KBR, or Kellogg Brown & Root, was a subsidiary of the
Halliburton Corporation until 2007, when bad publicity and
indictments against KBR forced Halliburton to sell its shares in
KBR.1
KBR and Vietnam:
KBR, having financed Lyndon Johnson from the
1940s and into the Vice Presidential position, was rewarded after
Kennedy’s assassination with lucrative contracts in the escalated
Vietnam War. “Johnson, who became president in 1963 after
Kennedy’s assassination and who was elected with broad support in
1964, used the Gulf of Tonkin incident,” in order to “justify the
sending of ground troops into Vietnam. The result of that move was
the need for billions of dollars worth of bases, airstrips, ports,
and bridges. Enter Brown & Root.”2
With that, “In 1965, a year after Johnson
stepped up America’s participation in Vietnam, Brown & Root joined
three other construction and project management behemoths, Raymond
International, Morris-Knudsen, and J.A. Jones to form one of the
largest civilian-based military construction conglomerates in
history.” That team of corporations was known as RMK-BRJ, which,
“literally changed the face of Vietnam, clearing out wide swaths
of jungle for airplane landing strips, dredging channels for
ships, and building American bases from Da Nang to Saigon.”3 KBR,
as a member of this joint conglomerate, was also contracted to
build new prison cells in Vietnam, replacing the “horribly
inhumane prison cells built by the French government 75 years
earlier to hold prisoners.”4
KBR and the Rwandan Genocide:
In 1990, the first invasion of Rwanda took
place by the Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF), a militant
organization from Uganda, overseen by a man by the name of Paul
Kagame. The aim of this Tutsi rebel organization was the overthrow
of Rwanda’s then-Hutu President Habyarimana, who was at the time,
using World Bank loans to import enormous numbers of machetes
under World Bank surveillance of Rwanda’s expenditure.5 This was
the offset of the Rwandan civil war, which lasted until 1993, when
a peace agreement was being brokered between Rwanda’s president
and other neighboring leaders, including the President of Burundi.
When the presidents of Rwanda and Burundi were flying back to
Rwanda during the time of peace settlements, in 1994, their plane,
also carrying on board many French officials, was shot down. This
is the event that triggered the Rwandan genocide.
The first invasion of Rwanda by the RPF in 1990
“had the military backing of the first Bush administration
[1989-1993], including Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney.”6 In
1992, “then-Defense Secretary Dick Cheney commissioned Brown &
Root to produce a classified report examining the benefits of
greatly expanding logistics privatization. The report led the
Pentagon to solicit bids from thirty-seven firms for an
unprecedented five-year contract to provide the bulk of the Army’s
overseas logistics needs. Later that year, the Defense Department
chose Brown & Root as the first such umbrella logistics
contractor.”7
In 1993, newly elected President Bill Clinton
continued this policy of supporting the RPF. His trusted allies in
the United Nations, Madeline Albright, then US Ambassador to the
United Nations and Kofi Annan, then head of the UN’s peacekeeping
operations, ensured that the relationship would be concealed from
the public. Wayne Madsen reported that both Albright and Annan,
“conveniently chose to ignore evidence that a US-trained and
supplied guerrilla force – the Tutsi-led Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF)
– was responsible for the fateful April 6, 1994 terrorist missile
attack on the aircraft carrying the Hutu presidents of Rwanda and
Burundi home from a peace summit in Tanzania.”8
Paul Kagame, leader of the RPF, had been
trained at US military bases in the United States in guerilla
warfare tactics, and had very close ties to the Pentagon, the US
State Department and the CIA.9 It also turns out that the US
supplied the RPF with the missiles used to shoot down the plane
carrying the two presidents, and that a UN investigation revealed
that the warehouse which was used in assembling the missile
launchers was leased to a company linked to none other than the
CIA. Albright and Annan also ensured that information did not
reach the public.10
Madsen revealed that a French investigation in
2004 about the shooting down of the plane, carried out on behalf
of the French citizens who were killed on the plane, revealed that
there was a startling connection to an organization that goes by
the name of the, “International Strategic and Tactical
Organization” [ISTO], which represents powerful political and
corporate interests, including Armitage and Associates LC, a firm
founded by George W. Bush’s first Deputy Secretary of Defense
Richard Armitage, and KBR, or Kellogg Brown & Root, then a
subsidiary of Halliburton.11 In 1994, KBR was in Rwanda under a
$6.3 million contract called “Operation Support Hope.”12
As a result of the Rwandan genocide, many of
the key players got handsomely rewarded with promotions. Paul
Kagame became President of Rwanda, Kofi Annan became
Secretary-General of the United Nations, and Madeline Albright
became Bill Clinton’s Secretary of State. A year later, in 1995,
Dick Cheney went to become the CEO of Halliburton until the year
2000.
