Defense appropriations subcommittee led by Inouye increases war funding 20%

As reported in the Washington Post, Senator Inouye pushed for more funding for C-17s:

In a separate action Wednesday, the subcommittee joined the House in adding funds to the appropriations bill to purchase an additional 10 C-17 transport airplanes. The Obama administration has said it does not need the planes.

“We expect that in re-examining its airlift fleet the Defense Department will eventually conclude that purchasing additional C-17’s … is the right solution” for meeting the increasing need for airlift, Inouye said.

But according to an article in Politico.com,

Senate appropriators have backed the White House and bucked the House over two major Pentagon programs – a fleet of helicopters for the president and an alternate engine for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.

The Senate and the House found common ground in supporting the F-22:
There is nothing to resolve regarding the F-22 Raptor. The Senate subcommittee followed the House’s lead, providing over $560 million for maintenance of the fifth-generation fighter jet.

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Updated at 2:38 p.m., Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Senate subcommittee led by Inouye OKs 20% increase in Afghan funding

By Walter Pincus
Washington Post

WASHINGTON – A key Senate subcommittee on Wednesday trimmed $900 million from the amount requested by the Obama administration to support Afghan security forces next year, but the $6.6 billion approved in the funding measure will still permit a 20 percent increase over this fiscal year to help train and equip the army and police in Afghanistan.

Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, has indicated that improving the Afghan security forces is central to defeating the Taliban insurgency, providing security for the country’s population and permitting broader reconstruction to take place.

In announcing details of the fiscal 2010 defense appropriations bill, Sen. Daniel Inouye, D-Hawaii, chairman of the Senate Appropriations subcommittee on defense, said Wednesday: “While we strongly concur with the administration that increased funding is needed to train and equip our Afghan army and police forces, it makes no sense to provide more funding than can be spent when other shortfalls exist.”

Members of the subcommittee said the administration had agreed that the $7.5 billion it originally requested for Afghan security forces could not be spent in the 2010 fiscal year. The committee decided instead to increase by $1.2 billion the amount to be spent on so-called “baby MRAPs,” all-terrain vehicles used to safeguard troops from improvised explosive devices.

In broad terms, the subcommittee’s bill, which provides $636.3 billion for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1, is $3.9 billion less than the amount requested by President Obama. Of the amount approved, $128.2 billion is for “overseas contingency operations,” essentially meaning the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Under the Bush administration, funds for Iraq and Afghanistan were approved in supplemental appropriations bills, a process that critics said obscured the full cost of the fighting.

In a separate action Wednesday, the subcommittee joined the House in adding funds to the appropriations bill to purchase an additional 10 C-17 transport airplanes. The Obama administration has said it does not need the planes.

“We expect that in re-examining its airlift fleet the Defense Department will eventually conclude that purchasing additional C-17’s … is the right solution” for meeting the increasing need for airlift, Inouye said.

Sen. Diane Feinstein, D-Calif., who noted that 4,000 Boeing workers in Long Beach will now keep their jobs, hailed the subcommittee’s decision as “good news for our workers and our military service members.”

Inouye said the subcommittee had cut by $300 million from last year the value of earmarks pushed by members, reducing the number overall by “nearly 200 projects.”

He said, “I hope that that our colleagues can support this package with its streamlined approach to earmarking.”

Because Inouye is chairman of the full Senate Appropriation’s committee, his subcommittee’s decisions are expected to easily pass the full panel on Thursday and be sent to the Senate floor.

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090909/BREAKING01/90909076/Senate+subcommittee+led+by+Inouye+OKs+20++increase+in+Afghan+funding+

Why the Wars Roll on

This article points out that Senator Inouye receives $160,000 from corporations outside his district that have an interest in war expenditures.   The map is pretty telling of the powers and interests that influence decisions about war, peace and militarization.   Many of these companies are the same ones that benefit from the earmarks for missiles defense, PMRF and the UARC/Project Kai e’e related programs.

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Why the Wars Roll on: Ban Campaign Money From Outside the District

Friday 04 September 2009

by: Ralph Lopez, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

As public opinion tips against the US military presence in Afghanistan, and Congress talks about “doubling down,” as the pullout from Iraq is accompanied by steadily increasing violence, and talk turns to slowing or halting the pull-out, the question the anti-war public must ask itself is: What now? War funding for Iraq continues despite two consecutive Democratic majorities elected expressly to stop it. Obama’s high-stakes 2008 Super Bowl ad blared “Getting Us Out of Iraq,” and it worked. He was elected. But the cold hard fact seems to be emerging that, regardless of public opinion, the wars will roll on.

The occasional heroic Congress member or senator will call for a timetable, an exit plan or a halt to war funding, but despite lots of heat generated in the debate, the war bills seem to pass at the end of the day. This is because incumbents’ real constituents are no longer the people who live in the district. The real power, the money which pays for television ad blitzes and the all-important donations to the local Little League, comes from far away.

Very few people know that on average 80 percent of their Congress members’ and senators’ campaign funds come from outside the district, and largely from outside the state. They come from industries like defense, telecommunications and financial services. What do they get for these contributions, even in cases when the Congress member votes against those contributors’ positions on certain bills?

The 1976 US Supreme Court decision, Buckley v. Valeo, which equated money with “free speech,” affirmed your right to buy your own congressman. But it did not explicitly affirm your right to buy mine. Since that decision, the amount of money in politics has skyrocketed and is at all-time highs. Also at record-breaking highs are the pay-offs, like bailouts for the auto and financial services industries.

The savings and loan bailout of the nineties, at $200 billion, was chump change compared to the $700 billion TARP slush fund of today, which rewards financial services companies for the subprime mortgage fiasco. In searching for an answer to how the $3 trillion Iraq war can drag on despite three years of Democratic majorities in Congress elected to end it, follow the money.

The citizen’s watchdog group MAPlight.org has found that congressmen who voted for TARP, the “Troubled Assets Relief Program,” received nearly 50 percent more in campaign contributions from the financial services industry (an average of about $149,000) than congressmen who voted no. Legislators who voted for the automobile industry bailout in 2009 received an average of 40 percent more in “contributions” from that industry (the less politic call them “bribes”) than those who voted against it. And House Energy and Commerce Committee members who voted yes on an amendment in 2009 favored by the forest products industry, to allow heavier cutting of trees, received an average of $25,745 from the forestry and paper products industry. This was ten times as much as was received by each member voting no. This pattern repeats itself over and over.

True, contributions don’t guarantee a particular legislator will vote your way. But neither will he or she filibuster your bill or go on TV to ask rude questions about impacts to taxpayers or consumers. Arguably, that could be called hush money.

What we have arrived at is a system of industries, defense, financial, telecommunications, health insurance, trail lawyers and the rest, looking to appease those who, as Richard Nixon said, can do something for them, or something to them. Take one example: Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-Hawaii), who chairs the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee. This is the final hurdle for war appropriations bills after they pass the House. No war bill gets to the president’s desk until it gets past Inouye, who can stop it cold, send it into perpetual conference committee loops or change it in a dozen ways. As one might guess, money comes pouring in to Inouye from defense contractors from across the country:

Campaign contributions to Sen. Daniel Inouye from the defense industry, ex-district.

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Inouye takes in $160,000 from corporations not in his district that have a financial interest in war. Double Medal of Honor winner Gen. Smedley Butler said after World War I, “war is a racket.”

How do we change this? We can call for reform which forbids money from outside the district. If money from PACs or individuals is to be equated with “free-speech,” then let it be confined to its rightful boundaries. There are now “free speech zones” for anti-war protesters, who welcome some public figures into town. So, the idea of geographically restricting some speech in the public interest is well established.

By halting money from outside districts, connections between business interests and committee members will be by coincidence, not forged as unholy alliances, which may conflict with the interests of real constituents. The influence of the defense industry over key committee members and House and Senate leaders will be diluted. The principle of Buckley v. Valeo, that money equals free speech, remains intact. But congressmen will still answer to constituents, the way they are supposed to. Of course, citizens are always free to work their hearts out for whomever they want.

When two-thirds of the nation’s wealth is owned by just ten percent of the population, as is the case in the United States, that ten percent has a lot more money to give than the other 90 percent: therefore, the interest of society in limiting the corrupting influence of money across geographical boundaries is clear. MAPlight.org found that money travels outward from wealthy zip codes to poorer ones.

If congressmen were not meant to represent geographical constituents, the founders wouldn’t have drawn district maps. Campaign finance is now a frenzy of interests shopping for committee members and chairpersons across the country. The industry determines which committees are targeted. The reason incumbents no longer pay attention to constituents who are overwhelmingly against bailouts, or strongly anti-war, is that their real bosses will always give them enough money to bury any challenger in a blizzard of negative TV ads.

