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  • Hastert, Helicopters, Textron, Turkey, Cash...

    Hastert, Helicopters, Textron, Turkey, Cash...

    Sun Aug 14, 2005
    Posted by: Christopher Deliso on Aug 14, 05 | 7:24 am |


    First of all, my new interview with former FBI translator turned
    whistleblower Sibel Edmonds- a very interesting read- will be out soon on
    Antiwar.com. If you aren't familiar with her case, read last year's
    interview, as well as this and this.

    Corruption in high places was alleged in a recent Vanity Fair article that
    surveyed government whistleblowers, including Edmonds, and unnamed
    congressional sources. The most sensational one was that House Speaker
    Dennis Hastert was paid up to $500,000 five years ago by the Turkish lobby
    to derail a bill that would have recognized the Armenian genocide carried
    out in the dying days of the Ottoman Empire.

    While it cited FBI wiretapped phone conversations from 2000 mentioning
    Hastert, the magazine conceded that there was no way of proving this
    allegation.

    For his part, Hastert had always claimed that his eleventh-hour decision to
    quash the bill in October, 2000 owed directly to the intercesson of
    then-President Clinton, who sent a letter to him personally requesting that
    maintaining good relations with Turkey were more important than Armenian
    heritage: "We have significant interests in this troubled region of the
    world: containing the threat posed by East and Central Asia, stabilizing the
    Balkans and developing new sources of energy."

    Indeed, the potential ill effects of irritating Turkey were vocally stated,
    not least of all by the Turkish authorities themselves. And this pressure
    probably meant the end regardless. But if Hastert was able to bluff the
    Turkish lobby into giving him 500G unnecessarily, hey, more power to him.

    But the tale is more complex. Consider this contemporary report on human
    rights and military sales to Turkey:

    "...Once House leaders decided to move the resolution, it easily passed in
    committee and headed to the House floor. Outraged representatives of
    Turkey's government threatened to halt negotiations with Textron and instead
    buy helicopters from a Russian-Israeli consortium, according to Bloomberg
    News Service. Worried that the $4.5 billion deal might collapse, Textron
    lobbied the congressmen who represent the area surrounding the company's
    Fort Worth plant to kill the resolution. 'We felt it was important to
    support Turkey,' explains [Textron Spokesman Gene] Kozicharow."

    It's also very interesting to look at the context, five years ago. From the
    same article:

    "...President Bill Clinton warned earlier this year that angering Turkey
    could have 'far-reaching negative consequences for the United States.'

    Eager to bolster its stock price, which has lost more than half its value in
    the last 18 months, Textron is using Clinton's views to its advantage. 'We
    agree with the State Department,' says Gene Kozicharow, Textron's
    Washington-based director of public affairs, referring to Clinton's warning.
    But when asked whether Textron agrees with the State Department's damning
    assessment of human-rights abuses in Turkey, Kozicharow responded, 'I think
    I'm going to cut this off, Steve [the journalist]. Talk to you later,' and
    hung up."

    Another contemporary report put the deal in context- and raised further
    serious questions about whether it would result in short-term profit and
    long-term loss:

    "...In July 2000, the Turkish government chose Bell Helicopter Textron's
    AH-1Z KingCobra over the other four finalists: Boeing, Kamov Helicopter
    (Russian-Israeli consortium), Agusta, (Italy), and the Europcopter
    (Franco-German). But to maintain pressure to receive a U.S. export license
    and the best possible contract terms, Turkey is keeping the Russian-Israeli
    model in the competition until the deal is signed, sealed, and delivered. At
    issue is the amount of local production and technology transfer that Turkey
    will receive. Ankara has plans to become an independent producer of attack
    helicopters, just as it used to manufacture and export F-16s under license
    in the 1980's and 1990's. Anxious to seal this lucrative deal, Bell Textron
    may be willing to give away the store, including not just a license to
    produce the exterior of the aircraft, but access to the technology needed to
    build, alter and improve upon the software operating the gunships' high-tech
    instruments. While the loss of jobs to overseas production is deemed an
    unavoidable cost of doing weapons business today, the U.S. government has
    refused in the past to allow the transfer of software "source codes" and
    other sensitive technology for reasons of national security.

    Turkey's negotiations with Bell Textron are scheduled to conclude in March
    2001, at which time the State Department will need to decide whether to
    issue an export license. The new administration has signaled that it will
    look favorable upon this sale, paying less attention to human rights
    considerations than its predecessor. However, the sale might still be held
    up in the administration over the question of technology transfers, which
    has prompted concern by both Republicans and Democrats in similar past
    cases. Certain members of Congress are also likely to raise questions about
    the sale based on questions of regional stability, U.S. security, and the
    protection of human rights. Because the deal involves a NATO member,
    however, Congress will have only 15 days to officially review the sale."

    A massive corporation active in a variety of industries, Textron is also a
    top-tier "Golden Horn" donor to the American-Turkish Council, the lobbying
    giant that has repeatedly come up in the Sibel Edmonds case. The ATC figures
    prominently in the Vanity Fair article which mentions Hastert and other
    unnamed officials in the pay of the Turkish lobby.

    So in other words, looks like Textron is looking forward to the
    "international competition" that Turkey's Undersecretariat for the Defense
    Industry announced on August 9, preliminary to "...the purchase of 32
    military helicopters and 20 fire fighters worth around $700 million."

    Textron's subsidiary, Bell Helicopters, was at the time of the Armenian
    resolution embroiled in controversy, as an US Customs undercover operation
    had concluded two months earlier that the company had laundered hundreds of
    thousands of dollars of drug money in order to sell a copter to a Colombian
    emerald mogul, Victor Carranza, who according to PBS "...has links to the
    drug trade and the right wing paramilitary groups in Colombia." Whoops!

    The PBS report provides a good example of the kind of cooperation between
    business, politics and the more sordid spheres of free enterprise- and why
    Textron had such headaches throughout Clinton's second term.

    However, with the ascension of Bush II, happy days were here again. And
    indeed, there seem to be no existential problems these days for Textron. On
    July 29, Bloomberg reported that

    "...Textron Inc.'s Bell Helicopter unit beat Boeing Co. in a contest worth
    as much as $3 billion to build a new class of armed reconnaissance
    helicopters for the U.S. Army, according to people familiar with the award.

    Bell will develop and build the first installment of what could be 368
    helicopters from largely commercial parts so they can be fielded as early as
    2008 to replace aircraft lost in Iraq."


    http://www.antiwar.com/blog/index.php?id=P2286
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