KBR and The Congo Civil War:
Kellogg-Brown & Root, which was connected to
the, “International Strategic and Tactical Organization” (ISTO),
made another appearance in Africa. This time, it was to do with
the Congo civil war, which started in the late 1990s. The Congo
was invaded in 1996 by forces from Rwanda under the leadership of
Paul Kagame, as well as Burundi and Uganda sending in troops
supporting rebel Congolese leader, Laurent Kabila, to overthrow
the then-President of Congo [Zaire], Mobutu Sese Seko.13 KBR,
“reportedly built a military base on the Congolese/Rwandan border,
where the Rwandan army has trained,” and, what’s more, “The
Bechtel Corporation provided satellite maps and reconnaissance
photos to Kabila so that he could monitor the movements of
Mobutu’s troops.”14 Bechtel’s board of directors includes former
Secretary of State George Schultz and has former Secretary of
Defense, Caspar Wienberger, as a legal counsel, while Dick Cheney
was CEO of Halliburton and its subsidiary KBR at this time.
After deposing the former President of Congo,
Kabila gave out juicy contracts to big corporations ready to rape
the Congo’s resources. American Mineral Fields (AMF) got a huge
contract for exploration rights over many rich minerals, and “Mike
McMurrough, a friend of US President Bill Clinton, was the chair
of AMF.”15 Another big company to profit off the death of millions
of Congolese people is Barrick Gold Corporation, a Canadian mining
company, with former Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and
Clinton Adviser Vernon Jordan on its board of directors, and
George HW Bush as a company adviser.16
KBR in Bosnia and Kosovo:
As economics professor at the University of
Ottawa, Michel Chossudovsky, noted, “Throughout the 1990s, the
Pakistan Inter Services Intelligence (ISI) was used by the CIA as
a go-between -- to channel weapons and Mujahideen mercenaries to
the Bosnian Muslim Army in the civil war in Yugoslavia.” Quoting a
report by the International Media Corporation, Chossudovsky wrote:
Reliable sources report that the United States
is now [1994] actively participating in the arming and training of
the Muslim forces of Bosnia-Herzegovina in direct contravention of
the United Nations accords. US agencies have been providing
weapons made in ... China (PRC), North Korea (DPRK) and Iran…
… It was [also] reported that 400 members of
the Iranian Revolutionary Guard (Pasdaran) arrived in Bosnia with
a large supply of arms and ammunition. It was alleged that the US
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) had full knowledge of the
operation and that the CIA believed that some of the 400 had been
detached for future terrorist operations in Western Europe.
