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
Again Shultz took a hard line, denying Bechtel had violated U.S. law, despite the fact that the company had been the subject of an antitrust suit brought by Gerald Fordโs Justice Department.
Yet another sensitive topic was raised by Alan Cranston of California, who pointedly wanted to know whether Shultz was involved in Bechtelโs promise to sell Brazil advanced nuclear technology with potential weapons application, despite U.S. policy restricting such exports. โI resent what I regard as a kind of smear on Bechtel,โ Shultz bridled. โI think it is a marvelous, honorable, law-abiding company that does credit to our country here and all over the world. โ7
Shultz was soon confirmed, but the media coverage of his appointment and the hearings had made Bechtel a household word-and the stuff of jokes on the Johnny Carson show. Publicly, Bechtelโs chairman professed distress at the publicity, and at the leave-taking that had occasioned it. W ith Shultz and Weinberger in Washington, he complained to a reporter that โgovernment officials have to bend so far over backwards [in dealing with Bechtel] to be sure thereโs nobody who can say thereโs any favoritism at all. โ8
In fact, the addition of George Shultz to the Reagan cabinet did nothing at all to hurt Bechtelโs business, or its increasingly powerful presence in Washington, where the company was now being represented by no fewer than thirteen paid lobbyists. Much of their work was focused on persuading Congress to fund what was becoming for Bechtel a new-and highly profitable-growth industry, one it had inadvertently helped create: the cleaning up of chemical and nuclear wastes. Already, Bechtel had secured a $320 million contract from the AWACS sale, which was bitterly opposed by hael and its supporters in Congress.
Meeting frequently at the Business Roundtableโs Washington office during the late summer and early fall of 1981, a Bechtel-led coalition of major U.S. corporations had mapped out a congressional lobbying strategy. In addition, Bechtel itself had sent out letters to every member of Congress, stating that โthe AWACS deal is vital to the national interest as well as to the stability of the Persian Gulf.โ Despite heated opposition from Secretary of State Alexander Haig, the strategy had paid off when, on October 28, 1981; the Senate voted to authorize the sale.
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department of Energy to tidy up 32 sites in 13 states that used radioactive materials as part of the Manhattan Project. By the time of Shultzโ
nomination as secretary of State, it was also taking in several hundred million dollars in federal funds to store nuclear wastes, making it the largest such operator in the industry. It was also one that requiredand got-extraordinary help from the Reagan administration, particularly after the accident at Pennsylvaniaโs Three Mile Island.
Though Bechtel had not been involved in Three Mile Islandโs design, construction or operation, the March 28, 1979, accident was to prove a decisive event for the company (which initially profited by winning the $1.5 billion contract for the plantโs cleanup) and for its chairman. โAfter Three Mile Island went down,โ explained one senior Bechtel executive, โSteve junior became obsessed with proving that nuclear power really was safe and with keeping the industry viable. He was absolutely determined that Bechtel should devote its full resources to keeping atomic energy alive. โ9
His enthusiasm was not shared by many of his own executives, who privately thought that in the aftermath of
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