Why should Boeing Aircraft (maker of the Apache helicopter,) which doesn’t even have a shop or an office in my district, be allowed to give money to my congressman in Boston? (It does.) He shouldn’t be worrying about what Boeing thinks. He should be worrying about what I and my neighbors think. Without any extraneous distractions.

If there is one thing congressmen hate, it’s being embarrassed and tongue-tied in public. If he or she won’t go to the mat to end the wars, or for any other issue important to the district, then ask your representative what’s the deal with that contribution from the real estate company in Arizona. Or what have you. If your congressman is using your district’s leather seat (it belongs to the district, not to any one person or set of outside interests) in that historic, marble-filled chamber to represent you, vigorously, then there’s no problem. If not, further questions are in order.

Source: http://www.truthout.org/090409A

Inouye hooks Native Hawaiians with military earmarks

Last week, Senator Daniel Inouye was a keynote speaker at the annual conference of the Council for Native Hawaiian Advancement (CNHA).

He began his speech with a classic Inouye-esque statement, an understated and oblique put down of recent protests of the statehood commemorations:

The shaping of public policy can occur in many different ways. It can be done gently and by consensus. It can come as a result of negotiation and compromise. It can occur violently, amid hostile protest. As it relates to setting the course for a more hopeful policy for the benefit of Native people, of Native Hawaiians, it is important that we know our history.

He seems to imply that those who choose the path of protest don’t know their history and that he will give them the correct history. The problem is that it is he who confuses the history.  He states in the speech:

Native Hawaiians are Native Americans.

Hawai’i is not a part of America.  It is an archipelago more than 2000 miles away.   Native Hawaiians are indigenous people to the Hawaiian islands and the independent nation state that they created, the Hawaiian Kingdom.

He then erroneously equates the overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom to the termination of Native nations by the U.S. government:

And, like the Native tribes whose federally recognized status was terminated, Hawaii’s monarchy was also terminated and the Native Hawaiian government illegally overthrown. As such, the Native Hawaiian people never voluntarily gave up or extinguished their sovereignty. The Hawaiian protests on Statehood day dampened the commemoration of our 50th anniversary. There was a sadness, as it bruised our conscience. It made clear to me that reconciliation is long overdue.

The sovereignty of an independent nation state cannot be terminated in the same way the U.S. government can terminate its recognition of domestic dependent native nations.  The U.S. had no legal basis to assume sovereignty over the Hawaiian islands without a proper treaty of annexation between two legitimate sovereign governments.

What I found revealing was the examples he chose to highlight of Native Hawaiian successes.  The first two were the Native Hawaiian heads of two military projects:

I was on Maui last Friday for a few events. The first was to celebrate the designation of the Maui Supercomputer as an official resource center of the Department of Defense because of their outstanding performance. What began as an earmark is today a budgeted Pentagon asset. The man in charge – a Native Hawaiian. Gene Bal.

The next Maui event was also to celebrate an earmark – the Joint Information Technology Center – becoming an official $20 million dollar program of the Department of Defense. The President & CEO – a Native Hawaiian. Vaughn Vasconcellos.

So military contracts is one of the selling points for federal recognition.   The Maui Supercomputer, which is run by the University of Hawai’i, is a boondoggle that supports the dangerously provocative missile defense programs that are tested over the Pacific. 95% of its work is military related.  The Joint Information Technology Center is a military owned system that is managed by Akimeka, a Native Hawaiian owned military technology company.  Akimeka is one of the leading companies that have cashed in on special contracting set asides for Native owned companies.  Under the normal 8A set asides for minority and women owned companies, the contract amounts are capped and the procurement process is competitive.  Under the ‘special’ 8A for Native American, Native Alaskan, and Native Hawaiian owned companies, the contracts are sole source awards (i.e. noncompetitive) and unlimited in amount.  This has led to problems with fraud and abuse with some of the Alaska Native owned companies that turned out to be fronts for large defense contractors.

The dope of military earmarks is an powerful temptation.  We’ll see who will line up for their fix.


Military expands computing centers on Maui

Computing center gets fresh Mana

Supersystem in S. Maui blows Jaws out of water with double the power

By HARRY EAGAR, Staff Writer
POSTED: August 22, 2009

New University of Hawaii President M.R.C. Greenwood, U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye and Mayor Charmaine Tavares celebrate Friday’s dedication of the new computing platform at the Maui High Performance Computing Center.

KIHEI – The Maui High Performance Computing Center got more Mana on Friday – that’s the name of its new platform, a giant parallel processing machine that requires $350,000 worth of electricity a month to keep it humming.

Mana is double the power of its predecessor, Jaws, which in turn was a huge step up when it was installed just three years ago.

Mana is a Dell PowerEdge M610 with 1,152 nodes. Each node contains two 2.8 Ghz Intel Nehalem processors with 24 GB RAM for a total of 9,216 computer cores. That gives it a performance of 103 TeraFLOPS per second.

A FLOP is a floating point operation, and that’s 103,000,000,000,000 every second.

Data flows into a Dual Data Rate Infiniband Data Direct disk storage system than can handle nearly 400 terabytes of data.

U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye spoke at the dedication and shortly afterward at the rededication of Akimeka’s Joint Information Technology Center across the street at Maui Research & Technology Park. Inouye helped find the funds that inaugurated the much-smaller supercomputer that launched the computing center in 1992.

Gene Bal, the director of the center, said about 95 percent of the computer’s time is devoted to military work. Maui is one of six Department of Defense Supercomputing Resource Centers.

The computer is used for research in computing, communications and computational modeling. Users can access the machine from distant locations, but many of them come to Maui because the center itself has graphical capacities that cannot be used remotely, Bal said.

The power-hungry machines will soon get some juice of their own. The computing center will add a photovoltaic research and development component.

The Kihei R&T Park is one of the best places in the world to put a photovoltaic panel. Even before the Maui Research & Technology Center was built, the hillside was used by researchers at the University of California at Davis to test a flexible photovoltaic system, called PV-USA. Engineers were surprised when they turned it on because it put out much more electricity than they had calculated.

It turns out that during most afternoons, the R&T Park gets 1.3 “suns” shining on it the direct sun, plus another three-tenths of a sun from light that falls on the slopes of Haleakala, bouncing up to the afternoon clouds that usually build up and back down on Kihei.

Akimeka also does military research. The Joint Information Technology Center is owned by the government and managed by Akimeka. Matt Granger, vice president for operations, describes it as a largely “virtual” organization, although it has about 66 people working on it here.

Akimeka’s primary contracts with the Department of Defense involve military health systems. It specializes in melding the health information systems of the three military services so that they can be accessed from anywhere.

That capacity is now finding a wider application in helping the military share data among many users. Granger estimates that up to 90 percent of the JITC work is still medical, but it is now turning into a research and development center, “heavy on the development side,” for a wider variety of tasks.

When Jaws was installed, much of its predecessor was made available to the University of Hawaii at Hilo. Bal said that since Jaws is only three years old, “this system has a significant remaining nominal useful life.”

“A portion of Jaws will be partitioned for use by the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory,” he said. This will support the Maui Space Surveillance System Advanced Image Reconstruction project, helping make use of data gathered by telescopes at Science City on Haleakala’s summit.

“Additionally, the University of Hawaii has expressed an interest in using another partition of Jaws for academic research, which would be sponsored under the Educational Partnership Agreement executed between the Air Force Research Laboratory and the University of Hawaii,” Bal said.

The photovoltaic project is being supported by American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds.

* Harry Eagar can be reached at heagar@mauinews.com.

Source: http://www.mauinews.com/page/content.detail/id/522634.html

Inouye and Obama clash on funding for Joint Strke Fighter

Senator Inouye is again backing an expensive exotic weapon system that the Pentagon doesn’t want or need.   Now he’s locking horns with President Obama.

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Democratic Sen. Inouye Bucks Fellow Hawaiian Obama on Defense Spending

In the first major clash between the two Hawaii-born Democrats since Obama entered the White House, Inouye is pursuing hundreds of millions of dollars to develop an alternative jet engine for a new aircraft dubbed the Joint Strike Fighter

AP

Sunday, August 23, 2009

HONOLULU — Sen. Daniel Inouye, one of Capitol Hill’s most powerful politicians by dint of his chairmanship of the Senate Appropriations Committee, is bucking President Obama on two high-profile spending controversies.

In the first major clash between the two Hawaii-born Democrats since Obama entered the White House, Inouye is pursuing hundreds of millions of dollars to develop an alternative jet engine for a new aircraft dubbed the Joint Strike Fighter. The Pentagon and Obama insist the second engine is unnecessary.

The eight-term senator, who leads both the full appropriations panel and its defense subcommittee, also pushed spending for more F-22 jet fighters despite opposition from the administration. However, funding for the additional planes now appears to be dead.

