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Hardcover Blood Money: Wasted Billions, Lost Lives, and Corporate Greed in Iraq Book

ISBN: 0316166278

ISBN13: 9780316166270

Blood Money: Wasted Billions, Lost Lives, and Corporate Greed in Iraq

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Book Overview

An investigative reporter pens an explosive indictment of how the Bush Administration wasted billions in Iraq through sweetheart deals to G.O.P. supporters, outrageous contracts to corrupt companies,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Death before being dishonored.

An important and imperative work. Investigative journalisim at its best under trying circumstances. American at its core, in that it gets a tough and dirty job done. Not with the help of government, but despite it. In this Reagan era of privitizaton/trust the market place, we have a choice: trust Bush or the dollar. How could you lose? The book opens and closes with Col. Ted Westhusing, the definition of his alma mater, WEST POINT: DUTY, HONOR, COUNTRY. Third in his class, plus a doctor of philosophy, and an exemplary record of war/peace service. Yet he met his nemesis: Iraq. For in Iraq he found a war of privitization that had nothing what so ever to do with DUTY, HONOR, or COUNTRY. It was simply about the money, or at best, cronyism. Whether it was murder or suicide, his last communication was in writing and I paraphrase, " I cannot support a mission that leads to corruption, human rights abuse and liars. No more. I cannot support corrupt, money hungry contractors, nor work for commanders only intersested in themselves. I came to serve honorably and I feel dishonored. Why serve when you cannot accomplish the mission, when you no longer believe in the cause, when your every effort and breath is met with lies, lack of support and selfishness. Life needs trust". So what comes around goes around. When a government is "elected" that produces Iraqs and Katrinas then you get the government you deserve. Col. Ted Westhusing desevered better. We, the citizenry could count on him. But in the end, he could not count on us. This book needs to be read and passed on by word of mouth. I wouln't count on the privitized mainstream press. I think there are about a total of four papers left that still have a investigative journalism department. After all, it is all about the bottom line. The Money. Highly recommended!!!!!

Shocking, Read with "Squandered Victory"

This is a definite five star piece of work that approaches our failures in Iraq from a different perspective, and hence should be read with, Squandered Victory: The American Occupation and the Bungled Effort to Bring Democracy to Iraq. It goes beyond Squandered Victory, which creates outrage over incompetence, and actually turns one's stomach with disgust toward the end. The book starts with a very useful timeline of events, and the opening premise that Paul Wolfowitz was wrong on virtually every promise and claim made to Congress. The author's strategic view, threaded throughout the book, is that the U.S. effort in Iraq never had coherent "supreme commander" type leadership, that virtually all elements (U.S. Army and U.S. Marines excepted) lacked both intelligence and integrity, and that this was one of the most incompetent, ignorant occupations in the history of mankind. He does seem to avoid pointing out that Rumsfeld demanded complete military control of the country, relegated the diplomats to the back room, and did not even tell Bremer for a year that there was a diplomatic plan for nation-building. This is on Rumsfeld and Bremer. History will judge them harshly. The author documents that the US Government knew in advance that there was no plan for the peace (the State Department efforts not-withstanding) and no way of creating an effective plan. The author is powerful in showing that "shock and awe" warfare made the transition to peace virtually impossible. 17 out of 21 Ministry headquarters buildings were completely destroyed (and then the occupying force allowed for the looting of all offices, all museums, all universities, and all stockpiles of ammunition and explosives needed for the Improvised Explosive Devices (IED) that have killed so many of our troops. The oil infrastructure was not protected, was completely looted, and this lost the chance for paying anything with oil in the early years. Immortal quote on page 40: "...a circus, a Looney Tunes version of government, hatched on the fly, delivered at random, and operating without instruction." Reconstruction cost estimate: $2.4 billion. Actual cost: $30 billion and rising. Results after several years: less than 10% of the needed work. Money unaccounted for: $18 billion. The author differs from those who supported sanctions in pointing out that the sanctions virtually destroyed Iraq's health system. Psychologically, the author suggests that the months of lip service to freedom and reconstruction raised hopes that were then dashed. One is reminded of the Davies J-Curve from the 1970's--revolutions occur not among the oppressed, but among those who have been shown the prospect of freedom and prosperity, and then had it taken out of their grasp. On contracting, one's stomach turns with every page. Cost plus, no incentive to save; U.S. companies doing for millions what Iraqi companies would do for tens of thousands; U.S. contractors earning $60K and more, foreign labo

Mindboggling Must-Read

If the media could forego its endless fascination with the Ramsey case and other nine-day-wonders long enough to highlight some of the revelations laid out in bloody detail in Miller's well-researched and righteously angry book, the public outcry would become overwhelming. Since that's not likely to happen, every voter within reach of a copy should read it and weep, then head for the polls and make sure the waste won't continue. Horrifying and essential.

A Bigger Mess than John Q. Public Thought

Halliburton is only the tip of the proverbial iceberg. Have you ever heard of Nuor, Bechtel, or SYColeman? They are merely chunks off an icy flotilla of the government's favored contractors. Daily news reports are filled with hints of the abuse of taxpayer dollars. In Blood Money, Miller spells it out in sickening detail. The very people who the American public have entrusted to "take care of business" are doing just that, and lining their own pockets in the process. No project, or life, is too big next to pockets of green. The Iraqi reconstruction process is plagued with poor planning, poor implementation, and misguided funding. Contractors are put in the line of fire in order to repair or rebuild infrastructure, and much of it falls apart after they leave due to the lack of training and/or necessary tools to keep it going. In some cases, the "reconstruction" efforts may have lasting negative effects on Iraqi citizens. Especially alarming is the possibility that botched repairs of a water infusion plant by a highly-paid American contracting group may be contributing to permanent damage to Iraqi oil fields. In the desert, the lack of ground water affects the pressure needed to allow oil to seep up from the ground, and the infusion plant does just that: infuses water into the ground to increase that pressure. Making matters worse are the broken pipelines that cause oil backups at working wells, forcing well workers to pump it back into the ground. Then there are the "expendable" third-world workers and blue-collar truck drivers brought in by some contractors to fill job orders - only to be mowed down by insurgent fire. The examples of political and corporate abuse are so abundant that even reading a few chapters will enrage people who oppose the war and worry supporters. It is clear that the Iraqis need reconstruction help, but there needs to be more accountability. T. Christian Miller is the kind of investigative reporter who promises to walk in the shoes of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. His tireless efforts and thorough sourcing are to be highly commended, as it takes a brave person to speak up against the powerful people he takes on in this book. Future journalism--and ethics--classes will do well to add this sad chapter to their lessons. Reviewed by Christina Wantz Fixemer 9/3/2006

A Must Read about the Iraqi War....

T. Christian Miller has written what will probably be called the "breakout" book on Iraqi reconstruction. His solid observations about the situation are definitely worth a read. The terror and horror of the situation shine through in his prose.
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