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  • Yet another documentary which gives you the right directions to uncover the tremendous amount of lies and greed of gain which lies within the US government and capitalistic systems in general today. Take this film as a eye opener, as a teaser to activate your own motivations in finding and judging these criminal acts that go unpunished these days. I'm no American but German. Nevertheless, corruption, profit, oppression, exploitation all these terms count as much in Germany as they do in the US.

    Don't take this film as the ultimate documentary, but see it as one of those small pieces which fit into the big picture of what our modern world has become.

    8/10 worth seeing
  • If you are a Liberal go see this movie... If you are a Conservative go see this movie...

    Everyone needs to see this movie. This like Greenwalds Wal-Mart movie can only be seen at private screenings hosted by families, churches, and in community centers all over the country. Screening films like this Greenwald refers to gorilla distribution. Forgoing all distribution companies to leave it up to the people to get the movie out there. With doing this Greenwald wants people to talk and discuss the movie instead of walking out and going home to never bring it up again. Which you will want to do with this film Iraq for Sale.

    In his newest film Iraq for Sale: The war Profiteers. Greenwald goes after the giant corporations that are making money off the War in Iraq. Exposing their illegal actions and immoral attitude to this war. Discovering how much money the corporations are making when soldiers are making far less and living a lot worse. It will make you sad and sick that our government would be allowed to do this to our men overseas. This movie crosses party lines and I once you watch this movie you will change your mind on what is happening in Iraq.
  • Finally the country is waking up to the realization that things are not as they should be. Either here or overseas. The wrong people have the power and the money and wrong people are suffering on account of it. But what can we do? How can I be apart of making it all change or shift gears?

    Now there is one strategy placed at your doorsteps. In the driving cinematic film Iraq for Sale. It is a documentary that the masses should see. It is is informative, engrossing, and enraging. Giving us the low down about War Profiteering and its ugly bi product, corporate greed. Is it possible that people could be making money from this unnecessary war? Why, yes it is. I wouldn't be surprised if the very necessity of the current state of affairs stems from this corrupt connection between the companies profiting and the politicians supporting them.

    Iraq for Sale is a unique tool that can be used to make a difference simply by joining the grass roots movement and sharing it with the people you know. Host a screening, buy one for a friend, inform people about the movie and its website. In order to move in the direction of change you half to first take one step in the right direction. And that step has always begun with arming the people with knowledge.
  • No doubt this will automatically be labeled as "liberal propaganda" by some but the issues tackled in this film should be of concern to everyone, Republican or Democrat.

    I must admit that I didn't know much about contracting before this film came along, though I had heard bits and pieces before in the news about Dick Cheney's shady Halliburton dealings. "Iraq For Sale: The War Profiteers" truly opened my eyes to the horrendous waste and fraud that is going on in Iraq and the risks that contractors and our troops have been exposed to by companies who were found in some cases to value money more than human life. People might possess the misconception that this film takes a stance against the war and against private contracting in general, but that is absolutely not the case; rather it takes a stand against war PROFITEERING and tells the stories of those who have been personally affected by it. The interviews with family members whose loved ones died needlessly are truly heartbreaking, as is the moving testimony of a former Halliburton employee, Ben Carter, who discovered the company was providing contaminated water to soldiers.

    I recommend that everyone show the film to friends, family and co-workers since Brave New Films counts on people and not theaters to distribute their movies. A definite must-see.
  • The war dribbles on, hundreds of billions of dollars dumped into the Iraqi sand, over a hundred thousand people dead, millions made homeless, Halliburton stock triples, Bush has his hair styled, Cheney shoots caged birds thrown from the bed of a pickup truck, heroically I guess or ain't it fun to watch the bird bodies splatter? Meanwhile, somebody somewhere has that "Mission Accomplished" banner. It should go for some serious bucks on Ebay someday. Karl Rove is writing his memoirs: "There's a new reality, the reality of power. Power makes its own reality. (And I--I!--was at the pinnacle: indeed I was the Power and the Glory. Myself. Me.)" Rumsfeld ditto. But Rummy writes of "shock and awe" and how the generals in the field bungled his best laid plans. And soon George W. himself will be writing his memoirs. The advance will be several million. The lies will probably not exceed that number.

