31. David Isenberg, “Myths and Mystery,” Asia Times
, May 20, 2004. While in the CIA, Bruner negotiated the deal for Ahmad Chalabi and the CIA to work together (Aram Roston, The Man Who Pushed America to War [New York: Nation Books, 2009], 76). Bruner later joined BGR and in 2007 became the full-time chairman of BKI Strategic Intelligence. In 2004, Bruner participated with BGR and an Israeli PMC operative in a scheme to help reelect George W. Bush (Laura Rozen, “From Kurdistan to K Street,” Mother Jones, November 2008, http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2008/11/kurdistan-k-street).32. Douglas Jehl, “Washington Insiders’ New Firm Consults on Contracts in Iraq,” New York Times
, September 30, 2003.33. Financial Times
, December 11, 2003. Ed Rogers, Diligence’s vice chairman, was one of George H. W. Bush’s top assistants when he was U.S. president. On resigning from the White House, he negotiated a lucrative contract to act as lobbyist for the former Saudi intelligence chief and Bank of Credit and Commerce International front man Kamal Adham at a time when American and British prosecutors were preparing criminal cases against him. Rogers used Adnan Khashoggi as a go-between to secure the contract, which was canceled after White House criticism of it (Peter Truell and Larry Gurwin, False Profits: The Inside Story of BCCI, the World’s Most Corrupt Financial Empire [Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1992], 362–64).34. Financial Times
, December 11, 2003. Cf. Mother Jones, March/April 2004: “More recently, Bush scored a $60,000-a-year consulting deal from a top adviser to New Bridge Strategies, the firm set up by George W.’s ex-campaign manager to ‘take advantage of business opportunities’ in postwar Iraq. His job description: taking calls for three hours a week.”35. Tim Shorrock, Spies for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 2008), 40, 41.36. Two Booz Allen officers were also beneficiaries of the Paradise Island Bridge Company in Nassau, along with James Crosby of Resorts International, a company supplying the CIA with cover for its connections to the covert world of Paul Helliwell and Meyer Lansky (see chapter 7). Richard Nixon also had a financial interest in the Paradise Island Bridge Company (Anthony Summers with Robbyn Swann, The Arrogance of Power: The Secret World of Richard Nixon
[New York: Viking, 2000], 244–45).37. Shorrock, Spies for Hire
, 43, citing Information Week, February 25, 2002. In 2008, Booz Allen Hamilton split into two companies: Booz Allen Hamilton, now majority owned by private equity firm The Carlyle Group, handles the government business, while Booz & Company, with the commercial contracts, is owned and operated as a partnership.38. Shorrock, Spies for Hire
, 51.39. Elizabeth Brown, “Outsourcing the Defense Budget: Defense Contractors Are Writing the President’s Defense Budget,” Center for Public Integrity, July 29, 2004, http://projects.publicintegrity.org/report.aspx?aid=363&sid=200.
40. “SAIC, which employs 44,000 people and took in $8 billion last year—sells brainpower, including a lot of the ‘expertise’ behind the Iraq war. . . . [SAIC is] a ‘stealth company’ with 9,000 government contracts, many of which involve secret intelligence work” (Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele, “Washington’s $8 Billion Shadow,” Vanity Fair
, March 2007, http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/fea
tures/2007/03/spyagency200703?currentPage=1).
41. Barlett and Steele, “Washington’s $8 Billion Shadow.”
42. Barlett and Steele, “Washington’s $8 Billion Shadow”: “Mark A. Boster left his job as a deputy assistant attorney general in 1999 to join SAIC, and was already calling Justice three months later on behalf of his new employers—a violation of federal law. Boster paid $30,000 in a civil settlement.” Yet another PIC for a while was Interop, combining former CIA director James Woolsey and former FBI director Louis Freeh with former Mossad chief Danny Yatom (Rozen, “From Kurdistan to K Street”).
43. Charlie Cray, “Science Applications International Corporation,” CorpWatch, http://www.corpwatch.org/section.php?id=17; cf. Barlett and Steele, “Washington’s $8 Billion Shadow.”
44. Barlett and Steele, “Washington’s $8 Billion Shadow.”
45. Fritz W. Ermarth, “Colin Powell’s Briefing to the Security Council: Brief Comments from an Ex-Intelligence Officer,” In the National Interest
, http://inthenation