their
performance. A US Army spokesman said KBR had been awarded $9.4 million
in bonus payments from its work in Kuwait and Afghanistan. Overall, KBR
has earned $7.2 billion under a massive 2001 logistics contract with
the US military and is set to earn more than $10 billion under that
deal. It has separate deals with the government for reconstruction work
in Iraq. The bulk of money paid out so far under the logistics deal -
about $6.6 billion - is for work in Iraq which still must be assessed
for bonuses that could amount to hundreds of millions of dollars. [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.