His aides would not disclose Inouye’s position on the VH-71, a new presidential helicopter that Obama has criticized as too costly and elaborate.

Obama last week lambasted the defense industry and Congress over what he called wasteful military spending.

“The impulse in Washington to protect jobs back home building things we don’t need has a cost that we can’t afford,” the president told a meeting of the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

“This waste would be unacceptable at any time. But at a time when we’re fighting two wars and facing a serious deficit, it’s inexcusable. It’s unconscionable,” he added. “It’s an affront to the American people and to our troops. And it’s time for it to stop.”

The president did not target any lawmaker by name. And none of the parts for the F-22 or the second F-35 engine are made in Hawaii.

Still, Inouye has been a loyal supporter of both programs. The F-22 was designed as a Cold War weapon but could be vital against a Chinese attack on Taiwan or a Russian war in the Baltics, Inouye contended on the Senate floor last month.

“Unless we truly believe that we will never face another nation state in a conventional conflict, then the F-22 is indeed necessary,” he said.

The plane was originally designed to replace Air Force F-15s, and 20 of them are still planned to go to the Hawaii Air National Guard. But at $140 million a copy, it was criticized as far too expensive.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates sought to cap its production at almost 190 aircraft. Administration officials in June warned Congress that the defense appropriations bill — of which Inouye’s committee is a primary author — would likely be vetoed if it included funding for more of them.

Last month, the Senate complied, killing $1.75 billion in further spending on it. Inouye and Sen. Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, backed the plane.

A few days later, senators by voice vote eliminated $439 million for the second F-35 engine. The administration also had threatened a veto over that program too, though in less declaratory language than it used in its warning on the F-22.

But Inouye recently told Congressional Quarterly that he wants to resurrect funding for the engine in his committee’s defense appropriations bill, due next month, because “it makes good sense.”

Inouye spokesman Peter Boylan said the senator has met with Gates and Vice President Joe Biden on defense spending, including the second engine. But Inouye continues to favor it so long as it does not cause cost overruns or delay the entire F-35 program, Boylan said.

“If you have a single supplier, you can guarantee…the government will pay a premium,” Boylan added.

However, the price tag for the F-35 program, now at $80 million to $90 million a copy, is rising and the Pentagon wants to cover those costs with money slated for the second engine, said Todd Harrison at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, a Washington D.C. think tank.

But if Inouye and Congress persist, the money for the alternate engine has to come from somewhere. Critics worry that Inouye will raid military operations and maintenance accounts, a frequent target of congressional appropriations committees that insist on financing a weapons project.

“It shrinks the money available for training and maintenance and those kinds of operational needs of the armed forces,” said Winslow Wheeler, who heads the military reform project at the Center for Defense Information, a Washington D.C. think tank. “The committee and its staff simply don’t care.”

Still, Inouye is under heavy pressure from both colleagues to back job-producing defense projects and the White House to make the cuts, said Loren Thompson, chief operating officer and longtime defense analyst for the Lexington Institute.

“Inouye is a veteran who usually backs funding of military programs,” Thompson said in an e-mail. “So it takes a lot to convince him that something the military wants is unnecessary.”

Though the administration persuaded Inouye not to buck Obama too much on the F-22, Thompson added, the White House “can’t count on overriding the military every time because Inouye trusts the judgment of the war fighters.”

Source: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/08/23/democratic-sen-inouye-bucks-fellow-hawaiian-obama-defense-spending/

Hundreds turn out to demand access to shoreline access in Kona

The Natural Energy Laboratory of Hawai’i Autority (NELHA) is a State of Hawai’i agency under the Department of Business Economic Development and Tourism. It is based at a site on the Kona shoreline, near the Kona airport. The public has had access to prime shoreline recreation and cultural areas via a jeep road that runs near the NELHA site. Recently, NELHA has locked the gates to the beach. Kona residents have mobized to demand access.

What’s not been discussed much is the role of NELHA in supporting military research via the National Defense Center of Excellence for Research in Ocean Sciences (CEROS), a state-run, federally funded program housed at NELHA.  CEROS is a program of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) which conducts many secret research programs in Hawai’i.

Is the beach access closure related to any security measures required by CEROS/DARPA?

Here’s a report on the recent meeting by Kona activist Shannon Rudolph:

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Hundreds Turn Out For NELHA Gate Closure Meeting

August 22, 2009

By Shannon Rudolph

A polite but agitated crowd, an estimated 500 to 600 people, filled the Kealakehe High School Cafeteria Friday night and spoke unanimously; open the gate at Natural Energy Laboratory of Hawaii Authority (NELHA) to O’oma / Kohanaiki – now.

Many members of the Kohanaiki ‘Ohana community public access group and other residents gave testimony to open the gate immediately, including former council member Angel Pilago, along with representatives of the Kapena, Ka’aaina, and Freitas families. Kaimanu Freitas told the audience he had the original deed to the NELHA property proving his family ownership.

The community talk story sponsored by Sen. Josh Green and Rep. Denny Coffman included representatives from the state Department of Transportation (DOT) and the Department of Business Economic Development and Tourism (DBEDT). (Click here and here to see previous references to the community meeting.)

Many testifying called for NELHA chief executive officer (CEO) Ron Baird to be fired immediately, not only for locking the shoreline gate, but also for putting the community in danger with the unfinished and unacceptable access further south on the highway. Rep. Coffman and the DOT representative also called the secondary highway access unsafe.

Hawaii County Councilman Kelly Greenwell told the crowd that he held the “key” to to the NELHA gate and that community members held that key also – namely, civil disobedience – and invited everyone to come down on Saturday morning to help remove the gate.

Puna’s Kale Gumapac and other community activists from around the island also attended and spoke of the need to stand up and protect public access in all areas of the island for future generations.

Sen. Green urged the audience to call NELHA’s CEO Ron Baird at (808) 329-7341, along with his boss, Ted Liu, director of DBEDT at 808-586-2355, email tliu@dbedt.hawaii.gov and urge them to open the gate. On Hawai’i island, call 808-947-4000 ext. 52423.  Ron Baird was invited, but did not attend the meeting or send a NELHA representative.

(Shannon Rudolph is a Kona resident concerned about shoreline access amongst other community issues.)

Source: http://www.bigislandchronicle.com/?p=8208

Inouye still the 'King of Pork'

Updated at 5:26 a.m., Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Hawaii’s Inouye says he’s ‘No. 1 Earmarks Guy’

By HERBERT A. SAMPLE
Associated Press

HONOLULU – U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye, normally not a politician who seeks a lot of attention outside of election years, is proclaiming himself Capitol Hill’s king of earmarks.

“It may please you or it may not please you,” he told a gathering of business leaders on the Big Island on Monday, according to West Hawaii Today. “I’m the No. 1 earmarks guy in the U.S. Congress.”

Inouye and his colleagues in the Hawaii congressional delegation have long defended targeted spending provisions as a prerogative of Congress, to which the Constitution gives the power of the purse. They also contend they can better ascertain what their districts need than executive branch officials.

During Monday’s remarks to the Kona-Kohala Chamber of Commerce, the 84-year-old senator described his earmarks as transparent and beneficial to the state. He cited the Army’s Pohakuloa Training Area in the middle of the Big Island, which resulted in significant upgrades to Saddle Road, once a narrow, unsafe path that connects the east and west sides of the vast island. The senator helped dedicate the newest 6.5-mile section of improved roadway on Monday.

The amount of federal money the eight-term senator has poured into the project could not be determined Tuesday. But supporters said the improvements could not have been accomplished otherwise.

“It’s a huge project for this island and we can’t wait to get it completed,” said Vivian Landrum, president of the Kona-Kohala chamber.

Federal funding for the road has not received much criticism. But other Inouye earmarks have, such as the $2 million that he and Rep. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, secured for the Imiloa Astronomy Center on the Big Island.

“Why do we need $2 million to promote astronomy in Hawaii when unemployment is going up and the stock market is tanking?” Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said in March.

Inouye sponsored 324 earmarks totaling more than $2 billion in the 2008 and 2009 appropriations bills, according to the Center for Responsive Politics and Taxpayers for Common Sense, two Washington, D.C., watchdog organizations.

Steve Ellis, vice president of the latter group, on Tuesday lauded Inouye for improving accountability on Senate earmarks, though more reforms are needed. But Ellis cited other comments the senator made about Hawaii projects he wants to finance before he leaves office.

Whenever Inouye departs, said Ellis, “It’s going to send a ripple effect throughout the state of Hawaii because the self-proclaimed king of earmarks is not going to be there anymore and the state is not going to have the juice to deliver anywhere near the amount of money it is getting currently.”

Some Hawaii residents object to earmarks by the state’s congressional delegation.

