Pubdate: Sun, 30 Nov 2008
Source: New York Times (NY)
Page: A1, Front Page
Copyright: 2008 The New York Times Company
Contact:  http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: David Barstow
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mccaffrey.htm (McCaffrey, Barry)

ONE MAN'S MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL-MEDIA COMPLEX

In the spring of 2007 a tiny military contractor with a slender track
record went shopping for a precious Beltway commodity.

The company, Defense Solutions, sought the services of a retired
general with national stature, someone who could open doors at the
highest levels of government and help it win a huge prize: the right
to supply Iraq with thousands of armored vehicles.

Access like this does not come cheap, but it was an opportunity
potentially worth billions in sales, and Defense Solutions soon found
its man. The company signed Barry R. McCaffrey, a retired four-star
Army general and military analyst for NBC News, to a consulting
contract starting June 15, 2007.

Four days later the general swung into action. He sent a personal note
and 15-page briefing packet to David H. Petraeus, the commanding
general in Iraq, strongly recommending Defense Solutions and its offer
to supply Iraq with 5,000 armored vehicles from Eastern Europe. "No
other proposal is quicker, less costly, or more certain to succeed,"
he said.

Thus, within days of hiring General McCaffrey, the Defense Solutions
sales pitch was in the hands of the American commander with the
greatest influence over Iraq's expanding military.

"That's what I pay him for," Timothy D. Ringgold, chief executive of
Defense Solutions, said in an interview.

General McCaffrey did not mention his new contract with Defense
Solutions in his letter to General Petraeus. Nor did he disclose it
when he went on CNBC that same week and praised the commander Defense
Solutions was now counting on for help -- "He's got the heart of a
lion" -- or when he told Congress the next month that it should
immediately supply Iraq with large numbers of armored vehicles and
other equipment.

He had made similar arguments before he was hired by Defense
Solutions, but this time he went further. In his testimony to
Congress, General McCaffrey criticized a Pentagon plan to supply Iraq
with several hundred armored vehicles made in the United States by a
competitor of Defense Solutions. He called the plan "not in the right
ballpark" and urged Congress to instead equip Iraq with 5,000 armored
vehicles.

"We've got Iraqi army battalions driving around in Toyota trucks," he
said, echoing an argument made to General Petraeus in the Defense
Solutions briefing packet.

Through seven years of war an exclusive club has quietly flourished at
the intersection of network news and wartime commerce. Its members,
mostly retired generals, have had a foot in both camps as influential
network military analysts and defense industry rainmakers. It is a
deeply opaque world, a place of privileged access to senior government
officials, where war commentary can fit hand in glove with undisclosed
commercial interests and network executives are sometimes oblivious to
possible conflicts of interest.

Few illustrate the submerged complexities of this world better than
Barry McCaffrey.

General McCaffrey, 66, has long been a force in Washington's power
elite. A consummate networker, he cultivated politicians and
journalists of all stripes as drug czar in the Clinton cabinet, and
his ties run deep to a new generation of generals, some of whom he
taught at West Point or commanded in the Persian Gulf war, when he
rose to fame leading the "left hook" assault on Iraqi forces.

But it was 9/11 that thrust General McCaffrey to the forefront of the
national security debate. In the years since he has made nearly 1,000
appearances on NBC and its cable sisters, delivering crisp sound bites
in a blunt, hyperbolic style. He commands up to $25,000 for speeches,
his commentary regularly turns up in The Wall Street Journal, and he
has been quoted or cited in thousands of news articles, including
dozens in The New York Times.

His influence is such that President Bush and Congressional leaders
from both parties have invited him for war consultations. His access
is such that, despite a contentious relationship with former Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, the Pentagon has arranged numerous trips
to Iraq, Afghanistan and other hotspots solely for his benefit.

At the same time, General McCaffrey has immersed himself in businesses
that have grown with the fight against terrorism.

