OVERSEAS INTEL

Professional Overseas Contractors
KBR Inc., the Houston-based defense and engineering contractor that has been sued in Oregon and Texas by soldiers who say the company knowingly exposed them to carcinogens in Iraq, has taken its defense to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The company has asked the Supreme Court to determine whether soldiers should be allowed to sue the contractor over activities directed by the U.S. military in foreign countries. The company argues that state tort law should not apply in such situations.

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Professional Overseas Contractors
G4S-SJC, LLC, of Fort Worth, Texas, protests the award of an indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract to Black Construction/MACE International, JV (BC/MI), of Barrigada, Guam, under request for proposals (RFP) No. N62742-13-R-1303, issued by the Department of the Navy, Naval Facilities Engineering Command, for design-build and design-bid-build construction on the island of Diego Garcia, British Indian Ocean Territory. G4S challenges the agency's conclusion that its proposal was unacceptable. In addition, G4S asserts that Black Construction/MACE International proposal was unacceptable.

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Professional Overseas Contractors
WASHINGTON — Afghanistan's disputed election and Iraq's unraveling are giving members of Congress and U.S. allies in the region reason to think President Barack should rethink his decision to withdraw virtually all Americans troops from Afghanistan by the close of 2016. The White House says Afghanistan is different from Iraq, mired in sectarian violence since shortly after U.S. troops left, and that the drawdown decision a done deal.

Some lawmakers, however, are uncomfortable with Obama's plan, which responds to the American public's war fatigue and his desire to be credited with pulling the U.S. from two conflicts. Ten senators, Republicans and Democrats, raised the drawdown issue at a congressional hearing Thursday.

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