“As the currency that legislators use to barter favors, earmarks always come at a cost,” said Jamie Story, president of the Grassroot Institute, a free-market advocacy group in Honolulu. “They give the federal government a foot in the door on issues that should be the jurisdiction of local government.”

In contrast, “very lively applause” followed Inouye’s self-description Monday as Congress’ top earmarker, said Debbie Baker, the Kona-Kohala chamber’s chairwoman-elect.

“I suppose that if I thought an earmarked project was frivolous, I might object,” Baker added. “But from what I’ve seen, the funding that he’s brought to the state has done a tremendous amount of good and much of it in the national interest.”

Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/20090819/BREAKING01/90819014/Hawaii%E2%80%99s+Inouye+says+he+s+%E2%80%98No.+1+Earmarks+Guy%E2%80%99

A $191 Million Question

Army official meets pretty private contractor at a conference in Hawai’i. They become intimate friends.  Confidential Army information is shared with the contractor. Her company wins a big contract. Whistleblower triggers and investigation, but nothing happens.  Whistleblower gets investigated and run out of town.  This story bears a striking resemblance to the Project Kai e’e/ UARC scandal.

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A $191 Million Question

How a relationship between an Army official and a private contractor led to allegations of collusion and impropriety

By Robert O’Harrow Jr.
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, August 7, 2009

He called her Princess. She called him Bubba. They got together whenever they could, sailing on the Chesapeake Bay, traveling to business conferences, taking long walks. They exchanged e-mails night and day.

“You been sleepin??” George Raymond wrote to Catherine Campbell in September 2005.

“I slept some,” she wrote back. “Just got out of the shower.”

“Oh boy,” he wrote.

Theirs was a cozy relationship, and they worked in a world where such cozy relationships are officially frowned upon. Raymond, now 61, was the director of a technology program for the U.S. Army, and Campbell, now 47, was a favored contractor. As they grew close, the lines between their public duties and private lives blurred, drawing them into a morass of ethical and legal allegations surrounding government contracts worth up to $191 million.

raymond-and-campbell

SLUG: INV/ARMY DATE: Downloaded E-mail 6/8/2009 CREDIT: Courtesy of Army AL&T Online CAPTION: The man on the left is George “Chip” Raymond. The woman standing to his left is Catherine “Katy” Campbell. The man seated is unidentified. StaffPhoto imported to Merlin on Mon Jun 8 16:35:02 2009 camera works  Photo Credit: Richard Mattox — Army AL&T Online Magazine Photo

The tale of their four-year relationship is an allegory for the chronic problems afflicting the government’s $532 billion procurement system. Reforms a decade ago, intended to make the system more efficient and entrepreneurial, had unintended consequences: insufficient oversight, conflicts of interest, unprecedented outsourcing and an endlessly revolving door that leads government officials into the offices of contractors.

It also shows how accountability for contracting misdeeds at the Pentagon can be hard to come by, even when a whistleblower comes forward.

An internal Army inquiry last year found evidence that Raymond passed on confidential and sensitive government information to Campbell and allowed a firm she worked for to help write the terms of a contract, giving it an unfair advantage. The Army also concluded that Raymond was involved in the award of a contract worth up to $185 million to giant BearingPoint after Campbell went to work there, in a manner that created “at least an appearance of impropriety.”

An official recommended that evidence be referred to the Army economic crimes unit at Fort Belvoir for “further investigation into possible criminal violations.” But before that happened last summer, Raymond retired with full benefits, his reputation and top-secret clearance intact. He took a top job as an Army contractor at the giant Computer Sciences Corp. — with references and recommendations from Army colleagues.

Raymond acknowledged in an interview that he had a close relationship with Campbell, but said the two were not lovers and neither he nor Campbell profited from their relationship. Campbell did not return repeated phone calls.

Raymond also said he was a product of the decade-old federal procurement philosophy that encourages close collaboration with contractors.

“Nobody ever pointed out that what I was doing was wrong,” Raymond said. “I was never counseled.”

Launching a Relationship

They met in the spring of 2004 amid the booths of a military technology conference in Hawaii.

Stocky and affable, “Chip” Raymond was a married, retired Army major. For almost two decades, he had worked his way up through a series of civilian Army jobs to become the director of a start-up technology center at Fort Belvoir, a part of the communications and electronics command known as CECOM.

Katy Campbell was a gregarious single mom who had moved up through a variety of jobs, including health plan enrollment specialist, telecom account executive and physician liaison at a health-care company.

She had landed a new job a few months earlier at a Northern Virginia technology contractor called Enterprise Integration Inc., and was quickly promoted from office manager to “corporate liaison.”

Hours after a mutual friend introduced them, Raymond and Campbell joined others on a rented 30-foot sailboat, an outing that launched their relationship. “She was not a sailor,” Raymond would say later, “but she became one.”

Later that year, Campbell introduced Raymond to her boss at EII. The firm was soon awarded a six-month, no-bid contract to support Raymond’s center, which came to be known as the Enterprise Solutions Competency Center. In the end, the contract was worth almost $600,000.

As Beltway contractors go, EII was small, operating out of a suite of offices in a brick-and-glass building in suburban Alexandria. Started by two George Mason University professors, it had about 50 employees and advised the government on the arcane business of building and managing intricate computer networks. Company leaders promoted Campbell the year before to see whether she could parlay her people skills into new contracts through Raymond’s program at Fort Belvoir.

Campbell’s work included networking throughout the Army — sometimes at conference booths — and producing publications and educational material for Raymond’s center. She and Raymond met regularly at EII’s Alexandria offices for lunch. For exercise, they made a ritual of walking through the woodsy, rolling hills around the Fort Belvoir golf course. They also continued sailing together on the weekends, plying the Chesapeake Bay on a 40-foot Catalina 400 sailboat called Sea Eagle.

The boat was owned by a senior vice president at BearingPoint named Miles McNamee, a close friend of Raymond from their days working together for the Army in the mid-1990s.

About half of the weekend sailors were government workers — from the Army, Navy, Energy Department and other agencies — and about half were contractors.

Everyone brought their own sandwiches and shared coolers stocked with soda and other drinks, while helping to crew the boat, Raymond recalled. Federal rules generally prohibit officials from accepting gifts like boat rides from contractors. But members of the sailing group thought they could avoid conflicts of interest. “It is an unwritten kind of rule that when you’re sailing, you’re sailing,” Raymond said. “You don’t talk business. You don’t make deals.”

The close ties were typical, Raymond said, in part because of the overhaul of the procurement system more than a decade ago. The ambitious plan was intended to encourage agencies to operate in a more entrepreneurial way in order to reap a windfall from the “peace dividend” after the Cold War. The reforms included massive cuts to the Pentagon’s procurement workforce and a far greater reliance on private contractors.

“The lines that were originally drawn . . . Those lines started to blur and partnerships were formed,” Raymond said. “It goes on all the time. There’s nothing wrong with it, in my view. It was the way it was supposed to work.”

McNamee, now at KPMG, declined repeated requests to discuss his ties with Raymond and the social constellation that formed around the Sea Eagle, which Raymond said McNamee sold last year. Such boats sell used for $100,000 to $200,000.

“I have cooperated fully with investigations in 2007 on this matter while at BearingPoint,” McNamee said in a statement. “And I’m comfortable I acted in a professional manner in accordance with BearingPoint’s contracting practices.”

‘Eyes Only’

By the middle of 2005, Chip Raymond and Katy Campbell had gone from close professional colleagues to close personal friends.

“Why are you awake at 0100?” she asked in an e-mail.

“Been waiting for your e-mails. You fell off the earth. Busy day??”

“You need to stop being cranky and get some sleep.”

“You’re being mean to me,” he said. “Phooey.”

Their e-mails also touched on business. In June 2005, Raymond sent Campbell one containing “procurement sensitive information” — the government’s cost estimates for a new support contract.

“Eyes only . . . this is the breakout,” he wrote at the top of the e-mail.

“Danke,” she responded.

Federal law prohibits government officials from sharing confidential cost estimates and other sensitive procurement information with contractors.

As his center prepared to issue a request for bids on the new contract, Raymond allegedly allowed EII to help shape the terms by contributing to what is known as the statement of work, according to Army documents. Federal acquisition regulations prohibit such arrangements when the firm that writes the statement also wins the contract. EII officials denied knowing anything about the passing of the cost estimates or the shaping of the statement of work.

In an interview with The Washington Post, Raymond acknowledged passing on the information to Campbell, but said it was only part of a “tutorial” to help her understand the procurement system. He initially denied allowing EII to write the statement, then conceded he might have. “Under the pressures of setting up the operation quickly, I could have said, ‘Show me a statement,’ ” he said. “If I did it, it was wrong.”

Raymond said it is common practice for contractors to bolster their chances of winning a deal by providing information that helps to shape statements of work. “It happens all the time . . . They disguise it as a white paper,” he said.