The consulting company he started after leaving the government in
2001, BR McCaffrey Associates, promises to "build linkages" between
government officials and contractors like Defense Solutions for up to
$10,000 a month. He has also earned at least $500,000 from his work
for Veritas Capital, a private equity firm in New York that has grown
into a defense industry powerhouse by buying contractors whose profits
soared from the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. In addition, he is the
chairman of HNTB Federal Services, an engineering and construction
management company that often competes for national security contracts.

Many retired officers hold a perch in the world of military
contracting, but General McCaffrey is among a select few who also
command platforms in the news media and as government advisers on
military matters. These overlapping roles offer them an array of
opportunities to advance policy goals as well as business objectives.
But with their business ties left undisclosed, it can be difficult for
policy makers and the public to fully understand their interests.

On NBC and in other public forums, General McCaffrey has consistently
advocated wartime policies and spending priorities that are in line
with his corporate interests. But those interests are not described to
NBC's viewers. He is held out as a dispassionate expert, not someone
who helps companies win contracts related to the wars he discusses on
television.

The president of NBC News, Steve Capus, said in an interview that
General McCaffrey was a man of honor and achievement who would never
let business obligations color his analysis for NBC. He described
General McCaffrey as an "independent voice" who had courageously
challenged Mr. Rumsfeld, adding, "There's no open microphone that
begins with the Pentagon and ends with him going out over our airwaves."

General McCaffrey is not required to abide by NBC's formal
conflict-of-interest rules, Mr. Capus said, because he is a
consultant, not a news employee. Nor is he required to disclose his
business interests periodically. But Mr. Capus said that the network
had conversations with its military analysts about the need to avoid
even the appearance of a conflict, and that General McCaffrey had been
"incredibly forthcoming" about his ties to military
contractors.

General McCaffrey declined to be interviewed but released a brief
statement.

"My public media commentary on the war labeled me as an early and
serious critic of Rumsfeld's arrogance and mismanagement of operations
in Iraq and Afghanistan," the statement said. "The New York Times
noted my strong on-air criticism as an NBC commentator. My op-ed
objections to the execution of the war were published in The Wall
Street Journal, The Washington Post, The L.A. Times, USA Today and
other media. Hardly the stuff of someone shilling a war for the
administration -- or privately pushing his business interests with the
Pentagon. Thirty-seven years of public service. Four combat tours.
Wounded three times. The country knows me as a nonpartisan and
objective national security expert with solid integrity."

In earlier e-mail messages, General McCaffrey played down his
involvement in lobbying for contracts, suggesting he mainly gave
companies "strategic counsel." His business responsibilities, he
wrote, simply do not conflict with his duty to provide objective
analysis on NBC. "Never has been a problem," he wrote. "Period."

General McCaffrey did in fact emerge as a tough critic of Mr.
Rumsfeld, describing him as reckless and incompetent. His central
criticism -- that Mr. Rumsfeld fought the Iraq war "on the cheap" --
reflected his long-stated views on waging war. But it also dovetailed
with his business interests. And his clashes with Mr. Rumsfeld were
but one facet of a more complex and symbiotic relationship with the
Bush administration and the military's uniformed leaders, records and
interviews show.

With a few exceptions General McCaffrey has consistently supported Mr.
Bush's major national security policies, especially the war in Iraq.
He advocated invasion, urged building up the military to sustain the
occupation and warned that premature withdrawal would invite
catastrophe.

In an article earlier this year, The New York Times identified General
McCaffrey as one of some 75 military analysts who were the focus of a
Pentagon public relations campaign that is now being examined by the
Pentagon's inspector general, the Government Accountability Office and
the Federal Communications Commission. The campaign, begun in 2002 but
suspended after the article's publication, sought to transform the
analysts into "surrogates" and "message force multipliers" for the
Bush administration, records show. The analysts, many with military
industry ties, were wooed in private briefings, showered with talking
points and escorted on tours of Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

The Pentagon inspector general is investigating whether special access
gave any of these analysts an improper edge in the competition for
contracts.