    Of course there is no way that I at my computer can find the words to really make clear the stupefying waste and the horrific immorality of what the Bush administration has done in the name that was once America. Robert Greenwald's documentary does it better, much better by focusing on the profiteering by KBR, Halliburton, Blackwater et al. He uses the camera to show the images of human carnage, of the weighty mass of trucks and equipment, of Bush administration officials lying through their teeth on TV, of Bush himself strutting, waving, smiling. There are graphs of profits going up, up, up, street level shots of the stately office buildings of the profiteering companies, silver and glass, sunlight on well-tended lawns. Condi and Rummy, and Dick and Bush lying, lying, and lying some more. And for what? Cheney will be dead soon himself. Bush will be bored (perhaps to drink), their ill-gotten millions of no value to their dying souls.

    I liked the way Greenwald predicted the Blackwater scandal, more or less with his focus. (You should check it out.) All those macho guys with their military pensions in their back pockets finding Soldier of Fortune jobs at Blackwater, toting their guns, shooting the enemy in self-defense, making an additional six figures a year. Pallets of hundred dollar bills forklifted off of military transport planes...

    Well, Greenwald didn't get THAT shot (too bad), but he did show EMPTY trucks, a convoy, on an Iraqi highway (paid for as LOADED according to the contract). The contract of America with Halliburton. Halliburton with America. What's good for Halliburton is good for America. He shows the hundred dollar a meal meals contracted for those inside the Green Zone. It's surreal and then some. We airlift the PX, the movie theaters, the gym equipment, the computers, the TVs, the Pepsi Cola--well, actually Halliburton was able to substitute some local Iraqi cola at a fraction of the cost. We create a virtual reality army base inside Bagdad where our forces can hang out in safety. Who gains? Those doing the transporting.

    More than any war in history, this documentary shows the influence of privatization. With no-bid contracts, of course. Bush hates big government. The way to reduce government is to make it go broke. How do you do that? You create a useless war and sell the contracts to your buds at inflated prices. It's amazing but this is what has happened. And Greenwald documents it.

    Problem is, this fine documentary will be lost in the vast sea of information that we ourselves are lost in. Hide in plain site is what the profiteers have been able to do. Your stock triples, it's reported on the five o'clock news and in the pages of the New York Times ("our paper, man") but who can see it amid the myriad details of other stock prices or of the endless parade of other numbers, and words, words, words. A billion dollars lost here and there. Pentagon accountants clueless. Just another story on CNN, spun out of sight by Fox News.

    You can watch this without the sound. The images tell the story.

    This is another fine piece of work by Greenwald. He also directed Uncovered: The Whole Truth about the Iraq War (2003) and Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism (2004). He does a great job with the visuals, the interviews, and the narrative.

    I have one tiny criticism. No captions. No English subtitles. Every film and documentary on DVD should have subtitles. That way we can be sure of the exact phrasing of the lies.

    (Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it at Amazon!)
  • The story of the connection between the privately held corporations that have profited from the war in Iraq without oversight and the Bush administration has been revealed in bits and pieces over the years. This film attempts to connect the links and highlight the impact that it has had on the lives of those most affected. It is admirable that a first time director would tackle such a feat, but it could be done more successfully. Better editing and a little more research into the issues could have made this film stronger. There are a few things that I find annoying in the film. First is the sloppy use of Powerpoint like graphs & tables. The directors show names of companies and individuals in boxes and lines in between them, but never really backs this up with any explanation of what the boxes & lines represent, much less actually proving that links between the many people mentioned actually exist. The directors also make heavy-handed use of dramatic music, which usually gets on my nerves. If the story is dramatic (which it is) and effectively presented (this could have been done with better editing), such hyperbole isn't needed. A lot of the information has been previously reported in The Nation, The Christian Science Monitor & Democracy Now, what this documentary adds is the personal toll that the privatization of war has had on those who fight it. Many of the interviews are very good, though a bit repetitive in their message. A clearer structure to the film, either by a timeline or using an omniscient narrator, would have made it stronger. As it stands the film is repetitive & I found myself (someone already familiar with the story) nodding off at about the half way point. Some talking heads (NGO representatives, academics, etc.) would have also strengthened this film and give it a bit more analytical edge to it.
  • RadioactiveRat14 October 2006
    Iraq For Sale is a truly horrifying documentary about the state of war profiteering in Iraq as allowed or encouraged by Washington in the United States. Not to be misunderstood or understated, it is terrifying how reckless the companies mentioned in the film (Halliburton et al) act towards their customers (US Military) and their employees in pursuit of the mighty dollar. Sending out trucks on delivery missions empty because they can charge the government for sending them to the bases. Providing dubious contaminated water to the troops from their water treatment plants, and charging $100 to wash a bag of laundry to mention a few. What is even more terrifying is that the Pentagon just ignores the abuse or gives the companies a slap on the wrist for their trouble, all the while continuing to funnel billions or more dollars into their pockets. I used to accept that war was about ideology and defense, this documentary proved me wrong. War is about the pursuit of wealth and power!
  • While perusing this site I saw the question posed: "What makes a good documentary", and that got me thinking, "Yes, what does make a good documentary?" When I thought of the documentaries I've seen, be they televised or motion picture, I found that all of the good documentaries had one common thread. All good documentaries provided facts and information regarding issues that I never knew about, and probably would never know about without doing extensive research.