During September and October [1994], there has
been a stream of "Afghan" Mujahedin ... covertly landed in Ploce,
Croatia (South-West of Mostar) from where they have traveled with
false papers ... before deploying with the Bosnian Muslim forces
in the Kupres, Zenica and Banja Luka areas…
The Mujahedin landing at Ploce are reported to
have been accompanied by US Special Forces equipped with high-tech
communications equipment, ... The sources said that the mission of
the US troops was to establish a command, control, communications
and intelligence network to coordinate and support Bosnian Muslim
offensives -- in concert with Mujahideen and Bosnian Croat
forces.17
Further, a Congressional report issued in 1997,
“confirms unequivocally the complicity of the Clinton
Administration with several Islamic fundamentalist organisations
including Osama bin Laden's al Qaeda,” and that, “The "Bosnian
pattern" described in the 1997 Congressional RPC report was
replicated in Kosovo. With the complicity of NATO and the US State
Department. Mujahideen mercenaries from the Middle East and
Central Asia were recruited to fight in the ranks of the Kosovo
Liberation Army (KLA) in 1998-99, largely supporting NATO's war
effort.” It was revealed that, “the task of arming and training of
the KLA had been entrusted in 1998 to the US Defence Intelligence
Agency (DIA) and Britain's Secret Intelligence Services MI6.”18
After the US/British instigated conflicts in
Bosnia and Kosovo in the 1990s, Halliburton subsidiary KBR got
another interesting contract. As the Asia Times reported, KBR’s
“big break came in December 1995. Dick Cheney had been the chief
executive officer of parent company Halliburton for only two
months. KBR was sent to Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo to build two
army camps in the middle of two deserted wheat fields. Instead it
built two cities, one in Bosnia and one in Kosovo - complete with
mail delivery and 24-hour food and laundry. In other words:
without KBR, there would be no operating US Army in Bosnia and
Kosovo. And the money was great: from 1995-2000, the KBR bill to
the US government was more than $2 billion.” On top of this:
KBR's strategic masterpiece is Camp Bondsteel -
the largest and most expensive US Army base since Vietnam, still
in use today, complete with roads, its own power generators,
houses, satellite dishes, a helicopter airfield and of course a
Vietnam-style prison. By a fabulous coincidence, Camp Bondsteel is
right on the path of the Albanian-Macedonian-Bulgarian Oil (AMBO)
Trans-Balkan Pipeline. This key piece of Pipelineistan is supposed
to connect the oil-and-gas-rich Caspian Sea with Europe. The
feasibility project for AMBO was conducted by none other than
KBR.19
As Michel Chossudovsky wrote, “The plans to
build Camp Bondsteel under a lucrative multibillion dollar DoD
[Department of Defense] contract with Halliburton's Texas based
subsidiary KBR were formulated while Dick Cheney was Halliburton's
CEO,” and that, “The US and NATO had advanced plans to bomb
Yugoslavia before 1999, and many European political leaders now
believe that the US deliberately used the bombing of Yugoslavia to
establish camp Bondsteel in Kosovo. According to Colonel Robert L.
McCure, ‘Engineering planning for operations in Kosovo began
months before the first bomb was dropped’.” The reasoning behind
this was that:
One of the objectives underlying Camp Bondsteel
was to protect the Albanian-Macedonian-Bulgarian Oil pipeline
project (AMBO), which was to channel Caspian sea oil from the
Bulgarian Black Sea port of Burgas to the Adriatic.
Coincidentally, two years prior to the
invasion, in 1997, a senior executive of `Brown & Root Energy, a
subsidiary of Halliburton, Edward L. (Ted) Ferguson had been
appointed to head AMBO. The feasibility plans for the AMBO
pipeline were also undertaken by Halliburton's engineering
company, Kellog, Brown & Root Ltd.20
KBR in Afghanistan and Iraq:
As Dan Briody wrote in The Halliburton Agenda,
“When troops were deployed to Afghanistan, so was Kellogg Brown &
Root. They built US bases in Bagram and Kandahar for $157 million.
