Excuse me?
Pentagon’s use of media firm, company’s performance, scrutinized
KIM BARKER AND STEPHEN J. HEDGES
KABUL, Afghanistan – When The Rendon Group was hired to help Afghan President Hamid Karzai with media relations in early 2004, few thought it was a bad idea. Though Rendon’s $1.4 million bill seemed high for Afghanistan, the U.S. government was paying.
Within seven months, however, Karzai was ready to get rid of Rendon. So was Zalmay Khalilzad, then the U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan and now the American envoy in Iraq, according to interviews, e-mails and memos obtained by the Chicago Tribune. The complaint: too much money for not enough work.
Despite such grumbling, The Rendon Group, based in Washington, managed to secure even more U.S.-funded work with Karzai’s government, this time a $3.9 million contract funded by the Pentagon, to create a media team for Afghan anti-drug programs. Jeff Raleigh, who helped oversee Rendon in Kabul for the U.S. Embassy, and others in the U.S. government said they objected because of Karzai’s and Khalilzad’s opposition but were overruled by Defense Department superiors in Washington.</i>
Excuse me, but why am I working to pay taxes to hire a PR firm for an Afghan leader? Maybe my copy of the constitution is abridged or something, but try as I might, I can’t find “Pimping drug lords” in it. Grr.