Lobbyist for Dakota Access Formerly Led Army's "Restore Iraqi Oil" Program

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Robert Crear, one of the lobbyists working for Dakota Access pipeline co-owners Energy Transfer Partners and Sunoco Logistics, formerly served as a chief of staff and commanding general for the U.S. Army Corps ofย Engineers.ย 

The Army Corps and other federal agenciesย are currently reviewing theย permit granted forย the controversialย pipeline’s construction near the Missouri River and Lake Oahe in North Dakota, and the Army Corps has reserved final authorization to complete construction on Corps land until after formal government-to-government consultations with the tribes are completed later thisย month.

Before he became a lobbyist, Crearย headed up the Army Corps project, โ€œTask Force: Restore Iraqi Oilโ€ during the early years of the U.S. occupation of Iraq under the George W. Bush administration. Thisย finding by DeSmog comes as the law enforcement presence has become increasingly militarized and additional forces pour into North Dakota from states nationwide under the auspices of the Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC).ย 

Thousands of people, including a number of Native American tribes, are protesting this pipelineย at the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’sย encampments in Northย Dakota.

This week, President Barack Obamaย stated that his administration is considering reroutingย the current Dakota Access pipeline path permitted by the Armyย Corps.

Greenpeace USA, though, has called for Obama to revokeย the Army Corps permit granted for the pipeline inย July.

โ€œThe administration seems to be buying time to maintain the status quo and profits for fossil fuel investors,โ€ Greenpeace USA spokeswoman Lilian Molina said in a statement. โ€œThere is only one option that is truly attentive to the Native lives and lands at stake: respect the rights and sovereignty of Indigenous communities by revoking the permitsย immediately.โ€

According to 2016 third quarter lobbying disclosure forms, Crear lobbied his former employer โ€” the Army Corps โ€” on behalf of both Energy Transfer Partners and Sunoco on compliance andย permittingย issues.

Dakota Access Lobbyist Iraq OIl

Image Credit: U.S. House of Representatives Office of theย Clerk

Restore Iraqi Oilย Program

The Army Corps’ย Restore Iraqi Oil (RIO) program, spearheaded under Crear’s leadership, got off the ground shortly after the initial โ€œShock and Aweโ€ bombardment of Iraq by the U.S. military and was a key part of what military planners called the reconstruction phase of the U.S. occupation of the country.ย As its namesake implies, RIO existed to help reinvigorate Iraq’s oil market and boostย production.ย 

In the book Hard Lessons: The Iraq Reconstruction Experience,ย then-Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstructionย Stuart Bowenย wrote about what became known as RIO.

โ€œAvoiding the perception that the U.S. would annex Iraqโ€™s oil wealth for its own purposes was a crucial goal,โ€ Bowen wrote of RIO. โ€œDecisions about Iraqโ€™s oilย wealth were not to be seen as made by the U.S.ย alone.โ€

Perception was one thing; reality,ย another.

Then-Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown, and Root (KBR) ended up as a major beneficiary of RIO, landing a lucrative contractย worth $2.5 billion to rebuild Iraq’s oil infrastructureย from the Army Corpsย on March 8, 2003, 12 days before the official invasion of Iraq by the U.S. military. Just a few years prior, then-Vice President Dick Cheney had left his perch as CEO of Halliburton to work in the executive branch, which critics noticed and called out withย fury.ย 

โ€œ[T]he no-bid nature of the contract became such a contentious issue with Congress that it catapulted KBR into the critical limelight and began the process of exposing the company’s rampant fraud, abuse and corruption,โ€ wrote the watchdog website Halliburton Watch. โ€œCongress asserted the RIO contract was awarded without competition because Dick Cheney is the former CEO of KBR‘s parent,ย Halliburton.โ€

Time Magazine reported in May 2004 that it had obtained an email from a senior Army Corps official dated March 5, 2003, three days before KBR landed the Army Corps contract, which stated that โ€œ’action’ on the [KBR] contract was ‘coordinated’ with Cheney’sย office.โ€

The collusion between KBR, the Army Corps, and the White House for RIO inspiredย Bunny Greenhouse,ย then-Chief Procurement Officer for the Army Corps, to become a whistleblower, and she was demoted for doing so.ย Greenhouse, in stark terms, made knownย her take on this state ofย affairs.

โ€œI can unequivocally state that the abuse related to contracts awarded to KBR represents the most blatant and improper contract abuse I have witnessed during the course of my professional career,โ€ saidย Greenhouse as she testified before Congress in 2005.

Uncertainย Future

Lydia Lafleur, a business professor at Louisiana State University and the corporate registered agent for AUX Initiatives, did not respond to a request for comment on whether Crear’s lobbying of the Army Corps was done specifically on behalf of the Dakota Access Pipeline. Crear also did not respond to a request for comment for thisย article.

The Dakota Access Pipelineย would transport oil obtained via hydraulic fracturing (โ€œfrackingโ€) from North Dakota’s Bakken Shale basin across the state and through South Dakota, Iowa and Illinois, where it wouldย terminate and connect to another pipeline in Patoka. That pipeline, theย Energy Transfer Crude Oil Pipeline, will shuttle oil down to Gulf Coast refineries in Texas and in part to the global exportย market.

To date, the progressive cell phone company Credo Mobile hasย gathered over 373,000 signatures for a petition calling on the Obama administration to reject Dakota Access.

CREDO Deputy Political Director Josh Nelson issued a statement this week:ย โ€œIndigenous water protectors and the First Amendment are under assault in North Dakota โ€“ and President Obama needs to intervene now.โ€ Nelson continued, โ€œif President Obama wants to uphold his promises to do right by indigenous people and fight climate change, he must summon the political courage to intervene now and stop โ€“ not just reroute โ€“ the Dakota Access pipeline.โ€
ย 

Photo Credit: C-SPANย Screenshot

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Steve Horn is the owner of the consultancy Horn Communications & Research Services, which provides public relations, content writing, and investigative research work products to a wide range of nonprofit and for-profit clients across the world. He is an investigative reporter on the climate beat for over a decade and former Research Fellow for DeSmog.

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