    In this documentary, for instance, we all knew about Halliburton and its involvement in the Iraq War, but how many of us had heard about Blackwater, Titan, C.A.C.I., or KBR? Or how many of us had heard about the gross negligence on the parts of these companies? Or how they've been egregiously over-charging the government? Or, better still, how our lawmakers cannot even agree to eliminate or at least limit the role of contractors in a war? Some of the information was sad, some of the information was startling, but all of it was necessary for the American public to know. And even as ignorant as most of us would like to remain about the particulars of war, we all should take interest when the government, and in turn, we are funding a war to the benefit of gluttonous corporations.
  • Robert Greenwald is a filmmaker I'm familiar with well from his very prolific output of politically charged documentaries (with one regular dramatic feature also) from the past several years, my favorite being Outfoxed. Now he comes with Iraq for Sale, a documentary aimed at exposing one of the gravest injustices to come out of the invasion of Iraq. The contractors who have been given carte-blanche (primarily Haliburton aka KBR) to take control of how the military is taken care of and that just to turn a profit (albeit a major, huge one) people who didn't sign up to fight for the USA die off. Greenwald, as in other docs, takes on the subject matter from two angles- the emotional side, where those close to those who died air their grievances and outrage at losing members of their family and friends; and the factual side, where it's laid out pretty plainly the message- something very, very corrupt and fascist is going on in both the so-called protection of the soldiers and in the Abu-Gharib scandal.

    Greenwald's film-making style isn't too bad at all, and is held back from being flashy with the usage of graphics and charts and such when interviewing his subjects. And a lot of the archival footage and testimonies do all add up to something that leaves one with a feeling of near hopelessness (saying near because there should still be hope that this can change). But at the same time I also felt that Greenwald could only go for so much in the 70 minute running time. He un-earths a couple of things I didn't know of, such as the corporations Caci and Titan, one of which was partly responsible for the torture in the prisons (half in military get-up, half in just regular attire, all torturing mostly random civilians). The numbers are also pretty staggering at times, though at this point with the practically one-party rule in the country- where corporate interests go hand in pocketed hand with lobbyists and firms- things shouldn't be surprising at this point. But that it feels a little rushed at times too is my only real complaint overall about the picture.

    It's really worth a viewing though, regardless of political affiliation (even as the Right would get uncomfortable and have to take their views into account when seeing Bush and Rumsfeld on screen). It deals with things that should be of consequence to all Americans, who are the ones paying out their tax dollars to intolerable problems in monopolized power structures. It almost comes off towards the last part, in discussing Halburton, like watching something out of a ice-cold communist structure where people in high places getting paid a lot give menial, awful conditions to those who are technically those to take care of. As Greenwald shows to his most prominent point, absolute power corrupts absolutely, and in this case during this 'war on terror' going on in Iraq.
  • As a contemporary military historian, I had high hopes for this film. On many accounts, it's informative, though largely it seems to demonize the companies that provide services in Iraq. I won't debate whether or not the film raises valid points, but I do wish to comment on the section regarding Blackwater. In the film, they interview the families of two of the Blackwater contractors that were killed in Fallujah. While moving, the comments of the families aren't informed. The comments are used as if they fact, when in actuality, they are speaking with heavy emotion, and aren't fully aware of all the details. I find it to be amateur documentary style to use a highly emotionally charged interview as a suggestion of fact, and I suggest all who watch this film keep that in mind.
  • This film shows how our tax dollars were wasted! We are paying contractors at prices far higher than what it costs us for the same thing. For example, buying new trucks every time one of them gets a minor maintenance problem. Another example of abuse is the fact that we are paying $99 per bag of laundry to get it washed by a contractor. Still another example of abuse, is that one of the contractors is supplying water to our troops that contains diseases in it for people to shower in. Also, it shows in detail how we paid to torture war prisoners. Another shocking detail was how the contractors did not get the proper equipment to protect themselves. Additionally, the contract workers were saying in 5-star hotels at night, while our troops were getting tents. What is even more shocking is the connections these companies have with officials, and how contracts to them were awarded without taking bids.