As it had done in the past, KBR has men on the ground before the
first troops even arrived in most locations.”21 It was reported
that KBR “was awarded a $100 million contract in 2002 to build a
new U.S. embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, from the State
Department.”22
As the Center for Public Integrity reported,
“KBR, Inc., the global engineering and construction giant, won
more than $16 billion in U.S. government contracts for work in
Iraq and Afghanistan from 2004 to 2006—far more than any other
company.”23
Indeed, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq
presented Halliburton and its subsidiary, KBR, with an amazing
opportunity of war profiteering on a scale never before seen. Not
only was the company enriching itself, but its former CEO, Dick
Cheney, currently Vice President of the United States, “sold most
of his Halliburton shares when he left the company, but retained
stock options worth about $8m,” and the Guardian reported in 2003
that KBR “is still making annual payments to its former chief
executive, the vice-president Dick Cheney.”24
In December of 2005, the Chicago Tribune
reported that, “A proposal prohibiting defense contractor
involvement in human trafficking for forced prostitution and labor
was drafted by the Pentagon last summer, but five defense lobbying
groups oppose key provisions.” The lobbying groups, “say they're
in favor of the idea in principle, but said they believe that
implementing key portions of it overseas is unrealistic. They
represent thousands of firms, including some of the industry's
biggest names, such as DynCorp International and Halliburton
subsidiary KBR, both of which have been linked to
trafficking-related concerns.”25 However, human trafficking
experts have criticized the move by the lobbying groups, and told
“the Pentagon that the policy would merely formalize practices
that have allowed contractors working overseas to escape
punishment for involvement in trafficking.”
The allegations of human trafficking include,
“the alleged involvement of DynCorp employees in buying women and
girls as sex slaves in Bosnia during the U.S. military's
deployment there in the late 1990s,” and that, “Middle Eastern
firms working under American subcontracts in Iraq, and a chain of
human brokers beneath them, engaged in the kind of abuses
condemned elsewhere by the U.S. government as human trafficking,”
which pertained to KBR. The Chicago Tribune then reported in 2006
that, “some of KBR's subcontractors, and a chain of human brokers
stretching to South and Southeast Asia, allegedly engaged in the
same kinds of abuses routinely condemned” as human trafficking.26
In December of 2007, it was reported that, “A
Houston, Texas woman says she was gang-raped by Halliburton/KBR
coworkers in Baghdad, and the company and the U.S. government are
covering up the incident.” The article continued, “Jamie Leigh
Jones, now 22, says that after she was raped by multiple men at a
KBR camp in the Green Zone, the company put her under guard in a
shipping container with a bed and warned her that if she left Iraq
for medical treatment, she'd be out of a job.”27 Jones filed a
lawsuit against Halliburton and KBR, and “says she was held in the
shipping container for at least 24 hours without food or water by
KBR, which posted armed security guards outside her door, who
would not let her leave. Jones described the container as sparely
furnished with a bed, table and lamp.”
KBR and the North American Union:
More recently, KBR has been awarded contracts
by Shell Canada, now majority owned by its parent company, Royal
Dutch Shell, “to provide field construction and module fabrication
services by Shell Canada for the Scotford Upgrader Expansion east
of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.”28 Business Wire reported that, “The
Scotford Upgrader Expansion project is part of the Athabasca Oil
Sands Project (AOSP) Expansion 1, which will add approximately
100,000 barrels per day of capacity to the AOSP bitumen mining and
upgrading facilities. AOSP is a joint venture between Shell
Canada, Chevron Canada Limited and Western Oil Sands L.P. The
total estimated cost of the project is between Cdn$10 billion and
$12.8 billion.”
This is significant because it directly relates
to the “deep integration” of Canada, the United States, and Mexico
into a North American Union under the auspices of the Security and
Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP). The Independent
Task Force on the Future of North America was a joint task force
created between the US-based Council on Foreign Relations (CFR),
the Mexican Council on Foreign Relations and the Canadian Council
of Chief Executives (CCCE). The purpose of this task force was to
produce a document, which would serve as a blueprint for the
implementation of “integrating” the three countries of North
America into a regional block, ultimately into a North American
Union. The report was issued 2 months after the leaders of the 3
nations signed the Security and Prosperity Partnership agreement
in 2005, and is titled, “Building a North American Community.”