Raymond said the intent is to make the system work better. “There’s this concept of doing the right thing and doing the best thing,” he said. “Sometimes you have to make a choice for the best thing.”

In another e-mail to Campbell that referred to the support contract, Raymond wrote, “ITS OUR BABY. You and me.” An Army investigator later said “content contained in the emails allude to collusion” between the two. In an interview, Raymond said the line was taken out of context and merely showed their shared desire to bolster the center.

In December 2005, EII won the one-year support contract with the possibility of two one-year extensions, altogether worth up to $6 million.

‘The Game Around This Town’

In February 2006, Raymond was invited to attend a conference on Army business at Oracle’s headquarters in Redwood Shores, Calif. He asked organizers to allow Campbell to accompany him. A few days after the Oracle conference, Campbell traveled with Raymond again to another technology conference, this one at the Doral Golf Resort and Spa in Miami.

By now, Campbell’s supervisors at EII had grown concerned about the personal nature of her relationship with Raymond. They also thought her work at Raymond’s center was not generating enough business.

The “frequent lunches, sailing trips, repeated evening visits by Mr. Raymond to EII’s office to see Ms. Campbell, and their coordinated travel together — created at least the appearance of a conflict of interest,” EII president Thomas Gulledge later said in a statement to an Army official.

Gulledge hired a contracting lawyer to train Campbell and other employees on their legal and ethical responsibilities. Campbell was told she no longer would be working with Raymond and the center. The change did not sit well with her or Raymond. Campbell would later say people at EII had made sexually suggestive remarks.

According to EII, Raymond issued a threat.

“At the time, Mr. Raymond told my partner, Dr. Sommer, that if Ms. Campbell left EII, then EII would be done working with CECOM,” Gulledge said in his statement.

Campbell resigned from EII in late March. Raymond signed a stop-work order on EII’s contract in mid-May.

Raymond later told The Post he ran out of money for the contract. “There was no retribution or vindictiveness,” he said.

Lynn M. Lovell, an Army official later assigned to investigate the relationship, noted that Raymond said “he should have cancelled the contract” after he had heard Campbell say that she also had been sexually harassed at EII.

“His statements reflect personal motivation; motivation that is not in the interests of the government,” Lovell concluded in a report.

For months in mid-2006, Campbell was unemployed. She resurfaced in Raymond’s professional world that fall.

On Nov. 9, her résumé was included in a BearingPoint proposal for another technology support contract at Raymond’s center, even though she later said in a sworn statement that she did not begin working at BearingPoint until Dec. 4. McNamee, Raymond’s friend at BearingPoint and Campbell’s sailing patron, later said he passed on her résumé to another company official but was not responsible for her hiring.

Raymond said the inclusion of Campbell’s résumé in the proposal was “not a big deal” and did not have an undue bearing on the contract award.

“The game around this town is you put résumés of people who are well known,” Raymond said. “It didn’t influence anything at all.”

In BearingPoint’s proposal, which was addressed directly to Raymond, Campbell was listed as part of the “leadership team,” second only to McNamee.

Although McNamee signed the proposal — and his résumé was the first presented as part of the project team — he later said he had nothing to do with it. He told one Army official “that he signed the forwarding letter but that he never saw nor read the proposal.”

For his part, Raymond told the same official he “never opened nor read the proposal,” but instead forwarded it to another official “and therefore did not realize that Mr. McNamee addressed the letter to him and that his résumé was included.”

This contract was much larger than the others, worth up to $185 million. It included some services that had been covered under the old EII contract.

The new contract made use of a separate government contracting channel at the National Institutes of Health, which allowed preapproved contractors to compete for work that government agencies deemed necessary.

BearingPoint was among the companies approved, but EII was not. Raymond later said he chose the NIH at the request of program managers who oversaw Army medical information systems.

When questioned about the deal, an Army spokesman recently said Raymond’s office “may not have followed proper administrative procedures” in using the NIH.

In any case, BearingPoint won the contract on Dec. 1, 2006, after a “selecting board” of Army officials recommended the firm. All four board members worked closely with Raymond, who was also the official responsible for endorsing any decision before it took effect.

In his interview, Raymond downplayed his role in the decision. “You either agree or disagree with the recommendation,” he said. “In most cases, you agree.”

Pressure to Investigate

Although Campbell had just begun at BearingPoint, she was not finished with EII. In January 2007, she filed a lawsuit against the firm in Fairfax County Circuit Court.

She said that she “was subjected to abusive, inappropriate, and humiliating treatment,” including remarks that “had a clear sexual undertone.” In a sworn statement, she said that Gulledge once made rude remarks about her breasts and another colleague read a Viagra ad aloud.

Campbell also asserted that the company owed her about $60,000 in “incentive payments” for her work. EII officials said the allegations were baseless. A judge threw out most of the allegations and a jury eventually ruled against Campbell on the rest.

While the case was pending, EII officials went straight at Raymond. The company requested details about the BearingPoint deal and subpoenaed Raymond to answer questions about Campbell.

Raymond referred the matters to the legal team at Fort Belvoir. The case was assigned to a new civilian attorney named Barbara Strong, who had joined the office only weeks before.

Strong, now 57, is a dogged former state government lawyer who is married to a retired investigator for the Internal Revenue Service. After graduating from Catholic University law school, she worked as an assistant Maryland attorney general for eight years before going to work for the Army in 2006.

In June 2007, she asked Raymond about Campbell and EII. He said Gulledge had seemed to imply that Raymond was sleeping with Campbell, asking whether she was “any good.” Gulledge later said his question related to her work performance. Raymond told Strong that he and Campbell were the best of friends and sailing companions. But he told Strong they were not lovers, according to documents she prepared.

Raymond introduced Strong to Campbell and the two women talked privately for an hour. Then Strong spoke to an EII attorney, who asked whether Raymond had retaliated against the firm by cutting off its funding.

The more Strong learned, she later recalled, the more problematic the relationship seemed. She urged Raymond to hire a private attorney to deal with any civil or criminal exposure he might have. He took her advice.

She also told Raymond he needed to quit sailing on McNamee’s Sea Eagle to avoid a possible conflict of interest.

Raymond reluctantly agreed in another e-mail: “I have been sailing with this group for a very long time and actually work the boat. Don’t know if that helps, but Miles and I have been friends since Army days . . . he is in a very different part of Bearing Point [sic]. I would hate to stop doing what I love to do and where I go to escape all discussion of business. We never talk work.”

A short time later, Raymond suggested in an e-mail that the Army might seek to retaliate against EII for pressing the Campbell matter, pulling their security clearances and suspending their contracts. “It may take some wind out of their sails,” he wrote.

That was too much for Strong. Without telling Raymond, she urged her Army colleagues in the legal office to forward the case to the Army’s CID, the criminal investigation command.

Strong’s advocacy was met with skepticism, but her superiors allowed her to brief their boss, Col. Thomas Loper, the chief of CECOM’s software engineering center, who initially seemed unconvinced.

“The situation was extremely delicate because Ms. Strong was recommending an investigation of one of COL Loper’s top employees,” John Metcalf, Strong’s direct supervisor, later wrote in a sworn statement.

After a two-hour discussion with Strong and Metcalf, Loper agreed to conduct an “Article 15-6 investigation,” or a fact-finding inquiry one step below a criminal probe.

They assigned the job to Hermann J. Spitzer, a civilian Army physicist who had nearly no experience as an investigator.

Sworn Statements

By his own account, Spitzer was an unlikely choice to run the 15-6. The closest he had come to such a task was years earlier when he was asked to look into a petty theft.

Spitzer, now 73, came to the United States from Germany as a student, was married and became a U.S. citizen. In four decades with the Army, he rose through the civilian ranks to head the “night vision” research labs at Fort Belvoir.

His first thought was to decline the assignment from the legal team. “I said, ‘Why should I do that? I’m not an investigator,’ ” Spitzer said in an interview with The Post. “I really did think I should not do it. They really coerced me into it.”

Strong, for her part, questioned whether Spitzer was up to the task. In early August 2007, she traveled to Fort Monmouth, N.J., to share new evidence about the ties among Raymond, Campbell and McNamee and to push for a more aggressive investigation. She met with Paul Harris, the legal adviser for Spitzer’s investigation, and Robert Russo, a contracting law attorney.

While reviewing documents, Harris and Russo urged her not to answer a written question that Spitzer had given her for “a review of the facts” that she had recently gathered, according to legal papers she filed later.

“Essentially, Mr. Russo suggested that Ms. Strong perjure herself, and expressed his view that there was nothing unusual about the apparent steering of a contract by military personnel to their friends within the defense community,” Strong said in documents later filed with the federal Merit Systems Protection Board.

