Friends in High Places: The Bechtel Story : The Most Secret Corporation and How It Engineered the Wo by Laton Mccartney (books to read to be successful TXT) ๐
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- Author: Laton Mccartney
Read book online ยซFriends in High Places: The Bechtel Story : The Most Secret Corporation and How It Engineered the Wo by Laton Mccartney (books to read to be successful TXT) ๐ยป. Author - Laton Mccartney
Despite the stories told by employees like Cheren and Fischer, the documentation of Bechtelโs compliance with the boycott in Commerce Department records and Leviโs own enthusiasm for the case, a number of Justice Department officials were uneasy about prosecuting Bechtel, especially on antitrust grounds. W hatever Bechtelโs sins, the case was clearly political. Moreover, it involved alleged violations that had occurred overseas, an area where the Sherman Antitrust Act had never before been applied. โA lot of people in the department were skeptical,โ recalled one Justice Department official. โWe were breaking new ground here. And frankly, it didnโt seem so much a legal issue as a public-policy one. โ11
Leviโs determination to prosecute also unsettled many members of the administration, including Gerald Ford, who hadnโt expected his attorney general to go so far. Nonetheless, Ford was reluctant to overrule Levi, whom he had installed at Justice to lift department morale, badly shaken by the Watergate scandals; moreover, the Jewish community was watching the case closely, and with a presidential election looming, Ford could hardly afford to alienate such an important voting block. โIt was to Fordโs advantage politically for the administration to appear to be behind the antitrust action,โ said a Washington lawyer involved in Bechtelโs defense. โThe President was smart enough to realize that there was some excellent political mileage to be garnered from this suit. โ12
Fordโs silence did not prevent others in the administration from speaking out, most notably Treasury Secretary William Simon. Having worked hard to recycle Arab petrodollars into the still-sagging U.S.
economy, Simon, who would later become a consultant to Bechtel and chairman of an investment firm controlled by Bechtelโs partner in Saudi Arabia, Suliman Olayan, publicly blasted Leviโs plans as a direct threat to the tens of billions the Arabs were expected to invest in the United States. More criticism came from Deputy Secretary of State Upon leaving his post as Treasury secretary in January 1977, Simon became a
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for Mideast Affairs Sidney Sofar as well as from Assistant Secretary of State Arthur Hartman. But by far the most formidable opponent of Leviโs plans was Henry Kissinger. The secretary of State held Bechtel and its president in high regard. With its Sumed pipeline deal, Bechtel had helped State open the door to improved relations with the Sadat government. Of Shultz, who would later ask the Secretary of State to join Bechtelโs Bohemian Grove lodge, Kissinger was unaccustomedly admiring, proclaiming him โthe one man whom I would readily entrust with the future of my country.โ
Beyond these considerations, Kissinger feared that Leviโs suit would jeopardize the Mideast peace offensive he had launched in November 1973. As a result of this offensive, the United States had been able to disengage Israel and Syria on the Golan Heights, bring Egypt out from under Soviet influence, lift the oil embargo and restore relations with Saudi Arabia, the worldโs largest oil supplier. That Levi
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