From a February 2004 New Yorker article
I don't know if an advisory board member would earn money. Does anyone here know?
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/040216fa_fact<snip>
It is so complicated to secure an Iraq contrac from the United States government that severa big Washington law firms have gone into th business of shepherding applicants through th process. More than twenty billion dollars ha been set aside for Iraqi relief and reconstructio projects, with work contracts being awarded b the Defense, State, and Commerc Departments, and by the U.S. Agency fo International Development, in coördinatio with L. Paul Bremer, the head of the Coalitio Provisional Authority. There’s an additiona five billion dollars sitting in the Developmen Fund for Iraq, also administered by the C.P.A Officials at the C.P.A. say that contracts ar awarded on the basis of competitive bidding but rumors proliferate about political influence When asked if connections helped, a executive whose firm has received severa contracts replied, “Of course.” On businessman with close ties to the Bus Administration told me, “Anything that has t do with Iraq policy, Cheney’s the man to see He’s running it, the way that L.B.J. ran the space program.
Cheney’s spokesman confirmed that the Vice-President speaks “on occasion” with officials at the C.P.A., and refers inquiries to the authority from third parties “expressing interest in getting involved in Iraq.” The businessman offered an example of Cheney’s backstage role. He said that Jack Kemp, the former Republican congressman and Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, got help from Cheney with a venture involving Iraq. Last summer, the businessman said, Kemp had Cheney over for dinner, along with two sons of the President of the United Arab Emirates. In an interview, Kemp confirmed the event, and his business plans, but denied receiving any special assistance from Cheney. “It was just social,” Kemp said. “We’re old friends. We didn’t talk about business.” He acknowledged, however, that Cesar Conda, who until last fall was Cheney’s domestic-policy adviser, was helping him with a study on how to fashion a public-private partnership plan to develop the Iraqi economy.
Kemp said that he is working on two business ventures in Iraq. He described the first project, a company called Free Market Global, as “an international company that trades in gas, petroleum, and other resources.” Although Kemp provided only vague details about the project, he said, “I can tell you that General Tommy Franks has joined the advisory board of Free Market Global.” Last year, General Franks commanded the invasion of Iraq.
Franks’s lawyer, Marty Edelman, confirmed his client’s participation: “That is correct. But it is my understanding that he won’t be dealing with Iraq or the military for a year” (to comply with government ethics rules). Asked how Kemp and Franks had joined forces, Edelman said, “It seems like everyone on that level knows each other.” Edelman himself is now on the advisory board of Free Market Global.
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