In sworn statements, Harris and Russo strongly denied Strong’s account. “I never suggested that she ‘turn a blind eye’ to anything or that she ‘perjure’ herself,” Russo said.

“Furthermore,” he said, “I never stated nor implied that ‘there was nothing unusual about the apparent steering of a contract by military personnel to their friends within the defense contract community.’ No such issue was ever discussed.”

But Harris’s sworn statement seemed to confirm Strong’s account that she was told that her evidence was lacking. “Mr. Russo shared with Ms. Strong that the particular documents she pointed to did not reveal anything unusual in the contracting arena,” Harris said.

Still, Harris added that he and Russo were not trying to block Strong but were merely attempting to prevent her from interfering with what Spitzer was doing.

“At no time did Mr. Russo or I ever suggest, recommend, and tell Ms. Strong to lie, conceal, cover-up, or otherwise prevent [Spitzer] from conducting a fair and impartial AR 15-6 investigation,” Harris said.

At least one member of the legal office accepted Strong’s assertions about the importance of what she had turned up. “Ms. Strong quickly picked up on the fact that the [BearingPoint] contract award appeared laced with irregularities and indicia of fraud,” Metcalf, her supervisor, later said in a sworn statement.

Strong speculated in a recent interview that the legal office might not have wanted an aggressive investigation because it might not have properly reviewed the contracts. In a recent statement, a civilian Army spokesman said the legal office apparently did not do the reviews. “There’s no known record of a legal review of the contracts,” spokesman Lenny Gatto said.

He said the Army personnel involved would not be made available for interviews because the matter is still under review almost a year after the evidence was handed over to Army criminal investigators.

‘I Did Something Wrong’

As he gathered material, Spitzer became convinced that Raymond and Campbell had done nothing wrong, except to give the wrong impression.

Spitzer relied heavily on the statements by Raymond, Campbell and McNamee. “I’m not an investigator,” he said in an interview. “I’m not a judge who could force these people to tell the truth.”

He ultimately found no problems with the contracts, no undue influence, no cheating.

“Their friendship may be or may have been somewhat unorthodox, but there is no evidence of an inappropriate relationship, sexual or otherwise,” he eventually wrote in a report. “Both have been described as competent and consummate professionals.”

He did recommend ethics counseling for Raymond regarding the use of McNamee’s boat.

Around the time he submitted his report, in November 2007, Spitzer contacted Raymond and offered his support. “I told him if he needs help in court, I’m going to retire in a couple of weeks. I will speak out for you,” Spitzer said in an interview.

Spitzer’s final report did not refer to the key “Eyes only” e-mail in which Raymond shared confidential procurement information with Campbell. In an interview, Spitzer said he did not recall seeing the e-mail. “I got a couple hundred e-mail,” he said. “You get dizzy after a half-hour . . . I didn’t see anything.”

In early December 2007, an Army colonel rejected Spitzer’s report without remarks. An Army spokesman later said the investigation was deemed insufficient.

“Many of his findings and recommendations were unsupported by the evidence developed, and there were a number of serious issues that he failed to investigate,” Gatto said in a recent statement.

In March 2008, Loper ordered another probe, this time by a contracting specialist named Lynn M. Lovell. Loper sharply narrowed the focus to two e-mails Raymond and Campbell had exchanged.

One was the “Eyes only” note that Raymond sent to Campbell containing cost estimates for a contract with EII. Another was a personal communication. Left unaddressed would be the far more valuable BearingPoint contract.

Lovell submitted her findings in May, concluding that the “Eyes only” e-mail appeared to violate the federal Procurement Integrity Act. A conviction can result in five years in prison. She recommended Raymond’s removal and the criminal investigation, which began last fall.

In July, Raymond was notified of his proposed removal. The next month, the Army issued a “Notice of Decision to Remove.” By then, he had received a number of calls from Army officials, alternately pressing him to leave and offering support. Among those calling was Loper.

“Tom Loper called up and said, ‘I’ve got some really bad news for you,’ ” Raymond recalled.

Raymond chose to retire before he could be removed.

He called his missteps “a human mistake.”

“I did something wrong,” he said. “I gave an acquisition sensitive document to a contractor, Katy Campbell. It was wrong of me to do that.”

Raymond said “Katy was as innocent as the day is long.” He said he was “set up” by Army colleagues jealous of his success.

“If I were to do it again . . . everything would be extremely by the book,” he said. “No partnerships. No friendships.”

Shortly before he left the Army, Raymond began talks with Computer Sciences Corp., one of the contractors he had worked with. He had the apparent support of some senior Army officials — including then-deputy undersecretary Thomas E. Kelly III — who Raymond cited as references in his résumé.

In an interview, Kelly said he did not recall Raymond’s request for a reference and did not know about evidence turned up by the internal 15-6 inquiry because it is confidential.

Raymond has also received recommendations from Army officials, including Col. Loper, who after accepting the findings on Raymond in August went on to praise him in December, saying in an online recommendation that his talents have “served the Army and this country well.”

Loper did not return phone calls. Army spokesman Gatto said that Loper, now in Afghanistan, believed that “even though Mr. Raymond had made a serious mistake, he had made numerous very positive contributions to the Army.”

But Gatto said no one in Loper’s chain of command was aware that he had written the endorsement. “It in no way reflects the official position of the department,” Gatto said. “The Army is evaluating what corrective action might be appropriate.”

In a statement, a spokesperson for Computer Sciences Corp., now called CSC, said the company followed proper procedures in hiring Raymond, who provided documents showing that he was free of conflicts of interests. The company said in statement it “has not seen, heard nor been made aware of any of the allegations.”

Raymond did not respond to requests to discuss the circumstances of his hiring.

Campbell is still an Army contractor, working for Deloitte, which recently acquired BearingPoint. A Deloitte spokesman said, “It would be inappropriate for us to comment. Katy Campbell declined to comment.”

No Kudos for Speaking Up

Barbara Strong got no kudos for spurring the investigation. Instead, she was investigated herself, for reasons the Army said were unrelated to her role in the Raymond matter.

In May 2008 she lost her title as a team leader following alleged missteps with Army clients. One of her supervisors, Vince Buonocore, who was based at Fort Monmouth, said that Strong “had demonstrated that she needed closer supervision,” documents show.

Her previous direct supervisor, John Metcalf, would later disagree in court papers. “I found Ms. Strong’s behavior, conduct and demeanor in the office and with clients to be entirely appropriate,” he said. “Ms. Strong appeared to fit in well with and get along with other members of the office, including her fellow attorneys.”

But Metcalf had retired on April 30 and was no longer around to defend Strong.

Her new supervisors asserted that she was not collegial, disobeyed orders and spoke to a senior Army official in a rude manner. When Strong was “counseled,” the Army lawyers noted, she “smirked and chuckled,” and then began “mimicking being gagged.”

She felt she was being set up. Strong, who has temporal lobe epilepsy, worried she might have a seizure from the stress. On July 1, she had a grand mal seizure at work and was taken to Dewitt Army Community Hospital, where she suffered another seizure. She had a third seizure a few days later.

On Aug. 13, with Strong out of the office following her seizures, the Army filed papers proposing her removal. The next day, the Army issued a termination notice for Raymond. Strong got her final notice two months later.

In December, she filed an appeal to the Merit Systems Protection Board, an appeals systems for civil servants, claiming among other things that she was retaliated against for her “disclosures of apparent fraud in connection with the award of a $185 million defense contract, and of attempts by Army personnel to cover-up that apparent fraud.”

Army officials questioned whether Strong qualified as a whistleblower under federal law, but in the end they settled the case earlier this year without admitting wrongdoing, paying her $115,000.

Researcher Madonna Lebling contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/06/AR2009080603918_pf.html

Hawaii sixth in federal spending

Someone needs to do a better analysis of the true costs and inefficiencies of this military economy.   Who gets paid? And who pays the price?  What are the opportunity costs?  And what happens when the artificially inflated military spending due to Congressionally directed spending comes to an end?

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Hawaii sixth in federal spending

Last year’s total of more than $15 billion worked out to $11,651 for every person here

By Craig Gima

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jul 23, 2009

Hawaii ranks sixth among states in per capita federal spending, largely because of military spending and salaries, according to a U.S. Census Bureau report released today.

Federal government spending topped $15 billion in Hawaii last year, which works out to $11,651 for every man, woman and child here. Of that amount, $6.1 billion, or $4,741 per each Hawaii resident, is related to Defense Department spending.

The $15 billion is up about 6.7 percent from the $14 billion spent in 2007. Nationally, federal domestic spending rose 9.3 percent last year to about $2.8 trillion.

“Federal spending is very important for Hawaii’s economy,” said Eugene Tian, the research and statistics officer at the state Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism.