General McCaffrey offers a case study of the benefits that can flow
from favored access: an inside track to sensitive information about
strategy and tactics; insight into the priorities of ground
commanders; a private channel to officials who oversaw war spending,
as the Defense Solutions example shows. In that case the company has
yet to win the contract it hired General McCaffrey to champion.

More broadly, though, his example reveals the myriad and often
undisclosed connections between the business of war and the business
of covering it.

A Move to Television

General McCaffrey made his debut as a military analyst in the weeks
after 9/11. NBC anchors typically introduced him by describing his
medals or his exploits in the gulf war. Or they noted he was a West
Point professor, or the youngest four-star general in the history of
the Army.

They did not mention his work for military contractors, including a
lucrative new role with Veritas Capital.

Veritas was a relatively small player in 2001, looking to grow through
acquisitions and Pentagon contracts. Competing for contracts is a
complex and subtle sport, governed by highly bureaucratic bidding
rules and the old-fashioned arts of access and influence.

Veritas would compete on both fronts.

Just days before the terrorist attacks -- on Sept. 6, 2001 -- Veritas
had announced the formation of an "advisory council" of well-connected
retired generals and admirals, including General McCaffrey. "They can
really pick up the phone and call someone," Robert B. McKeon, the
president of Veritas, would later tell The Times.

Access was also part of what drew NBC to General McCaffrey. Mr. Capus
said General McCaffrey "opens doors with generals and others who we
would not otherwise be able to talk to."

Veritas gave its advisers board seats on its military companies, along
with profit sharing and equity stakes that were all the more
attractive because Veritas intended to turn quick profits through
initial public offerings. On Sept. 6, this might have been considered
a gamble. Revenue growth -- a key to successful I.P.O.'s -- required
sustained increases in military spending. But after Sept. 11, the only
question was just how big those increases would be.

 From his first months on the air, General McCaffrey called for huge,
sustained increases in military spending for a global campaign against
terrorism. He also advocated spending for high-tech weapons, including
some like precision-guided munitions and unmanned aerial vehicles that
were important to the Veritas portfolio. He called the C-17 cargo
plane -- also a source of Veritas contracts -- a "national treasure."

In a statement, Veritas said it had gained no "discernible benefit"
from General McCaffrey's television appearances and called his TV work
"completely independent" from his role with Veritas.

In their corporate filings, Veritas military companies told investors
they were well positioned to benefit from a widening global struggle
against terrorism. The approaching conflict with Iraq, though, would
create new areas of tension between General McCaffrey's fiduciary
obligations to Veritas and his duties to NBC.

General McCaffrey harbored significant doubts about the invasion plan.
An informal participant in the war planning, he was troubled by Mr.
Rumsfeld's resistance to an invasion force of several hundred
thousand, he acknowledged months and years later in interviews. Mr.
Rumsfeld's team, he said, was bent on making an "ideological" point
that wars could be fought "on the cheap." There were not enough tanks,
artillery or troops, he would say, and the result was a "grossly
anemic" force that unnecessarily put troops at risk.

That is not what General McCaffrey said when asked on NBC outlets to
assess the risks of war. As planning for a possible invasion received
intense news coverage in 2002, he repeatedly assured viewers that the
war would be brief, the occupation lengthy but benign.

"These people are going to come apart in 21 days or less," he told
Brian Williams on MSNBC.

In the fall of 2002 General McCaffrey joined the Committee for the
Liberation of Iraq, a group formed with White House encouragement to
fan support for regime change. He also participated in private
Pentagon briefings in which network military analysts were armed with
talking points that made the case for war, records show.

In early 2003 Forrest Sawyer asked General McCaffrey on CNBC what
could go wrong after an invasion. Anticipating this very question, the
Pentagon had invited General McCaffrey and other analysts to a special
briefing. Years later General McCaffrey would say he knew that the
post-invasion planning was a disaster. "They were warned very
categorically and directly by many of us prior to that war," he said.

Given a chance by Mr. Sawyer to raise an alarm, the general reiterated
Pentagon talking points about the "astonishing amount" of postwar planning.

