Yoni, I read the article and this is what struck me:
1. Irritation at yet another no-bid contract being let.
2. Wonder at how it was happening after the democratic congress in 2008 (also in the article) directed that it wasn't going to happen anymore.
3. Understanding that the company in question (is KBR the same as Halliburton?) received a bid contract a few years ago that included some options (is this what is happening now, one of those options?), and that the military on the ground in Iraq asked that KBR be allowed to finish the job they are doing now rather than disrupt the process of leaving Iraq by transitioning to a new company while the military is in the process of trying to leae Iraq on a short time-table.
What I conclude from all of the above is that the politics of pragmatism is being engaged in by the military in order to try to accomplish their 'mission' of getting out of Iraq as quickly as possible. I assume (perhaps incorrectly, maybe they are all on the take) that the military heads figure their performance reviews are based on how well and how efficiently they progress with the 'get-out-of-dodge' plan, and that their bosses would not respond well if they said "Well, we could have gotten out sooner but we had a change of vendor and the new guys didn't know what we needed....honest, it's not our fault".
I honestly don't know how you or anyone would conclude, based on the article, that this instance is comparable to Cheney's company (the one that he was on the board of before he was Vice President, and in whom he still held stock while said company was being given one after another no bid contracts in Iraq over a period of 8 years). Did Obama ever work for this company? Was he ever a member of their Board of Directors? Does he own stock in them now?

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