Federal spending accounts for 13.5 percent of Hawaii’s gross domestic product, Tian said, the third-largest sector after real estate and tourism. State and local government spending, which was about 9.2 percent of Hawaii’s GDP, was fourth.

Tian said the federal government is the second-largest job generator and the top household income generator in Hawaii, mainly because federal wages and benefits are much better than the tourism industry, which provides the most jobs in the state.

Oahu has four major military bases — Pearl Harbor, Hickam Air Force Base, Marine Corps Base Hawaii and Schofield Barracks — along with the Pacific Command and Marine Forces Pacific headquarters at Camp Smith, Tripler Army Medical Center and other bases and posts.

The Defense Department spent about $2.2 billion on contracts to provide goods and services for the military last year and an additional $3.5 billion on salaries and wages for active-duty and civilian workers and retirees. All other federal agencies accounted for $234 million in procurement contracts and $630 million in salaries and wages.

The largest percentage increase in federal spending came in the “other direct payments” category, which includes Medicare benefits, unemployment compensation, food stamp payments and housing assistance. It grew 18.4 percent to $1.8 billion, while salaries and wages increased 14.2 percent.

The majority of federal spending — $10 billion last year — was spent in Honolulu. The Big Island got the second-highest amount, about $1 billion.

The federal government spent $659 million on Maui, $477 million on Kauai and $3.3 million at Kalaupapa on Molokai. Another $2.6 billion went to federal spending not concentrated on any one island.

Virginia ranked No. 1 in per capita federal spending with $15,256 per person, followed by Maryland, $13,829; Alaska, $13,730; Kentucky, $12,242; and New Mexico, $12,017.

States that had the lowest per capita federal spending were Utah at $6,255; Nevada, $6,638; and Wisconsin, $7,132.

The national average for per capita federal spending was $9,042 per person.

Source: http://www.starbulletin.com/news/20090723_hawaii_sixth_in_federal_spending.html

Looking Back: The National Missile Defense Act of 1999

The National Missile Defense Act of 1999 (the Cochran-Inouye Bill), also nicknamed the missile defense “blank check act” by anti-nuclear activists, was a turning point in the expansion of U.S. missile defense programs and the escalation of a new arms race. This bill committed the U.S. to deploy a national missile defense system “as soon as technologically feasible” and led to the undoing of both the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, two cornerstones of nuclear arms control and reduction.

In 1998, Hawai’i Senators Inouye and Akaka, were two of only four Senate Democrats who supported Cochran’s bill.  But opposition from the Democrats in Congress fell apart following the 1998 Republican sweep of Congress.

The National Missile Defense Act of 1999 opened the floodgates for research, development and testing of new, exotic missile defense technologies.  Inouye had been preparing for this opportunity, quietly earmarking funds for the refurbishment of the Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kaua’i.   The controversial Navy University Affiliated Research Center (UARC), also known as the Applied Research Laboratory – University of Hawai’i, and its corrupt origins, were enabled by the National Missile Defense Act of 1999.

The following article posted on the Arms Control Association website gives good analysis of the circumstances and consequences of the Act.

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The National Missile Defense Act of 1999

Greg Thielmann

The National Missile Defense Act of 1999 was described by its chief sponsor, Sen. Thad Cochran (R-Miss.), as “the necessary first step to protecting the United States from long-range ballistic missile attack.”[1] Indeed, the act constituted an important milestone on the road to U.S. withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty in 2002, a step that the sponsors of the act advocated. Although the act itself neither authorized any programs nor appropriated any funds, it was misrepresented then and has been misrepresented since as proof of strong congressional support for the urgent and unqualified pursuit of strategic missile defenses.

The National Missile Defense Act gave the United States a clearly stated policy goal: to “deploy as soon as is technologically possible an effective National Missile Defense system capable of defending the territory of the United States against limited ballistic missile attack (whether accidental, unauthorized, or deliberate)….” These simple words essentially became executive branch policy following the election of 2000. They were adopted as a charter for the Missile Defense Agency, appearing prominently today on the home page of the agency’s Web site. Although the meaning of “effective” has been subject to debate and the elections of 2006 and 2008 have affected the implementation of that policy, the act represents an enduring symbol of the potent backing strategic missile defense has received from Congress during the last 10 years.

Ironically, the threat assessments on which the act was based have proven unrealistic with regard to Iran, Iraq, and North Korea. None of these countries and no other proliferant states have deployed long-range ballistic missiles in the decade following the act.

The sponsors of the act also identified growing Chinese missile deployments as a source of concern, “perhaps [the] most troubling”[2] in the words of Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.), the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Yet, the U.S. strategic ballistic missile defenses deployed after passage of the act were never intended to defend against a deliberate Chinese attack.

Those missile defense deployments were also not directed at a deliberate Russian attack, although the act prepared the way for the U.S. decision in 2001 to withdraw from the ABM Treaty, which had been a keystone in the management of the U.S.-Russian strategic relationship. The Russians abandoned START II on the day after U.S. withdrawal from the ABM Treaty. In ratifying START II, the Russian Duma had conditioned its approval on continuing U.S. adherence to the ABM Treaty.

The Russian abandonment of START II, which the United States had never ratified, removed any chance of reducing Russian strategic offensive forces under the stabilizing terms of that treaty. Although Russian missile and warhead numbers continued to decline even without START II, the Russians were able to retain “heavy ICBMs” and other land-based ballistic missiles with multiple, independently targetable re-entry vehicles.

In short, China and Russia have increased the quality and, in the case of China, the quantity, of their strategic ballistic missile forces in response to U.S. missile defense programs. However, there is no evidence that the U.S. programs have dissuaded the states of proliferation concern from developing or deploying ballistic missiles.

Cold War Origins

The United States and the Soviet Union deployed limited numbers of strategic missile defense interceptors and radars in the middle years of the Cold War. These defenses were designed to cope with the intercontinental-range (greater than 5,500 kilometers) and intermediate-range (3,000-5,500 kilometers) ballistic missiles, with which the two sides could threaten each other’s homeland. The U.S.S.R. went first, deploying nearly 100 nuclear-armed ABM interceptors around Moscow in the 1960s. The United States began deploying a comparable number of nuclear-armed ABM interceptors at Grand Forks, North Dakota, in 1974. The 1972 ABM Treaty had banned the United States and U.S.S.R. from developing nationwide defenses as well as systems or components for sea-based, air-based, space-based, or mobile land-based ABM deployments. The treaty permitted each side to build ABM systems at two fixed locations for defense of each national capital area and a land-based missile base, with up to 100 interceptors at each site. A 1974 protocol to the treaty reduced that allowance, limiting each side to only one site. The Soviets opted to maintain their system around Moscow while the United States elected to protect a missile field in North Dakota, until Congress cut off funding in 1975. A 1997 agreement on confidence-building measures, negotiated in the ABM Treaty’s Special Consultative Commission, precisely demarcated strategic missile defense interceptors from those that were designed to intercept tactical and theater ballistic missiles. The latter systems were deemed incapable of overcoming the technical challenge of coping with the much faster re-entry of ICBM and sea-launched ballistic missile warheads.

Although the Soviets sought to be able to defend their capital and national leadership against the new U.S. missile threat that emerged in the 1960s, they never succeeded. U.S. warheads and the options for countermeasures were too numerous and the radars on which the Moscow system relied too vulnerable. Yet, bureaucratic inertia, vested interests, and the psychological desire to have some defense, however inadequate, have allowed vestiges of the Soviet/Russian system to survive even to the present day.

The United States was susceptible to the no-less-potent illusion that it could use technology to replace the defensive shield two oceans had historically provided for keeping enemies at bay. Nurtured by an almost unlimited faith in technological solutions and feeling the same natural reluctance as the Soviets to accept vulnerability, Washington plowed ahead until the inevitable logic of cost effectiveness caught up with strategic defenses in the mid-1970s when the Safeguard ABM system was canceled and dismantled. Although a new vision of a defensive umbrella that would render nuclear weapons “impotent and obsolete” was articulated by President Ronald Reagan in 1983, the Strategic Defense Initiative he launched two years later eventually fell victim to the “cost effectiveness at the margin” criterion advocated by his own special adviser, Paul Nitze. Strategic missile defense planning changed direction successively under Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, but research and development funding remained robust throughout both presidencies, and neither administration made any decision to deploy strategic defenses.

Three events were key in creating the political environment for passage of the National Missile Defense Act. First was the 1994 U.S. congressional elections, which gave the Republicans a majority in the House and Senate. The new speaker of the House, Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.), included “a renewed commitment to a National Missile Defense” in his “Contract With America.”[3] Republicans in both houses consistently and relentlessly pursued this goal as part of the GOP’s political agenda, culminating in passage of the 1999 act.