And when Tom Brokaw asked him, days before the invasion, "What are
your concerns if we were to go to war by the end of this week?" he
replied, "Well, I don't think I have any real serious ones."

Only when the invasion met unexpected resistance did General McCaffrey
give a glimpse of his misgivings. "We've placed ourselves in a risky
proposition, 400 miles into Iraq with no flank or rear area security,"
he told Katie Couric on "Today."

Mr. Rumsfeld struck back. He abruptly cut off General McCaffrey's
access to the Pentagon's special briefings and conference calls.

General McCaffrey was stunned. "I've never heard his voice like that,"
recalled one close associate who asked not to be identified. He added,
"They showed him what life was like on the outside."

Robert Weiner, a longtime publicist for General McCaffrey, said the
general came to see that if he continued his criticism, he risked
being shut out not only by Mr. Rumsfeld but also by his network of
friends and contacts among the uniformed leadership.

"There is a time when you have to punt," said Mr. Weiner, emphasizing
that he spoke as General McCaffrey's friend, not as his spokesman.

Within days General McCaffrey began to backpedal, professing his
"great respect" for Mr. Rumsfeld to Tim Russert. "Is this man O.K.?"
the Fox News anchor Brit Hume asked, taking note of the about-face.

For months to come, as an insurgency took root, General McCaffrey
defended the Bush administration. "I am 100 percent behind what the
administration, what the president of the United States, is doing in
Iraq," he told Mr. Williams that June.

A Corporate Troubleshooter

Mr. Rumsfeld's swift reaction underscored the administration's
appreciation of General McCaffrey's influence. His comments were
catalogued and circulated at the White House and Pentagon.

Other network analysts were monitored, too, but not the way General
McCaffrey was. He was different. He was one of the few retired
four-star generals on television, and his well-known friendships with
men like General Petraeus and Gen. John P. Abizaid gave him added currency.

As the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan dragged on, General McCaffrey
increasingly gave public expression to the private frustrations of
generals pressing their civilian bosses for more troops, weapons and
reconstruction money. The Army, he repeatedly warned, could break
under the strain.

These were politically charged topics, and so the administration
worked to influence his commentary, using carrots and sticks alike. In
2005, for example, Mr. Rumsfeld took umbrage at remarks General
McCaffrey made to The Washington Times about the impact of unchecked
poppy production in Afghanistan. Mr. Rumsfeld wrote to Gen. Peter
Pace, then the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, demanding to
know where General McCaffrey "got his information," records show. No
less than an assistant secretary of defense was dispatched to speak
with General McCaffrey, who said he had been misquoted.

In a letter to The Times, General McCaffrey's lawyer, Thomas A. Clare,
said the general's recurring criticisms had cost him "business
opportunities with defense contractors." NBC executives said they,
too, fielded high-level complaints, and General McCaffrey was not
invited back to the Pentagon's analyst briefings.

On the other hand, when Pentagon officials noticed that General
McCaffrey was scheduled to appear on programs like "Meet the Press,"
they asked generals close to him to suggest themes, records show. The
Pentagon also began paying for General McCaffrey to travel to Iraq and
Afghanistan. Other military analysts were invited on trips, but only
in groups. General McCaffrey went by himself under the sponsorship of
Central Command's generals.

The stated purpose was for General McCaffrey to provide an outside
assessment in his role as a part-time professor at West Point. But his
trips were also an important public relations tool, meticulously
planned to arm him with anecdotes of progress. Records show that
Central Command's generals expected him to "publicly support their
efforts" upon his return home and solicited his advice on how to
"reverse the perception" in Washington of a lost war.

After each trip General McCaffrey embarked on a news media campaign,
writing opinion articles, granting interviews, publishing "after
action" reports on his firm's Web site. Each time he extolled Central
Command's generals and called for a renewed national commitment of
money and support.

At the same time, General McCaffrey used his access to further
business interests, as he did during the summer of 2005, when
Americans were turning against the Iraq war in droves.

