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<P class=articleTitle style="MARGIN: 0px">Perle's Conflict Issue Is Shared<BR>By
Others on His Defense Panel</P>
<P class=articleTitle style="MARGIN: 0px">3/27/03</P><SPAN
style="FONT: bold 12px times new roman, times, serif">
<P style="FONT: bold 12px times new roman, times, serif">By <B>TOM HAMBURGER</B>
and <B>DENNIS K. BERMAN</B> <BR><SPAN
style="FONT: bold 10px times new roman, times, serif"><B>Staff Reporters of THE
WALL STREET JOURNAL</B></SPAN><BR></P></SPAN>
<P class=times>WASHINGTON -- Former Pentagon assistant secretary Richard
<B><FONT color=#660000>Perle</FONT></B> has been assailed for possible conflicts
between his business interests and chairmanship of a Pentagon advisory board,
but other panel members have potential conflicts, too.</P>
<P class=times>Mr. <B><FONT color=#660000>Perle</FONT></B> has been criticized
in recent days following disclosure that he sought defense-related consulting
business while heading the Defense Policy Board, which advises the defense
secretary on a range of policy and strategic issues. But business interests of
at least nine of his colleagues also overlap with their board service.</P>
<P class=times>Former Central Intelligence Agency chief James Woolsey is a
senior executive at consultancy Booz Allen Hamilton Inc., which received $688
million in Pentagon contracts in 2002. He also is one of three principals in a
venture-capital firm that has been soliciting investment in
homeland-security-related firms. Mr. Woolsey insists none of the companies he is
affiliated with has ever been discussed at a board meeting, and that he does no
lobbying. He said he was unaware of Mr. Perle's personal financial interests and
wouldn't comment on them.</P>
<P class=times>Another panel member, retired Adm. David Jeremiah, sits on boards
-- one of them advisory -- of five corporations that received more than $10
billion in Pentagon contracts in 2002, according to a forthcoming report from
the Center for Public Integrity, a Washington watchdog group. Retired Air Force
Gen. Ronald Fogleman sits on the board of five defense firms that received more
than a billion dollars in defense contracts in 2002. Adm. Jeremiah and Gen.
Fogleman didn't return calls requesting comment.</P>
<P class=times>Panel members must disclose their business interests, but those
disclosures aren't open for public examination. The potential for conflict in
these arrangements is sparking calls from lawmakers and watchdog groups for
government inquiries and greater disclosure of activities of the advisory board
and its members.</P>
<P class=times>Mr. Woolsey and others on the board reject such complaints. "I
cannot recall a single contractor matter coming before the boards I sit on. In
any case, you don't have decision-making authority over contracts," the former
CIA director said.</P>
<P class=times>Mr. Woolsey's firm, Paladin Capital Group, and that of Mr.
<B><FONT color=#660000>Perle</FONT></B> , Trireme Partners, both solicit
investment in homeland-security concerns.</P>
<P class=times>Mr. <B><FONT color=#660000>Perle</FONT></B> also secured a
$725,000 fee from Global Crossing Ltd., a telecommunications firm now operating
under bankruptcy-court protection, that is seeking Pentagon permission to sell
itself to investors in Asia. The Defense Department has objected to the Global
Crossing deal on national-security grounds because the company would be owned by
a Hong Kong-based concern with ties to China, Hutchison Whampoa Ltd.</P>
<P class=times>According to documents prepared by Global Crossing to explain its
sale plan to the court, Mr. Perle's total fee is $725,000. Of that, $600,000
would be paid if the company obtains approval from the Pentagon. The documents
cite Mr. Perle's defense-board chairmanship as a reason for hiring him to press
its case.</P>
<P class=times>Mr. <B><FONT color=#660000>Perle</FONT></B> didn't return calls
requesting comment, but a person close to the transaction said Mr. Perle's
primary role was to identify the deal's national-security issues and create a
plan to address them. "He had the security credentials to get the investors
comfortable" with the structure that now makes Hutchison a passive investor in
the reorganized Global Crossing, this person said.</P>
<P class=times>Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is busy and unable to comment
on the matter, said a spokesman, Maj. Ted Wadsworth.</P></DIV>
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