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The U.S. Agency for
International Development says that that it has asked a select
group of U.S. engineering firms to bid on a contract that
could be worth $900 million to rebuild a postwar Iraq.
The firms were sent a request
for proposals about three weeks ago, says a USAID official.
Special procurement laws allow for the select bidding, and
also prohibit the government from discussing details, including
which firms were asked to respond, the agency official says.
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But the official says that all
the firms that were asked to send proposals "have the unique
capability to work under these urgent circumstances." President
Bush has said that humanitarian relief, including rebuilding,
should begin as soon as hostilities, if any, are over.
USAID declined to say when the
main contract would be awarded. "That is unpredictable because
there are a lot of moving parts" the official says, referring
to the uncertainty over whether or when a war would begin.
Agency officials also are preparing RFPs for secondary contracts,
but the official did not know when firms would be contacted
to bid on them. The Bush administration wants "to move
quickly but specific dates have not be designated," the official
adds.
News of the RFP was first reported
in the Wall Street Journal.
Bechtel Corp., San Francisco,
and Washington Group International Inc., Boise, say that they
are responding or have responded to the RFP. Other large U.S.
engineering firms contacted by ENR did not respond by enr.com's
deadline on March 10.
Jack Herrmann, Washington Group
vice president for corporate communications, says they company
is talking to federal agencies in two areas, rebuilding Iraq
and also destroying chemical, biological and nuclear weapons
in that country.
But Bechtel spokesman Jonathan
Marshall declined comment on details, including the scope
of work U.S. AID outlined.
Marshall also notes that "this
is somewhat speculative in the sense that we are not...at
war with Iraq. The President says he hopes to avoid war, but
if this kind of work is required, we have the skills necessary
to do it."
Bechtel last had workers on the
job in Iraq in the summer of 1990. Some of its personnel at
that time were held in Iraq under arrest.
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