Veritas had been on a shopping spree, buying military contractors
deeply enmeshed in the war. Its biggest acquisition was of DynCorp
International, best known for training foreign security forces for the
United States government. By 2005 operations in Iraq and Afghanistan
accounted for 37 percent of DynCorp's revenues.

The crumbling public support, though, posed a threat to Veritas's
prize acquisition. The changing political climate and unrelenting
violence, DynCorp warned investors, could force a withdrawal from Iraq.

What is more, some of DynCorp's Iraq contracts were in trouble,
plagued by cost overruns, inept work by subcontractors and ineffective
training programs. So when DynCorp executives learned that General
McCaffrey was planning to travel to Iraq that June, they asked him to
sound out American commanders and reassure them of DynCorp's
determination to make things right.

"It is useful both ways," Gregory Lagana, a DynCorp spokesman, said in
an interview. "If there were problems, and there were, then we could
get an independent judgment and fix them."

Mr. Lagana said General McCaffrey had been a troubleshooter for
DynCorp on other trips. "He'll say: 'I'm going over. Is there anyone
you want me to see?' " Mr. Lagana said. "And then he'd go in and say,
'I'm on the board. What can you tell me?' "

The Pentagon had its own agenda. For eight days, General McCaffrey was
given red-carpet treatment. Iraqi commandos even staged a live-fire
demonstration for him. But General McCaffrey also was given access to
officials whose decisions were important to his business interests,
including DynCorp, which was planning an I.P.O. He met with General
Petraeus, who was then in charge of training Iraqi security forces and
responsible for supervising DynCorp's 500 police trainers. He also met
with officials responsible for billions of dollars' worth of contracts
in Iraq.

General McCaffrey would not discuss these sessions, and General
Petraeus said in an e-mail message to The Times that he had no reason
to discuss DynCorp with General McCaffrey because he would have gone
directly to DynCorp's executives in Iraq.

Back home, General McCaffrey undertook a one-man news media blitz in
which he contradicted the dire assessments of many journalists in
Iraq. He bore witness to progress on all fronts, but most of all he
vouched for Iraq's security forces. A year earlier, before joining
DynCorp's board, he had described these forces as "badly equipped,
badly trained, politically unreliable." Just months before, Gary E.
Luck, a retired four-star Army general sent to assess progress in
Iraq, had reported to Mr. Bush that security training was going
poorly. Yet General McCaffrey now emphasized his "surprising"
conclusion that the training was succeeding.

After Mr. Bush gave a speech praising Iraq's new security forces,
Brian Williams asked General McCaffrey for an independent assessment.
"The Iraqi security forces are real," General McCaffrey replied,
without noting the concerns about DynCorp.

His financial stake in the policy debates over Iraq was not mentioned.
He did not disclose that he owned special stock that allowed him to
share in DynCorp's profits, up 87 percent that year largely because of
the Iraq war.

"I took as objective a look at it as I could," he told David Gregory,
the NBC correspondent.

A Contract in Iraq

In his written statements to The Times, General McCaffrey said his
role with Veritas was "governance, not marketing," and Veritas
insisted that he never "solicited new or existing government contracts."

General McCaffrey did, however, play an indirect role in helping
Veritas win one of its largest contracts, to supply more than 8,000
translators to the war in Iraq. The contract had been held by L-3
Communications, but when General McCaffrey got wind that the Army was
considering seeking new bidders, he called his friend James A. Marks,
a major general in the Army who was approaching retirement and was
versed in the uses of translators, having served as intelligence chief
for land forces during the Iraq invasion.

As General Marks recalls it, General McCaffrey asked him to lead an
effort to win the contract for Veritas.

General Marks, who became a CNN military analyst after his retirement
in 2004, would be named president of a new DynCorp subsidiary, Global
Linguist Solutions, created in July 2006 to bid for the translation
contract. In August 2006 Veritas designated General McCaffrey as
chairman of Global Linguist. According to a 2007 corporate filing,
General McCaffrey was promised $10,000 a month plus expenses once
Global Linguist secured the contract. He would also be eligible to
share in profits, which could potentially be significant: the contract
was worth $4.6 billion over five years, but only if the United States
did not pull out of Iraq first.