In this document, regarding integrating energy
sectors, it stated, “Canada’s vast oilsands, once a high-cost
experimental means of extracting oil, now provide a viable new
source of energy that is attracting a steady stream of
multibillion dollar investments, and interest from countries such
as China, and they have catapulted Canada into second place in the
world in terms of proved oil reserves. Production from oilsands
fields is projected to reach 2 million barrels per day by 2010.”29
The report further stated, “the three governments need to work
together to ensure energy security for people in all three
countries. Issues to be addressed include the expansion and
protection of the North American energy infrastructure.”30
In 2006, the SPP created a new organization
with the specific purpose of “advising” and “directing” the three
governments on how to integrate properly and to set deadlines for
specific programs. This organization is called the North American
Competitiveness Council (NACC).
The Canadian membership of the North American
Competitiveness Council includes Dominic D’Alessandro, President
and CEO of Manulife Financial, who is also Chairman of the
Canadian Council of Chief Executives (CCCE), David A. Ganong,
President of Ganong Bros. Limited, as well as being a director of
the CCCE and a director of Sun Life Financial, Hunter Harrison,
President and CEO of Canadian National Railway Company and member
of the CCCE, Linda Hasenfratz, CEO of Linamar Corporation who also
sits on the board of CIBC, Michael Sabia, President and CEO of
Bell Canada Enterprises (BCE), Annette Verschuren, President of
The Home Depot Canada and member of the board of the CCCE, Richard
E. Waugh, President and CEO of The Bank of Nova Scotia who also is
on the board of the Institute for International Finance, is a
member of the Chairman's Advisory Council for the Council of the
Americas, and the IMF's Capital Markets Consultative Group.
Further members of the NACC include Richard L. George, President
and CEO of Suncor Energy Inc., an American who is Honourary Chair
of the CCCE, and Paul Desmarais, Jr., Chairman and Co-CEO of Power
Corporation of Canada.
Suncor, one of the Canadian corporations on the
NACC, has as a member of its board of directors an American by the
name of John Huff. John R. Huff, also happens to be on the board
of directors of KBR32, now in a joint project with Shell in
developing the oil sands, as recommended by the SPP.
KBR and Concentration Camps:
The New York Times reported in 2003, that,
“Since the attacks of Sept. 11, Kellogg Brown & Root has won
significant additional business from the federal government and
the Pentagon. It has built cells for detainees at Guantánamo Bay
in Cuba and is the exclusive logistics supplier for the Navy and
the Army, providing services like cooking, construction, power
generation and fuel transportation.”33 In 2005, the Independent
reported that, “A subsidiary of Halliburton, the oil services
group once led by the US Vice-President, Dick Cheney, has won a
$30m (£16m) contract to help build a new permanent prison for
terror suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.”34
On January 24, 2006, KBR, which was still a
subsidiary of Halliburton at the time, got a contract from the
Department of Homeland Security, “to support the Department of
Homeland Security’s (DHS) U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
(ICE) facilities in the event of an emergency.”35 The press
release on KBR’s website further stated that the contract has a
“maximum total value of $385 million over a five-year term,
consisting of a one-year based period and four one-year options,
the competitively awarded contract will be executed by the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, Fort Worth District. KBR held the
previous ICE contract from 2000 through 2005.” The Executive
Director of the KBR Government and Infrastructure division was
quoted in the release as saying the contract, “builds on our
extremely strong track record in the arena of emergency operations
support.”
The contract awarded to KBR, a construction
firm, “provides for establishing temporary detention and
processing capabilities to augment existing ICE Detention and
Removal Operations (DRO) Program facilities in the event of an
emergency influx of immigrants into the U.S., or to support the
rapid development of new programs,” [Emphasis added]. Further,
“The contract may also provide migrant detention support to other
U.S. Government organizations in the event of an immigration
emergency, as well as the development of a plan to react to a
national emergency, such as a natural disaster,” [Emphasis added].
