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What construction company is building the American embassy in Iraq?

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What construction company is building the American embassy in Iraq?

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4 ANSWERS


  1. Bombs-R-Us


  2. First Kuwaiti General Trading & Contracting is the primary contractor for the embassy:

    P.O. Box 480 Al Souk Al Dakhli 15255 - Kuwait

    Tel: +(965) 800500 - Fax: +(965) 800600

    Email: info@firstkuwaiti.com

    Six smaller contracts were awarded for the classified portion of the construction - they names will not be publically released by official sources.

  3. KBR, a former Haliburton subsidiary.

    .

    It can be said that the Embassy is the only construction project in Iraq to be finished on time.  Not that anyone previously said when it was supposed to be finished by.

    Nor was it mentioned that the Embassy was supposed to cost only 400 million dollars instead of the 787 million it has cost.

    The architect  firm had posted on its web site details of the complex.  It boasts a shopping mall, restaurants, a nightclub, swimming pools and a mini golf course.

    Sounds nice huh?  It's all on our dime folks, compliments of the corrupt Republican administration in Washington.

    .

    d**k Cheney was once part of Haliburtons' board and recieved a $37 million severance package when he became VP.

    .

    This company formerly had no experience in building embassies,  they got the job thru a no-compete bid.

    .

    KBR, despite it's lack of experience also got the job to transport supplies, provide meals and repair vehicles for the Army.  Again, there was no competition for the bid.

    .

    KBR is also building four huge bases for America, in Iraq, that on average, cover 70 square miles each.

    Cost?

    One billion dollars.  

    Each

    Last February Bush proposed cutting the school lunch program by 237 million dollars to help balance his bloated budget.

    That happens to be the cost of just one  F-22 stealth fighter.

    ,

    Is this a great country or what?

  4. US Building Massive Embassy in Baghdad

        By Charles J. Hanley

        The Associated Press

        Friday 14 April 2006

        The fortress-like compound rising beside the Tigris River here will be the largest of its kind in the world, the size of Vatican City, with the population of a small town, its own defense force, self-contained power and water, and a precarious perch at the heart of Iraq's turbulent future.

        The new U.S. Embassy also seems as cloaked in secrecy as the ministate in Rome.

        "We can't talk about it. Security reasons," Roberta Rossi, a spokeswoman at the current embassy, said when asked for information about the project.

        A British tabloid even told readers the location was being kept secret - news that would surprise Baghdadis who for months have watched the forest of construction cranes at work across the winding Tigris, at the very center of their city and within easy mortar range of anti-U.S. forces in the capital, though fewer explode there these days.

        The embassy complex - 21 buildings on 104 acres, according to a U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee report - is taking shape on riverside parkland in the fortified "Green Zone," just east of al-Samoud, a former palace of Saddam Hussein's, and across the road from the building where the ex-dictator is now on trial.

        The Republican Palace, where U.S. Embassy functions are temporarily housed in cubicles among the chandelier-hung rooms, is less than a mile away in the 4-square-mile zone, an enclave of American and Iraqi government offices and lodgings ringed by miles of concrete barriers.

        The 5,500 Americans and Iraqis working at the embassy, almost half listed as security, are far more numerous than at any other U.S. mission worldwide. They rarely venture out into the "Red Zone," that is, violence-torn Iraq.

        This huge American contingent at the center of power has drawn criticism.

        "The presence of a massive U.S. embassy - by far the largest in the world - co-located in the Green Zone with the Iraqi government is seen by Iraqis as an indication of who actually exercises power in their country," the International Crisis Group, a European-based research group, said in one of its periodic reports on Iraq.

        State Department spokesman Justin Higgins defended the size of the embassy, old and new, saying it's indicative of the work facing the United States here.

        "It's somewhat self-evident that there's going to be a fairly sizable commitment to Iraq by the U.S. government in all forms for several years," he said in Washington.

        Higgins noted that large numbers of non-diplomats work at the mission - hundreds of military personnel and dozens of FBI agents, for example, along with representatives of the Agriculture, Commerce and other U.S. federal departments.

        They sleep in hundreds of trailers or "containerized" quarters scattered around the Green Zone. But next year embassy staff will move into six apartment buildings in the new complex, which has been under construction since mid-2005 with a target completion date of June 2007.

        Iraq's interim government transferred the land to U.S. ownership in October 2004, under an agreement whose terms were not disclosed.

        "Embassy Baghdad" will dwarf new U.S. embassies elsewhere, projects that typically cover 10 acres. The embassy's 104 acres is six times larger than the United Nations compound in New York, and two-thirds the acreage of Washington's National Mall.

        Original cost estimates ranged over $1 billion, but Congress appropriated only $592 million in the emergency Iraq budget adopted last year. Most has gone to a Kuwait builder, First Kuwaiti Trading & Contracting, with the rest awarded to six contractors working on the project's "classified" portion - the actual embassy offices.

        Higgins declined to identify those builders, citing security reasons, but said five were American companies.

        The designs aren't publicly available, but the Senate report makes clear it will be a self-sufficient and "hardened" domain, to function in the midst of Baghdad power outages, water shortages and continuing turmoil.

        It will have its own water wells, electricity plant and wastewaster-treatment facility, "systems to allow 100 percent independence from city utilities," says the report, the most authoritative open source on the embassy plans.

        Besides two major diplomatic office buildings, homes for the ambassador and his deputy, and the apartment buildings for staff, the compound will offer a swimming pool, gym, commissary, food court and American Club, all housed in a recreation building.

        Security, overseen by U.S. Marines, will be extraordinary: setbacks and perimeter no-go areas that will be especially deep, structures reinforced to 2.5-times the standard, and five high-security entrances, plus an emergency entrance-exit, the Senate report says.

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