In the fall of 2006, that was hardly a sure thing. With casualties
rising, the nation's discontent had been laid bare by the November
elections. Then, in December, the Iraq Study Group recommended
withdrawing all combat brigades by early 2008.

That month, in a flurry of appearances for NBC, General McCaffrey
repeatedly ridiculed this recommendation, warning that it would turn
Iraq into "Pol Pot's Cambodia."

The United States, he said, should keep at least 100,000 troops in
Iraq for many years. He disputed depictions of an isolated and deluded
White House. After meeting with the president and vice president on
Dec. 11 in the Oval Office, he went on television and described them
as "very sober-minded."

General McCaffrey was hardly alone in criticizing the Iraq Study
Group, and in his e-mail messages to The Times he said his objections
reflected his judgment that it was folly to leave American trainers
behind with no combat force protection. But in none of those
appearances did NBC disclose General McCaffrey's ties to Global Linguist.

NBC executives asserted that the general's relationships with military
contractors are indirectly disclosed through NBC's Web site, where
General McCaffrey's biography now features a link to his consulting
firm's Web site. That site, they said, lists General McCaffrey's clients.

While the general's Web site lists his board memberships, it does not
name his clients, nor does it mention Veritas Capital, by one measure
the second-largest military contractor in Iraq and Afghanistan, after
KBR. In any event, Mr. Capus, the NBC News president, said he was
unaware of General McCaffrey's connection to the translation contract.
Mr. Capus declined to comment on whether this information should have
been disclosed.

CNN officials said they, too, were unaware of General Marks's role in
the contract. When they learned of it in 2007, they said, they were so
concerned about what they considered an obvious conflict of interest
that they severed ties with him. (General Marks, who also spoke out
against the withdrawal plan on CNN, said business considerations did
not influence his comments.)

On Dec. 18, 2006, the Pentagon stunned Wall Street by awarding the
translation contract to Global Linguist. DynCorp's stock jumped 15
percent.

Hiring a General

After touring Iraq in March 2007 and meeting with American officials
responsible for equipping Iraq's military, General McCaffrey published
a trip report recommending that the United States equip Iraq with
5,000 armored vehicles.

This kind of access had strong appeal to Mr. Ringgold, Defense
Solutions' chief, who had a plan to rebuild Iraq's decimated fleets of
armored vehicles by culling "leftovers" from depots across Eastern
Europe. "I was looking for an advocate," Mr. Ringgold recalled.

General McCaffrey soon arrived for an audition at the Defense
Solutions headquarters outside Philadelphia. "Frankly," Mr. Ringgold
recalled, "I had to get over the sticker shock of what he was going to
cost me."

General McCaffrey liked his basic concept but told him to think
bigger, Mr. Ringgold said. Instead of minimally refurbished equipment,
he urged Mr. Ringgold to sell "Americanized" armored vehicles upgraded
with thermal sights and other expensive extras. And why not also team
up with DynCorp and others to supply the maintenance, logistics and
training to keep them running?

The suggestions vastly increased the proposal's scale and price tag,
but the general seemed to have a read on the complex interplay between
the Iraqi government and the American military leadership, Mr.
Ringgold recalled. For a retainer and an undisclosed equity stake,
General McCaffrey signed on weeks later, then promptly wrote to
General Petraeus.

His letter, drafted with help from Defense Solutions, explained that
in the three months since his trip to Iraq, he had found just one
feasible way to equip Iraq with enough armored vehicles to permit a
"phased redeployment" of American combat forces -- the proposal by
Defense Solutions. He urged General Petraeus to act quickly but did
not disclose that he had just been hired by Defense Solutions.

In his e-mail message to The Times, General Petraeus said he received
"innumerable" letters from "would be" contractors. In this case, he
wrote, he simply sent General McCaffrey's material "without any
endorsement" to James M. Dubik, the general then responsible for
training Iraq's security forces.

