(WMR) -- WMR
has learned from a knowledgeable contractor who served in Iraq and Afghanistan
that a number of large U.S. defense contractors have been involved in
questionable deals to land major contracts in countries that made up the �Coalition
of the Willing� that invaded and occupied Iraq.
The companies named by the contractor include Booz Allen of
McLean, Virginia, where Donald Rumsfeld�s Comptroller Dov Zakheim took a job
after resigning in 2004; Lockheed Martin; and VSE Corporation of Alexandria,
Virginia. In December 2003, a Government Accountability Office (GAO) audit
concluded that there was $1.6 billion in lost funds from the war in Iraq and on
information technology contracts.
VSE provided �support services� to the U.S. military in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
WMR has learned that VSE and Lockheed Martin�s Tokyo
representative were involved in distributing $2 million in �black funds� to
bribe South Korean diplomats and politicians who were involved in crafting an
international arms tender from South Korea to purchase from the United
States F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jets fitted with Lockheed Martin�s
Low Altitude Navigation and Targeting Infrared for Night (LANTIRN) system. The
competitors on the potential $7 billion contract with South Korea included
companies representing the Eurofighter, as well as the Russians.
The back room dealing primarily occurred in 2006 and the
U.S. embassy in Seoul helped in arranging payments of untraceable cash for
several South Korean politicians. The U.S. ambassador to South Korea
at the time was Alexander Vershbow, who was nominated in March 2009 by
President Obama as Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security, a
post in which Vershbow oversees foreign military sales.
Successive South Korean governments have been wracked by
bribery scandals, some involving top retired armed forces and police commanders
and, in one case, the South Korean tax chief.
WMR�s source stated that Booz Allen�s representative for
arms sales to Egypt had previously been responsible for the sale of $55 billion
of de-commissioned U.S. military hardware to countries friendly to the
United States. The same Booz Allen representative to Egypt allegedly
was also working for Lockheed Martin�s rocket propulsion
division in the deal to sell the fighters to South Korea. The dubious U.S.
arms dealing based out of Tokyo also involved, according to our
source, a wealthy Pakistani businessman from Lahore, a Saudi
prince, and a Japanese firm based in Yokohama.
In February of this year, two Japanese businessmen revealed
that they were involved in the secret A. Q. Khan nuclear acquisition ring that
saw Pakistan serve as a hub for the proliferation of nuclear technology to
Pakistan, Iran, Libya, Saudi Arabia, and North Korea. One of the businessmen
worked for Western Trading, a firm headquartered in Tokyo.
The U.S. arms dealing team in Tokyo got its start after the
outbreak of war with Iraq. WMR has learned that then-British Prime Minister
Tony Blair was deeply involved in British profiting from major contracts involving
U.S. and U.K. defense contractors supporting the Iraq war effort. The pay back
for the contractors was lucrative defense contracts from other countries in the
�Coalition of the Willing,� including South Korea, Italy, Bahrain, and
Japan and �soft partners� like Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Greece, and
Turkey.
Allegations of bribery payments to South Korean officials
suggests that there were systematic violations of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act by American defense contractors during the Bush administration.
Such payments in return for contracts are prohibited by the U.S. law. Another
contractor in Iraq, Titan Corporation, came under a federal probe in 2004 for
paying bribes to foreign officials in return for providing communications
equipment. The revelations about Titan surfaced as Lockheed Martin prepared to
purchase the firm. Lockheed Martin later scrapped the merger deal. Titan was
later acquired by L-3 Communications.
A bribery scandal involving bribes paid by Lockheed to
Japanese Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka led to his conviction and
imprisonment in 1976 for granting contracts to Lockheed in return for
$1.7 million in bribes paid between 1973 and 1974. The scandal also involved
officials of Japan�s Marubeni Trading Corporation, Lockheed�s agent in Japan.
Japanese transportation officials, including the Transport Minister, were also
convicted of accepting bribes from Lockheed. The bribery scandal also involved
Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, husband of Queen Juliana, who admitted
receiving a $1.1 million bribe from Lockheed in return for steering Dutch
fighter plane contracts to Lockheed. Bernhard was a driving force in
establishing the Bilderberg Group, thought by many to be a
behind-the-scenes influence-peddler of a globalist policy among
industrialized nations.
Lockheed was also accused of paying $2 million in bribes
between 1970 and 1971 to a top Italian politician code-named �Antelope
Cobbler� in return for a contract to sell 14 C-130 Hercules aircraft to Italy.
Although he flatly denied the charges, suspicions swirled around Italian
President Giovanni Leone, who died in 2001, as the actual identity of Antelope
Cobbler.
The Lockheed bribery scandal resulted in the enactment of
the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977.
In 1995, Lockheed paid a $24.8 million fine for bribing an
Egyptian official in return for a $79 million contract to provide three C-130
Hercules planes to Egypt. Lockheed Aeronautical�s director for Middle East
and North African sales, Allen Love, pleaded guilty to paying and covering up
the bribes and Suleiman Nassar, Lockheed�s regional vice president for Lockheed
International, fled to Syria to avoid prosecution.
In 1979, four McDonnell Douglas top executives were charged
witb paying bribes to Pakistani officials in return for Pakistan International
Airways purchase of four DC-10 aircraft. The firm was also charged with bribing
South Korean and Venezuelan officials in return for aircraft contracts.
Previously
published in the Wayne
Madsen Report.
Copyright � 2009 WayneMadenReport.com
Wayne
Madsen is a Washington, DC-based investigative journalist and
nationally-distributed columnist. He is the editor and publisher of the Wayne Madsen Report
(subscription required).