Iraq

professional-overseas-contractors
According to the Department of Defense (DoD) — BH Defense LLC,* Arlington, Virginia, was awarded a $20,782,657 contract (Iraq) to assist Iraq in establishing the Iraq International Academy to develop senior leadership.

Fiscal 2015 other procurement funds in the amount of $7,793,464 were obligated at the time of the award. Estimated completion date is March 31, 2016. Army Contracting Command, Ft. Bragg, North Carolina, is the contracting activity.

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professional-overseas-contractors
Recently, the Supreme Court found that lawsuits against the American contractor that operated the burn pits, KBR, could move forward. KBR had argued that it couldn’t be sued because it had operated the burn pits for the government. The Court issued no statement, but the lawsuits will go back to trial courts.

The high court denied a petition by the Houston-based company to consider arguments in cases that allege the contractor and former parent corporation, Halliburton, acted negligently while operating open-air burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan and other facilities, resulting in death and illness of U.S. troops.

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professional-overseas-contractors
WASHINGTON — The Department of Defense only has about 250 civilian contractors in Iraq supporting the 2,700 US troops deployed there; but a handful of new solicitations and potential contracts may soon add to that number, according to items posted to a federal contracting Web site.

For the past two decades, the resource-heavy American way of war has dictated that where US troops go, civilian contractors follow. It's a way of doing business that has become ingrained in the Pentagon's culture as end strength has slowly been whittled away while global commitments show no sign of slackening.

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