Report Spurs Action

The second and most important substantive development was the July 1998 release of the Report of the Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States, chaired by Donald Rumsfeld, who had been President Gerald Ford’s secretary of defense. The report’s executive summary warned that North Korea and Iran would be able to inflict major destruction on the United States within about five years of a decision to acquire such a capability and that both placed “a high priority on threatening U.S. territory” and were even then “pursuing advanced ballistic missile capabilities to pose a direct threat to U.S. territory.”[4] The report claimed that any other nation with a well-developed, Scud-based ballistic missile infrastructure could be within five years of an ICBM capability. Finally, the report warned that the United States “might have little or no warning before operational deployment” of these systems.[5]

The dire warnings of the Rumsfeld Commission were subject to considerable criticism and controversy among experts. Senate Democrats were still confident going into the August recess that year that they could sustain efforts by the Clinton administration to avoid congressional passage of an unqualified endorsement of strategic missile defense in reaction to the report. The public, however, which had already been spooked by Rumsfeld’s depiction of a potential near-term threat from “rogue state” ballistic missiles, was about to receive a further jolt. North Korea surprised the world with its August 31, 1998, attempt to place a satellite in space using a three-stage Taepo Dong-1 rocket. Although the attempt was unsuccessful, no missile re-entry vehicle was tested, and the system’s throw weight was inadequate to deliver a nuclear-sized payload to the United States, the political impact of the event was enormous. Proponents of strategic missile defenses skillfully used the North Korean launch as vindication of the Rumsfeld Commission’s warnings and accompanying allegations that previous U.S. intelligence assessments had been overly sanguine.

Most Democratic senators became unwilling to stand behind White House threats to veto the strategic missile defense resolution being pushed by the Republican majority. The alternative strategy the Democrats chose was to make the issue go away by adding language to make the bill uncontroversial. Amendments to the policy bill provided reminders that any national missile defense program funding would have to be subject to annual authorization and appropriation measures and that it was still U.S. policy to seek negotiated reductions in Russian strategic forces. Clinton stressed that the amendments made clear that no deployment decision had been made, but the simple language of the bill implied strongly that Congress recognized U.S. technological obstacles as the only acceptable justification for delay. The Senate bill passed 97-3 on March 17, 1999. The House bill passed the next day, 317-105.

Clinton announced in 2000 that strategic missile defenses, then under the rubric of the National Missile Defense program, were sufficiently promising and affordable to justify continued development and testing but that there was not sufficient information about the technical and operational effectiveness of the entire system to move forward with deployment. He noted that critical elements, such as the booster rocket for the interceptor, had not been tested and that there were questions about the system’s ability to deal with countermeasures.[6]

At the outset of the Bush administration in 2001, the programmatic course of strategic ballistic missile defense and the future of the ABM Treaty were still up in the air. That summer, a bipartisan majority of the Senate Armed Services Committee even voted to reduce missile defense funding.

The September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon created an entirely different atmosphere for continuing the debate. In the fearful wake of those attacks, President George W. Bush was successful in supercharging strategic missile defense procurement and deployment. In spite of virtually unanimous international opposition, he announced U.S. withdrawal from the ABM Treaty in late 2001 and a commitment to deploy strategic defense interceptors by 2004. The U.S.-based deployments and their “operational” designation were accomplished only after Rumsfeld, whom Bush had appointed secretary of defense, suspended traditional acquisition rules and operational testing criteria, introducing an unconventional and controversial “spiral” development process. By the end of two terms, the Bush administration was able to deploy a set of 20 ground-based missile defense (GMD) interceptors at sites in Alaska and California and to plan for deploying another 24 there and 10 more in Poland.

The ABM Treaty constituted a tacit acknowledgment by both sides that unlimited strategic defenses constituted a threat to the stability of the balance in offensive forces. Each side further demonstrated by its subsequent actions, albeit at different times, that offenses and defenses were inextricably connected. In 1988 the United States demanded that the Soviet Union dismantle the large phased-array radar Moscow was constructing at Krasnoyarsk before Washington would agree to any new offensive arms control limits.[7]

In response to U.S. withdrawal from the ABM Treaty on June 13, 2002, Russia announced one day later that it would no longer consider itself bound by START II, consistent with the Duma’s ratification terms in 2000, which were contingent on continuation of the ABM Treaty. Thus, not for the first or last time, U.S. determination to escape from strategic missile defense strictures led to the loss of an opportunity to secure lower limits and stabilizing measures in strategic offensive forces.

In 2004 the Bush administration began talks with eastern European states to explore the potential use of their territory for deployment of U.S. GMD interceptors and a sophisticated midcourse X-band radar. By the end of his administration, Bush had secured agreements with the Czech Republic for hosting the radar and Poland for hosting the missile interceptors, but the agreements remain to be ratified by the host governments. Meanwhile, on the U.S. side, the pendulum again seems to be swinging away from the urgent priority assigned to strategic missile defense by the Bush administration. President Barack Obama said in his April 5, 2009, Prague speech that he would only go forward with a missile defense system in Europe that was “cost effective and proven.” His revised request for the Missile Defense Agency in the fiscal year 2010 budget was $7.8 billion, a $1.2 billion funding cut in missile defense.[8]

Conclusion

In this tenth anniversary year of the National Missile Defense Act, it is worth noting that the North Korean ICBM seen as imminent when the act was passed has still not been successfully flight-tested. Deployment is down the road, “probably another three to five years minimum,” according to Gen. James Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. [9] Helms worried during the 1999 debate over the act that “Iran may very well be able to deploy an ICBM before America has a missile defense to counter it, even if the United States breaks ground on construction tomorrow morning.”[10] In fact, neither Iran nor any of the other emerging ballistic missile states the Rumsfeld Commission said could have ICBMs by 2003 has them today.

The sponsors of the National Missile Defense Act were correct in predicting that the pursuit of strategic missile defenses outside the ABM Treaty would not necessarily forestall additional reductions in the number of Russian strategic missiles given the state of Russia’s economy after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. That pursuit did, however, derail START II, the next step of negotiated reductions in U.S. and Russian strategic forces. In order to satisfy the requirements of START II, Moscow would have had to deploy only single-warhead ICBMs, leading to a force structure with greater crisis stability and possibly with fewer overall warheads than it currently has. U.S. strategic missile defense deployments also provided additional incentives for the modernization of Chinese strategic forces that so troubled Helms at the time the act was debated. Using formulas familiar to U.S. and Russian strategic planners countering strategic defenses in the past, the Chinese have increased the mobility and number of their deterrent forces while improving the survivability of their re-entry vehicles.

Actual threat history aside, the National Missile Defense Act became an important argument in the continuing policy debate over the direction and pace of the strategic missile defense program. After 1999, whenever skeptics of missile defense raised programmatic issues, the act was cited as proof that an overwhelming and bipartisan majority in Congress had already established a policy of rapid deployment, relegating other issues to a subordinate position. The act prodded the executive branch to move forward with little consideration of the full repercussions. Following the superficial logic of the act, the United States discarded the ABM Treaty even though most of the U.S. missile defense activities that have taken place between then and now could have been accommodated under the broad conceptual framework of the treaty. Moreover, the United States rushed to deploy defenses against the rogue-state ICBM missile threat before that threat materialized and before U.S. defensive systems had been adequately tested. These actions cost the United States dearly in terms of treasure spent and opportunities lost to reduce the threat from its potential adversaries with the most lethal capabilities, against which U.S. strategic forces are still principally directed.

Greg Thielmann is a senior fellow at the Arms Control Association, where he directs the Realistic Threat Assessments and Responses Project. He previously served as a senior professional staffer on the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and was a U.S. Foreign Service Officer for 25 years.

ENDNOTES

1. “Senate Backs Missile Defense System,” CNN.com, March 17, 1999, www.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/stories/1999/03/17/missile.defense/.

2. Congressional Record, March 15, 1999, p. S2632.

3. Republican Contract with America, http://www.house.gov/house/Contract/CONTRACT.html.

4. Greg Thielmann, “Rumsfeld Reprise? The Missile Report That Foretold the Iraq Intelligence Controversy,” Arms Control Today, July/August 2003, p. 3.

5. Ibid.

6. Office of the Press Secretary, The White House, “White House Fact Sheet on National Missile Defense,” September 1, 2000.

7. Paul Lewis, “U.S. Ties Arms Deal to a Soviet Radar,” New York Times, September 1, 1988, http://www.nytimes.com/1988/09/01/world/us-ties-arms-deal-to-a-soviet-radar.html.

8.”David Morgan, “Pentagon Seeks $1.2 Billion Cut for Missile Defense,” Reuters, May 7, 2009, http://www.reuters.com/article/politicsNews/idUSTRE5465CJ20090507.

9. Gen. James Cartwright, Testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee, June 16, 2009.

10. Congressional Record, March 15, 1999, p. S2632.

Source: http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2009_07-08/lookingback

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