General Dubik, now retired, said in an interview that he, too,
received a letter and information packet, and as a result briefed
Iraq's defense minister. "Quite frankly," he said, "I thought it was a
good idea."

General Dubik emphasized that although he used Defense Solutions
briefing materials, he first "sanitized" them of any mention of the
company. He said he presented the idea as his own, intending to ask
Defense Solutions to bid if the Iraqis liked the concept. But the
defense minister reacted coolly, he said, arguing that Iraq deserved
advanced American-made vehicles.

General McCaffrey also sent letters to top lawmakers and approached
contacts inside the Defense Department bureaucracy that oversees
foreign military sales. His influence was immediately apparent. For
example, General McCaffrey reached out to Maj. Gen. Timothy F.
Ghormley, chief of staff at Central Command, who promptly invited Mr.
Ringgold to a meeting in Tampa, Fla. Mr. Ringgold recalled General
Ghormley's first words: "Why aren't we doing this already?"

Nevertheless, by late 2007, Defense Solutions still had no deal.
General McCaffrey, Mr. Ringgold recalled, said the company needed to
get to Baghdad and meet directly with Iraqi leaders and important Americans.

On Oct. 26, 2007, General McCaffrey wrote an e-mail message to General
Petraeus proposing to return to Iraq. He said his "principal interest
would be to document progress in standing up Iraqi security forces,"
and he proposed traveling soon, before the presidential primaries, so
he could "speak objectively -- before politics goes to roar level."

In early December General McCaffrey arrived in Baghdad, where he met
with Generals Petraeus and Dubik, among others.

General Petraeus said he did not recall them discussing Defense
Solutions. General Dubik recalled giving General McCaffrey a detailed
briefing on the effort to equip Iraq's army, including the plans for
armored vehicles. He said it was a measure of General McCaffrey's
integrity that he did not raise Defense Solutions. "He's not going to
cross the line," General Dubik said.

Mr. Ringgold said General McCaffrey "made it perfectly clear" that he
would not discuss their proposal with the two generals and even sent
instructions that he was not to be contacted in Iraq "to avoid even
the perception of conflict of interest."

But Defense Solutions used information General McCaffrey gleaned from
his meetings to refine its proposal. Mr. Ringgold followed General
McCaffrey to Baghdad in February 2008 and then made plans to return in
the spring to meet with Generals Dubik and Petraeus. "General
McCaffrey insisted that I see you," Mr. Ringgold wrote to General
Petraeus in a March 20 e-mail message.

General Petraeus forwarded Mr. Ringgold's message to General Dubik,
who warned Mr. Ringgold that while he was happy to meet, Iraq's
defense minister was still hesitant. "They've gone back and forth on
the refurbished stuff," General Dubik wrote.

Defense Solutions turned to the White House. On May 9, Mr. Ringgold
and Tom C. Korologos, a Republican lobbyist, met with a military aide
to Vice President Dick Cheney and two National Security Council officials.

The next day, in an e-mail memorandum to his staff, Mr. Ringgold
discussed other ways to press Iraqi and American officials, including
generating news media coverage to suggest that Iraq's "failure to
ready its Army" was prolonging the occupation. General McCaffrey had
been making a similar argument for months on NBC and elsewhere. "The
end of the game is that the Iraqis got to maintain internal order," he
told Ann Curry, the NBC journalist.

Mr. Ringgold said he had never asked the general to take positions
supporting Defense Solutions in his news media appearances. On the
other hand, he added, "I hope he was thinking of us."

Mr. Weiner, the general's longtime publicist, said General McCaffrey
worked with clients "to get your mission achieved in the media."
General McCaffrey, he said, often speaks out with the twin goals of
shaping policy and generating favorable coverage for clients with
worthy products or ideas.

"His motive is pure," Mr. Weiner said. "It is national
interest."

Despite Defense Solutions' efforts, Iraq recently placed orders for
billions of dollars' worth of American-made armored vehicles. But the
company is not giving up, and it continues to rely on the advice of
General McCaffrey, who returned to Iraq on Oct. 31 for another visit
sponsored by the Pentagon. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake