Democratic
Blood Money and Senator Feinstein’s War Profiteering
by
Joshua Frank
by Joshua Frank
DIGG THIS
Democratic
Senator Dianne Feinstein of California silently resigned from her
post on the Military Construction Appropriations subcommittee (MILCON)
late last week as her ethical limbo with war contracts began to
surface in the media, including an excellent investigative report
written by Peter Byrne for Metro in January. MILCON has supervised
the appropriations of billions of dollars in reconstruction contracts
since the Bush wars began.
Feinstein,
who served as chairperson and ranking member for the committee from
2001-2005, came under fire early last year in these pages for profiting
by way of her husband Richard Blum who, until 2005, held large stakes
in two defense contracting companies. Both businesses, URS and Perini,
have scored lucrative contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan in the last
four years, and Blum has personally pocketed tens of millions of
dollars off the deals his wife, along with her colleagues, so graciously
approved.
Here’s a brief
rundown of the Feinstein family’s blatant war profiteering. In April
2003, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers gave $500 million to Perini
to provide services for Iraq's Central Command. A month earlier
in March 2003, Perini was awarded $25 million to design and construct
a facility to support the Afghan National Army near Kabul. And in
March 2004, Perini was awarded a hefty contract worth up to $500
million for "electrical power distribution and transmission" in
southern Iraq.
But it is not
just Perini that has made Feinstein and Blum wealthy. Blum also
held over 111,000 shares of stock in URS Corporation, which is now
one of the top defense contractors in the United States. Blum was
an acting director of URS, which bought EG&G, a leading provider
of technical services and management to the U.S. military, from
the neocon packed Carlyle Group back in 2002.
"As part of
EG&G's sale price," reports the San Francisco Chronicle, "Carlyle
acquired a 21.74 percent stake in URS – second only to the 23.7
percent of shares controlled by Blum Capital."
URS and Blum
have since banked on the war in Iraq, attaining a $600 million contract
through EG&G, which Sen. Feinstein permitted. As a result, URS
has seen its stock price more than triple since the war began in
March of 2003. Blum has cashed in over $2 million on this venture
alone and another $100 million for his investment firm.
And
it is not just the Feinstein family that has benefited from the
war – so too has the Democratic Party. Since 2000, the Democrats'
Daddy Warbucks has donated over $100,000 to the Democratic Senatorial
Committee including leading Democrats including John Kerry, Robert
Byrd, Ted Kennedy, and even Barbara Boxer.
Feinstein’s
resignation from MILCON was the least the senator could do to atone
for profiting off the spoils of war. But Feinstein wasn’t trying
to atone, she seems to have been trying to cover her tracks instead
by distancing herself from her post. If the Democratic Party had
any foresight whatsoever it would return all the Blood Money donated
by Blum. From there the Senate ought to hold hearings and examine
Feinstein’s tenure as the chair and ranking member of MILCON and
analyze every single contract she approved which benefited her husband’s
respective companies.
There is absolutely
no question – Sen. Dianne Feinstein has a plethora of ethics violations
she needs to account for at once.
April
4, 2007
Joshua
Frank [send him mail]
is the author of Left
Out!: How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush, just published
by Common Courage Press. You can order a copy at a discount through
Josh’s blog.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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