From the Los Angeles Times
A Bright Career Unravels in Iraq
The Pentagon says an officer known for her
integrity used her post for personal gain.
By T. Christian Miller
Times Staff Writer
April 19, 2006
WASHINGTON — When Jay Garner arrived as the first U.S. administrator in
Iraq after the 2003 invasion, he chose a highly decorated Air Force
colonel named Kimberly D. Olson as his right arm because he considered
her among the best America had to offer.
One
of the first female pilots in the Air Force, she was a hard-charger
with an unblemished reputation for honesty, a high profile in the
Pentagon and a commitment to the U.S. goal of creating a democracy in
the Middle East.
Today, Olson is at the center of accusations of audacious impropriety
in the corruption-plagued reconstruction of Iraq.
She
is accused of profiting from the post-invasion chaos by using her
position to benefit a private security firm that she helped operate,
according to interviews and government documents obtained by the Los
Angeles Times.
Pentagon investigators allege that while on
active duty as one of the most powerful figures in Iraq, Olson
established a U.S. branch of a South African security firm after
helping it win more than $3 million in contracts to provide protection
for senior U.S. and British officials, as well as for KBR, a subsidiary
of Halliburton Co.
Olson, 48, has spent more than a year
fighting the charges. In military proceedings last year, she denied
abusing her position to enrich herself or the security company, but
agreed to plead guilty to lesser charges. She was reprimanded and
allowed to resign from the Air Force with an honorable discharge and no
reduction in rank. Olson was also banned from receiving further
government contracts for three years. She is appealing the ban.
To
her defenders, including Garner and other prominent people, Olson's
troubles are evidence that Washington regulators are imposing
unreasonable standards of conduct for a war zone. Friends described
Olson as a problem solver who moved from crisis to crisis and who was
punished for her effort to get things done in a chaotic environment.
Olson's
legal file is packed with endorsements and letters of recommendations
from Garner and his successor as U.S. administrator in Iraq, L. Paul
Bremer III, as well as from top military and civilian officials in Iraq
and Washington. Some worry the action against her is an overzealous
prosecution that might impinge on reconstruction efforts.
Government
officials "are going over there with the best of intentions, and
they're coming back and being grilled," said Bob Polk, who was the
director of plans for Garner. "It will have a chilling effect the next
time."
But government investigators say Olson took advantage of
her position for personal gain and made a mockery of U.S. efforts to
establish the rule of law in a country long ruled by corrupt autocrats.
Olson is the highest-ranking U.S. military officer to be accused of
wrongdoing in connection with the reconstruction.
Olson did not
respond to requests for an interview, but she supplied by e-mail a
point-by-point response to the charges against her. The e-mail said the
military's version of events contained "numerous factual statements and
conclusions that are not accurate."
In interviews, Garner
defended his former aide, saying he thought she was trying to carry out
his orders to help his personal bodyguards find work in Iraq.
"Kim
Olson is one of the most honest people that I've ever known," said
Garner, who was in charge of the first occupation government in Iraq,
known as the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance. "I
don't think she got a proper hearing."
The previously
undisclosed Olson case is the latest controversy over corruption
allegations involving private security contractors in Iraq.
It also points up the chaotic beginnings of the reconstruction, plagued
from its start by accusations of waste and fraud.
In
January 2003, Garner, a retired Army general turned defense contractor,
was chosen by Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld to lead the
reconstruction effort in Iraq. Olson, a senior official in the
Pentagon's comptroller office, was initially assigned to work on
financial matters, but Garner soon made her his executive officer,
impressed by her can-do attitude, he said.
As Garner assembled
his team in Kuwait in mid-March in preparation for moving into Iraq, he
found that he would need private security to protect him and other
senior U.S. officials. Garner asked for military protection, but was
told there would not be enough troops available.
About the same
time, Pentagon documents say, Olson took steps to open an office out of
her home in Vienna, Va., for Meteoric, which was based in Pretoria,
South Africa. Four months later, she filed formal incorporation papers
that made her director of the new American entity.
It was the
beginning of a substantial boom for private security in Iraq, where
more than 25,000 security contractors working for scores of different
companies now operate. The Government Accountability Office estimates
that at least $766 million has been spent on security contracts in Iraq.
