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
Read free book 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 - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- 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
In. Washington, meanwhile, Bechtef representatives we๏ฟฝe making a similar pitch to the administration, which, still reeling from the Arab oil โshocks,โ did not require much persuading. All that remained, aside from getting the approval of Congress, was for the United States and Japan to sign a formal agreement. That, in turn, was accomplished, in July 1972, when Nixon, accompanied by National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger and Secretary of State William P. Rogers, flew to Honolulu for a two-day summit meeting at the Kuilima Hotel with Japanโs new 52-year-old prime minister, Kakuei Tanaka. Known by his admirers as the โcomputerized bulldozer,โ Tanaka was no less enthusiastic about buying nuclear fuel than Nixon was in peddling it. Using the Bechtel-Union Carbide proposal as a basis for their discussion, Tanaka and Nixon drew up an agreement for a study to be made by the United States and Japan. The document that resulted was, almost word for word, identical with the OโDonnell paper. 1
In November, with presidential elections over and the study in hand, Nixon gave Bechtel and Union Carbide-and their Japanese partners
-tentative ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝproval to build the worldโs first privately owned nuclearfuel plant, a $5.7 billion facility at Dothan, Alabama. Financing for the plant, which was to be operated by Carbide and a specially created Bechtel subsidiary, Uranium Enrichment Associates (UEA), was to come largely from the federal government. When, the following June, Nixon provided Bechtel and six other members of the nuclear fraternity with access to the previously classified secrets of uranium-enrichment 198
NUCLEAR ECLIPSE
technology, The Wall Street Journal hailed the beginning of โwhat may be the largest commercial undertaking in history. โ2
Bechtel was no less enthusiastic. Once the Dothan plant was built and private uranium enrichment a reality, the company could function as a veritable one-stop supermarket for the nuclear industry-not to mention the emerging countries that wanted one. As John A. Damm, UEAโs business-development manager, glowingly put it in a, letter to the Brazilian minister of mining and energy, the companyโs product line would soon run โthe gamut from the development of uranium mines, reprocessing, enrichment fuel processing โฆ through the design of nuclear plants themselves. โ3
The confident expectations began going awry when W Kenneth Davis, Bechtelโs vicepresident for nuclear development (and later, deputy secretary of Energy for Ronald Reagan) attended a nuclear-energy conference in Washington in September 1973. During a panel discussion, Davis was startled to hear Dr. Stephen Hanauer, an Atomic Energy Commission official, remark offhandedly that โthere is likely to be a major nuclear disaster in the world, and the prime candidate is Tarapur.โ Hanauer went on to charge that โthe reactor suppliers and the architect engineer are acting irresponsibly and to the detriment of the best interests of the United States in that theyโve failed to
Comments (0)