    Our country needs to stand up, and hold our people in the white house, congress, the justice department, and our military accountable for these actions. We have spent almost a half a trillion dollars on the Iraq War now, and billions of it were wasted in this abuse of our money by these private contractors. Thanks to Robert Greenwald for getting out the truth to the American public again!!!!!
  • I was most interested in watching this documentary as i find the subject fascinating: the industry of war presented as it really is, a business opportunity.

    But i was rather disappointed with the film itself. Even though the content was OK, the way it was presented was disconnected and superficial. The way the stories (or "cases" should i say) are glued together is rather abrupt and takes the viewer from personal stories that simply don't cut it to more "cold facts" interviews that are a real downer.

    So, the film never takes off emotionally and never really touched me in any manner. It was just interesting to hear some first hand experiences about the corruption that permeates all these companies making big bucks in Iraq... but not a doc i would recommend to everyone.
  • Just recently saw this on DVD and I have to say it opened my eyes to some of these issues with private contractors. Now I knew already that Halliburton and CACI and all those other companies really had no logical place in a war such as the one in Iraq, but some of the stuff they did like purposefully destroy their own equipment (in some cases sending their own employees in harm's way and having them killed by insurgents) because they would get compensated for it and profits would rise, is just plain monstrous. Not only that, but the amount of money that Congress has subsidized these companies is just incredibly outrageous. Money that could be used towards the $8 TRILLION dollar debt, or improving the health care system, or funding the education system better. And then using private contractors to do intelligence operations, such as interrogations...you saw what happened at Abu Graib - half the sickos who did the torture weren't even the military.

    I mean WTF, America it's time to wake up!! Congress is incompetent since the majority always turns down all the major amendments that would control these types of criminal activities, with lobbyists controlling almost all of the legislative branch. And since Deick Cheney is the former CEO of Halliburton, you can see where this is connecting the dots.
  • The math is very simple. Contribute a couple of million dollars to key congressional figures and the Republican party and get $19 BILLION dollars worth of contracts in Iraq. You figure out the profit percentage. It's far more that your bank is paying you for your savings. How about a $4.5 million dollar investment by Halliburton resulting in so many billions of dollars in contracts that the CEO makes over $40 million. Do you really believe that the Vice-president, the former head of Halliburton, is not actively involved? Military that were involved in abuse of Abu Gahrib were court-martial-ed and jailed, while civilian contractors, after killing Iraqis were simply sent home to come back later with another contractor. At this the President dances and jokes and grins like a monkey.

    The billions of dollars that we are spending in Iraq is going to companies that are major Republican contributers and they are not accountable for the fraud, waste, and abuse they are perpetrating on the American people.

    It should be the obligation of every American to see this film before they cast another vote.
  • Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers film review by Bravebeauty I was enthralled while previewing this movie for screenings in my home for Brave New Theaters and MoveOn. I have seen parts of it many times and each time, I become more outraged.

    Greenwald has created a masterpiece of exposing not only the Bushwackers (Bush Administration and his and Cheney and Rumsfeld's cronies), but the mistreatment of our brave and courageous Armed Forces fighting a war that was based on lies and creating a war - which is not really a war, now is it because in "doublespeak" it is called Iraqi Freedom? The film's message packs a powerful punch and jolt of reality, the directing and images are outstanding, and the pace of the truth revealed is spot on.

    This film exposes the real forces profiting from the Iraq WAR. Titan, CACI, Blackwater, and Halliburton.