In
May 2003, Garner was replaced by Bremer. Garner became concerned that
his security detail — made up of former members of the South African
special forces — would be left without jobs.
He recommended the
South Africans to Bernard Kerik, the former New York police
commissioner who was leading the effort to establish a police force in
Iraq.
Garner said he ordered Olson to assist the South Africans
in winning jobs with Kerik by helping them through the U.S. contracting
process. The South Africans subsequently went to work for Meteoric.
"While
I was there, to my knowledge, the things that Kim did were based on my
instruction," Garner said. "I never gave her an illegal order. There
was nothing wrong with her giving [the South Africans] assistance as to
how to go through the U.S. contracting process."
After Garner
left at the end of May 2003, Olson stayed on to work for the Coalition
Provisional Authority's Program Review Board, which was responsible for
approving contracts using Iraqi funds. Olson began helping Meteoric win
contracts and did other work for the company, the Pentagon
investigation said.
She put together a promotional packet that
featured a picture of Garner and the leader of the South Africa
security team, Lion Olivier. The packet included a letter of
recommendation from Garner, the investigation said.
Olson also
helped Meteoric draft contract proposals to provide security guards,
which the company later won, the Pentagon said. One contract, valued at
$600,000, was to provide security for Kerik. A second, worth $1.9
million, was to provide security for trucking convoys operated by KBR.
Meteoric won at least one other contract, for nearly $500,000, to
provide protection to senior British officials in Iraq.
Over the
summer of 2003, Olson allegedly became a director of the South African
company, sought visas for company officials, contacted senior Pentagon
officials to resolve a payment dispute in favor of the company, and
wrote letters and invoices on behalf of the company. One coalition
official estimated that Olson spent 70% of her time working on Meteoric
matters, the Pentagon investigation said.
By that fall, rumors
spread that Olson had some connection to Meteoric. The Pentagon's
Defense Criminal Investigative Service opened an investigation that
resulted in the Air Force conducting a so-called Article 15 proceeding,
a military inquiry used for less serious crimes.
In her
rebuttal, Olson objected to many of the military investigators'
conclusions. She denied that she helped steer work to Meteoric, or that
she was a director of the South African company. Investigators found
copies of contract proposals mailed from her computer to Meteoric, but
she said her computer was frequently used by Meteoric guards, who
worked in an office next door.
Olson also denied forming the
U.S. office of Meteoric in March. She said she opened the U.S. company
in July 2003, after consulting with a Pentagon ethics official, in
order to pursue security contracts with private businesses, not with
the Department of Defense. She acknowledged receiving $12,000 in
"start-up money" from South Africans involved in Meteoric to help the
American branch of the company, but said she returned the money.
Olson
resigned from the U.S. company in October 2003, she said, and the firm
"had no customers, entered into no contracts and made no money."
James
Cole, Olson's lawyer, said that Olson refuted many of the Pentagon
investigators' conclusions and avoided a court-marital. She agreed to
plead guilty to less serious offenses, including creating the
appearance of conflict of interest based on her involvement with
Meteoric and failing to get her commander's approval before pursuing
outside employment.
"With a full understanding of the facts, we
were able to show her commanding officer that the serious allegations
in the report were not substantiated," Cole said.
In March 2005,
Olson was reprimanded and ordered to pay $3,500. The sanction
effectively ended her career. Olson's former commander, who issued the
sanctions, could not be reached. Air Force lawyers involved in the
proceeding declined to comment.
A separate branch of the Air
Force concerned with regulating contractors later took up Olson's case.
It concluded that Olson's actions were "fraudulent" and "seriously
improper." Air Force Deputy General Counsel Steven A. Shaw issued a
finding in October 2005 that banned Olson and Meteoric from receiving
contracts for three years. The ban is not yet final.
Meteoric
ran into trouble elsewhere. Employees were arrested in 2004 on
suspicion of participating in an attempted coup in Equatorial Guinea. A
former U.S. military official said some of the men had ties to
Executive Outcomes, a controversial mercenary outfit involved in
fighting civil wars in Sierra Leone and Angola.
"These guys were knuckle-draggers," the official said.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times