As author, professor and former diplomat Peter
Dale Scott notes in his book, The Road to 9/11: Wealth, Empire,
and the Future of America, “On February 6, 2007, homeland security
secretary Michael Chertoff announced that the fiscal year 2007
federal budget would allocate more than $400 million to add
sixty-seven hundred additional detention beds (an increase of 32
percent over 2006).” Scott goes on to state that this was “in
partial fulfillment of an ambitious ten-year Homeland Security
strategic plan, code-named Endgame, authorized in 2003,” whose
goal was to “remove all removable aliens,” as well as “potential
terrorists.”36
As Scott wrote in an article shortly after the
KBR contract was issued in 2006, “the contract evoked ominous
memories of Oliver North's controversial Rex-84 ‘readiness
exercise’ in 1984. This called for the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) to round up and detain 400,000 imaginary
‘refugees,’ in the context of ‘uncontrolled population movements’
over the Mexican border into the United States.” Scott quoted
Daniel Ellsberg, who in 1971 as a military analyst leaked the
“Pentagon Papers” about the military’s activities in Vietnam, as
saying, “Almost certainly this is preparation for a roundup after
the next 9/11 for Mid-Easterners, Muslims and possibly
dissenters,” and that, “They've already done this on a smaller
scale, with the 'special registration' detentions of immigrant men
from Muslim countries, and with Guantanamo.”37
A recent San Francisco Chronicle article,
co-authored by a former US Congressman, reported that, “Beginning
in 1999, the government has entered into a series of single-bid
contracts with Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root (KBR)
to build detention camps at undisclosed locations within the
United States. The government has also contracted with several
companies to build thousands of railcars, some reportedly equipped
with shackles, ostensibly to transport detainees.”38
Conclusion
As the preparations of martial law are being
put in place, it is of vital important to identify the specific
corporations involved in this process. Administrations change,
politicians go in and out of power, but the corporation is a
consistent powerhouse. In this case, KBR has been a force to be
reckoned with since the rise of Lyndon Johnson. Today, it has
reached new heights. It was necessary to examine the recent
history of this company’s activities, much the same as identifying
a person’s own history and experiences to account for their
present personality: so as to better understand their actions
today. Given KBR’s history related to war and violence, more light
should be shed on their current activities with the Department of
Homeland Security, as morality is not a concept KBR seems to
understand.
Notes
1 KBR Splits From Halliburton, Names New Board Members, RigZone,
April 9, 2007:
http://www.rigzone.com/news/article.asp?a_id=43642
2 Dan Briody, The Halliburton Agenda: The Politics
of Oil and Money. John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: New Jersey, 2004: pages
163-64
3 Dan Briody, The Halliburton Agenda: The Politics
of Oil and Money. John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: New Jersey, 2004: page
164
4 Dan Briody, The Halliburton Agenda: The Politics
of Oil and Money. John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: New Jersey, 2004: page
167
5 Michel Chossudovsky, The Globalization of
Poverty and the New World Order, 2nd ed. Global Research: 2003,
page 114
6 Wayne Madsen, Jaded Tasks – Brass Plates, Black
Ops, & Big Oil: The Blood Politics of Bush & Co. TrineDay: 2006,
page 2
7 Habib Moody, Soldiers for Rent. The New
Atlantis: No. 17, Summer 2007:
http://www.thenewatlantis.com/archive/17/soa/soldiersforrent.htm
8 Wayne Madsen, Jaded Tasks – Brass Plates, Black
Ops, & Big Oil: The Blood Politics of Bush & Co. TrineDay: 2006,
page 2
9 Wayne Madsen, Jaded Tasks – Brass Plates, Black
Ops, & Big Oil: The Blood Politics of Bush & Co. TrineDay: 2006,
pages 2-3
10 Wayne Madsen, Jaded Tasks – Brass Plates, Black
Ops, & Big Oil: The Blood Politics of Bush & Co. TrineDay: 2006,
page 12
11 Wayne Madsen, Jaded Tasks – Brass Plates, Black
Ops, & Big Oil: The Blood Politics of Bush & Co. TrineDay: 2006,
page 6-12
12 Dan Briody, The Halliburton Agenda: The
Politics of Oil and Money. John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: New Jersey,
2004: page 186
13 Steven Hiatt, ed., A Game As Old As Empire: The
Secret World of Economic Hit Men and the Web of Global Corruption.
Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc: 2007, page 94
14 Steven Hiatt, ed., A Game As Old As Empire: The
Secret World of Economic Hit Men and the Web of Global Corruption.
Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc: 2007, page 99
15 Steven Hiatt, ed., A Game As Old As Empire: The
Secret World of Economic Hit Men and the Web of Global Corruption.
Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc: 2007, page 99
16 Steven Hiatt, ed., A Game As Old As Empire: The
Secret World of Economic Hit Men and the Web of Global Corruption.
Berrett-Koehler Publishers, Inc: 2007, pages 99-100
17 Michel Chossudovsky, Osamagate. Global
Research: October 9, 2001:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/CHO110A.html
18 Michel Chossudovsky, Osamagate. Global
Research: October 9, 2001:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/CHO110A.html
19 ATOL, The Iraq Gold Rush. Asia Times Online:
May 14, 2004:
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/FE14Ak03.html
20 Michel Chossudovsky, The Criminalization of the
State: "Independent Kosovo", a Territory under US-NATO Military
Rule. Global Research: February 4, 2008:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=7996
21 Dan Briody, The Halliburton Agenda: The
Politics of Oil and Money. John Wiley & Sons, Inc.: New Jersey,
2004: page 219
22 Laura Peterson, Kellogg Brown & Root
(Halliburton). Center for Public Integrity:
http://www.publicintegrity.org/WOW/bio.aspx?act=pro&ddlC=31
23 John Perry, Baghdad Bonanza. Center for Public
Integrity:
http://www.publicintegrity.org/Content.aspx?source=home&context=article&id=936
24 Robert Bryce and Julian Borger, Cheney is still
paid by Pentagon contractor. The Guardian: March 12, 2003:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2003/mar/12/usa.iraq5
25 Cam Simpson, US Stalls on Human Trafficking.
Chicago Tribune: December 27, 2005:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0512270176dec27,1,2117782.story
26 Cam Simpson, U.S. to probe claims of human
trafficking. Chicago Tribune: January 19, 2006:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0601190052jan19,0,1567028.story
27 Brian Ross, Maddy Sauer and Justin Rood,
Victim: Gang-Rape Cover-Up by U.S., Halliburton/KBR. ABC News:
December 10, 2007: http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/story?id=3977702&page=1
28 Business Wire, KBR Awarded Contracts for
Construction and Fabrication Services by Shell Canada for Scotford
Upgrader Expansion. BNet: May 14, 2007:
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_2007_May_14/ai_n19096678
29 John Manley, Pedro Aspe, William Weld.
“Building a North American Community”.
The Council on Foreign Relations: May 2005, page
25
http://www.cfr.org/publication/8102/
30 Ibid, page 26
31 Embassy Report, Meet the Powerful Business
Members of the North American Competitiveness Council. Embassy
Magazine: June 13, 2007:
http://www.embassymag.ca/html/index.php?display=story&full_path=/2007/june/13/businessmembers/
32 KBR, Board of Directors.
http://www.kbr.com/corporate/corporate_governance/board_of_directors/index.aspx
33 Elizabeth Becker, A NATION AT WAR:
RECONSTRUCTION; Details Given On Contract Halliburton Was Awarded.
The New York Times: April 11, 2003:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B04EED9173BF932A257
57C0A9659C8B63
34 Rupert Cornwell, Halliburton given $30m to
expand Guantanamo Bay. The Independent: June 18, 2005:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/halliburton-given-30m-to-expand-guantanamo-bay-494530.html
35 KBR, KBR Awarded U.S. Department of Homeland
Security Contingency Support Project for Emergency Support
Services. Press Releases: 2006 Archive, January 24, 2006:
http://www.kbr.com/news/2006/govnews_060124.aspx
36 Peter Dale Scott, The Road to 9/11: Wealth,
Empire, and the Future of America. University of California Press:
2007, page 240
37 Peter Dale Scott, Homeland Security Contracts
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http://news.pacificnews.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=eed74d9d44c30493706fe03f4c9b3a77
38 Lewis Seiler and Dan Hamburg, Rule by Fear or
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