    Every single voting American must see this film BEFORE they voice their opinions on the Iraq WAR which is now a civil war and our courageous troops are in a no-win situation while corporate carpetbaggers are reporting record profts.
  • Documentarian Robert Greenwald is at it again with "Iraq for Sale: the War Profiteers", exposing gross atrocities going on around the world and in our backyards with an account of the powerful sway certain American corporations are having over the United States government in regards to the current war in Iraq. It's angering, unsettling, and never attempts to offer easy answers. What it does do is make the viewer gasp in horror at the human injustices perpetrated by companies who have found they can make a buck off the government at the expense of the health, safety, and well-being of soldiers and their own contractors. Although the film feels very thrown together, the timeliness, heart and intention of the film are most important.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Most people who want the US to pull out of Iraq think in terms of the war having little to do with the attack on September 11th, 2001, and are also against the death and destruction. These of course are valid concerns and anti-war sentiments are very familiar at this point in time (2006). But if anyone saw the film and were made aware of the even more compelling reasons to leave Iraq, it would make their blood boil. "Iraq For Sale" shows us facts and situations most of the general public are not even aware of, or if they are only on the surface. The current war in Iraq has become a business. Corporations have thrown aside all morals and values for the sake of the almighty dollar, and no one is holding them accountable. There is a direct relation to US businesses (contractors) benefiting from being in Iraq and their ability to manipulate Congress and those in power to keep them there for the sake of on going profit. I left the viewing of the movie with a deep sense of disgust for what our country tolerates. It is my opinion that this film should be viewed by all American citizens aged 18 and older. I am absolutely certain that if all were made to watch this film that the war would end very quickly.
  • This documentary deals with an important subject, and is a reasonable means for a person to get up to speed on (the downsides of) military contracting in Iraq, but the presentation, the quality of this documentary as a film, is certainly nothing special and one is reminded more of a routine television program than of anything carefully crafted. This documentary also fails to present much information that is not available elsewhere, although the film wraps this information into an easily consumed package. Okay for content, but not groundbreaking. A viable documentary, but more informative than touching or artistic.
  • It was to Frederick Douglas who said: "A true patriot is a lover of his country who rebukes and does not excuse its sins".

    I know these films represent one side of a two sided story, and I'm not easily duped into getting angry because the director says I should (a-la-Micheal Moore), but the information in this film is going to be pretty hard for our government to explain.

    If only 1 third of this is true, it's a sad day for the ideals that most of us "regular" Americans hold to be true.

    The capitalist system works on greed, and not that that is a bad thing, but that greed has to have by boundaries policed by our government. When the people that run our government are part of the problem, we are all in trouble. The bottom line is that greed can't be the only motive our system works on.

    Blah, I'm disgusted, wonder if I could emigrate to Australia or something......
  • bigisaac3725 April 2007
    Hats off to Mr Greenwald for exposing the truth on what's really going on in Iraq! Is the situation getting better or worse? You be the judge! I've spent time in Iraq and when my buddies & I watched this movie it really hit home for those of us who wear the uniform. There's no need for all these contractors to be over there. Pull the troops out and let the civilians win this thing! The movie should have also touched on what the Gov't of Iraq is doing to help its own people. NOT MUCH!!! The U.S. has babysat this country too damn long! Now it's time for the Iraqis to stand own their own feet. We got our own issues to deal w/ in the U.S. Bottomline, war mean$ profit and the American taxpayers are being robbed!!!
  • A MUST SEE ! ! You will get so angry and remorseful watching grown mature men cry on screen with first hand accounts of the blatant & profuse and prolithic corruption & unbridled GREED at our taxpayers expense and OUR LIVES from NEEDLESSNESS & crimes. Oh yeah , the one guy is Betsy DeVos' brother , three former Secretary of Education.
  • This has to be one of the most overrated films of the past few years. The director, Robert Greenwald, does nothing to add to the information given in this documentary. At best this is a good news report. Don't get me wrong, the stories told are very important and WE SHOULD hear more about this type of these big companies taking our tax payer money to "rebuild". However, that said this film does not delve deep into the story here and does not do a good job in telling this story. The film is all over the place the editing is poor & if anything the choice in music takes away from the information. I was not impressed. To sum up my opinion: just because a story is good or important, does not mean that a film itself is good.
  • jfrizelle17 October 2006
    The content/style and political spin of this documentary should be no surprise to those that are familiar with Mr. Greenwald's prior work.

