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
Borman was relieved it appeared that the crisis had passed. Now that his beloved railroad was complete, even ibn Saud was in good spiritsdelighting in the electrification of Riyadh, finished in 1949, and even more so in an X-ray machine the Americans had given him as a gift.
The X-ray pictures so amused him that he had them taken of his harem and the entire royal family.
But despite ibn Saudโs mood, Borman was not completely in the clear. A Palestinian Arab, Badr Fahuum, who had been assigned by the king to act as a liaison between Suleiman and IBI, was proving uncooperative; like Suleiman, he was also dipping into the Bechtel till.
Childs and others who knew the man concluded that he was trying to ingratiate himself with the Saudis at IBIโs expense. A different view was taken by Bormanโs rival John Rogers, who had the full beaucratic backing of IBIโs president, Van Rosendahl, and who was now spending most of his time in Saudi Arabia. The problem, said Rogers, wasnโt the Palestinian: it was Borman.
Rogers himself was making new friends in the kingdom. He publicly quarreled with U.S. officials, most notably General Richard OโKeefe, the commander of the Dhahran airfield-and was openly critical of Borman, 14 who did his best to ignore the attacks. It particularly seemed to gall Rogers that Suleiman kept him waiting for a week for an appointment, while the nonconfrontational Borman could walk into the finance ministerโs office at any time.
The hostilities finally came to a head just before Christmas 1949
when, with the backing of Rosendahl, Rogers announced that Borman was being removed from his post. The change, Rogers asserted, represented nothing more than a routine transfer of Bechtel managers; but there was no doubt that Borman was being fired. Rogers had ordered him out of Jeddah in three days.
Childs had seen the dismissal coming, but was nonetheless shocked and extremely upset. โWHEN NEWS OF BORMANโS REMOVAL BECAME
KNOWN โฆ HIS MANY FRIENDS WERE OUTRAGED,โ he cabled Secretary of State Dean Acheson. โBORMANโS REPUTATION FOR ABSOLUTE INTEGRITY AND FAIR DEALING HAS EARNED HIM THE HIGHEST RESPECT OF THE
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FRIENDS IN HIGH PLACES
SAUDI OFFICIALDOM AND THE FOREIGN BUSINESS COMMUNI1Y IN ]EDDAH.โ15
When they learned of Bormanโs dismissal, the Bechtel crew working on the huge Jeddah pier threatened to resign en masse in protest. They were dissuaded only when Borman told them to stick it out. He reflected, Childs noted, โA REMARKABLE LACK OF BIITERNESS โฆ
CONSIDERING WHAT HE HAD TO CONTEND WITH. โ16
Suleiman was also unhappy with Bormanโs dismissal and wired Steve Bechtel asking that he be allowed to stay on. Childs followed with a letter making the same entreaty and stating that โTom holds an almost unique position of confidence with the Saudi Arabian Government, with the American and foreign community in Jeddah and with the United States Air Force in Dhahran.โ But there was no reprieve.
In the end, Childs attributed Bormanโs demise to Rogersโ extreme jealousy. Rogers, he said, was a ruthlessly unprincipled executive. According to Childs, Rogersโ charges, notably that Borman was more concerned with Arab needs than with those of IBI, were grossly unjust, and merely a smoke screen for his own overweening ambition. Before leaving Saudi Arabia himself a few years later, Childs noted that under Rogers, Bechtelโs policies had come to mirror those of Aramco, which saw itself as an extension of the U.S. government and was viewed as
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