    One sided polemic.

    Although "Iraq for Sale" tries hard to impress upon its viewers the importance of curtailing war profiteering it does so in a repetitively boring way which - often resorting to documentary clichés like the cries of a grieving mother to punctuate a point, and distortions of truth all too common in political commentaries.

    Production values are frankly pathetic given the amount of money spent on the production.

    What is unfortunate is that this subject matter lends itself to a more unbiased hand - something like the recent documentary "Shadow Company" - which I was able to view on Capitol Hill alongside members of the Senate and Congress. If you want to see a more realistic primer on the world of private contracting - avoid "Iraq for Sale"
  • I am in the US Army. This is not a documentary. It is made up of interspersed interviews with people who fit into four categories: families of civilian contractors who died, civilian contractors who survived an attack, eyewitnesses of wasteful spending by companies with government contracts, and former Soldiers of unknown character complaining about the use of civilian contractors in Iraq. Wrongdoing should be punished. This film never clears up whether it is against wasteful spending or against the use of civilian contractors altogether. The film's arguments are too broad and, sometimes, random and confusing. Several times, the statement is made that "this war has been privatized to a greater extent than any other war in history." This is an asinine comment. With a new type of war being fought over the course of almost a decade, now, of course private companies will be employed more than before. Statements like these are devoid of value in the greater debate of how to regulate wasteful spending by these large corporations. Another frustrating element of this film is that the images from Iraq are not related to the story being told at that time. It's confusing for the viewer. Interviews with people who had first-hand knowledge of the wasteful spending were effective, but few, and as a result, the filmmaker spread them throughout the film, which watered down the effectiveness of their accounts. Unfortunate. As a Soldier, I found the complaints about contractors living in better quarters than tent-bound Soldiers ridiculous. Soldiers, Marines, Sailors, and Airmen have given their lives to their Country and are willing to sleep in muck and grime for the sake of the cause. Civilians, brave and heroic them all, need a softer touch. The men and women of the U.S. Military are happy to sleep wherever the mission takes us. Keep your pity to yourself. Of course Soldiers are going to living in the suck, suffer, bleed, and die; that's our calling. We love it! We're here, on the wall, so you don't have to be. Just say thank you and move on. The emotional outcry against Halliburton as a demonic overlord is very compelling; however, not backed by enough evidence to be completely persuasive. The speakers are mostly just making accusations that sound reasonable, but are not substantiated within the film itself. (This only makes the fact that there is a special feature on the DVD aimed at organizing protesters more laughable. Is it possible to organize protesters based solely on unsubstantiated claims, reasonable or not?) Someone is going to make money on the privatization of jobs by the U.S. Government. The American economy is built on the concept of companies doing what they can, within ethical boundaries, to make money. That shouldn't be discouraged. Only wrongful profiteering should be punished. This film does not clearly delineate between the two, so the viewer is never sure which is under attack. There are two redeeming qualities in the film: First, the opening story of the Blackwater employee, who died in an ambush, was touching. The family's argument that an ambush, by definition a surprise attack, could have been avoided was heart-wrenchingly naive. The second redeeming comment was the argument that more Iraqi civilians should have been hired, thereby getting them off the street and winning a PR battle, was very enlightening. (This approach worked in Germany and Korea.) Too bad the rest of the film is simply an emotional debate and not one backed up by actual evidence, but rather logical assumptions on the part of the individual interviewees. Pass this one up.
  • jgraves331 October 2006
    Actually, it's great to be American. What a hypocrite you are! How about cleaning your own house before pointing fingers. Just how many Australian companies are profiting from this war?

    Worely Group have a US$800 million contract with the Parson corporation to "rebuild" oil infrastructures in northern Iraq.

    Queensland-based Morris Corporation has secured a deal worth more than $100 million to establish catering support services for Coalition troops stationed in Iraq.

    Australian Wheat Board have remaining contracts under the Oil-for-Food Program, valued at more than $350 million.

    SAGRIC International and the CSIRO, as part of a US-led consortium, won a contract to rehabilitate Iraq's agriculture, which is valued at up to $155 million. CSIRO is also involved in a pre-feasibility study to rehabilitate Iraq's Southern Marshes.

    I could go on and on, but I don't fault Australian companies for helping rebuild Iraq. God Bless 'em!