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At the same time, U.S. military officials talked up Libya as a new client. Vice Admiral Jeffrey Wieringa, head of the Defense Security Cooperation Agency, told a 2009 national security event in Washington that the U.S. might supply Humvees to Libya as "non-lethal" aid. DSCA spokesman Charles Taylor said last week that a Humvee sale never materialized. Momentum began bubbling for the troop transport deal in 2009 after a U.S. military attache in Tripoli told BAE officials about Libyan interest, the defense industry official said. BAE had paired up with a Turkish firm, NUROL Holding, in a joint venture to modernize old M113s for other Mideast and Asian armies. The joint firm, FNSS Defense Systems, submitted the $77 million Libyan proposal in September 2009 to the State Department's defense trade agency, officials said. BAE is a British firm with a major U.S. defense arm, BAE Systems, Inc., that was listed in 2010 as the nation's 12th largest government contractor. Headquartered in Rockville, Md., the company's U.S. board is chaired by former Gen. Anthony Zinni, who retired at the end of Clinton administration; former Indiana Rep. Lee Hamilton, an Obama foreign policy mentor; and former Bush administration Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff. Libyan officials wheedled for swift action. In a meeting with American diplomats in Tripoli in late 2009, a senior aide to Gadhafi's son Saif said that he and his brother Khamis wanted the U.S. to quickly approve the armored transport upgrades. The aide "requested an update on the status" of the joint venture, Ambassador Gene Cretz wrote on Dec. 14, 2009, in the cable published by WikiLeaks. The Libyans' obsession with troop transport also showed in their interest in Jordanian-built "Tiger" high-mobility vehicles and in MH-6 "Little Bird" helicopters previously denied by U.S. officials. Both items could not be sold to Libya, U.S. officials repeated, according to the memo. The armored transport deal, though, sailed through. By late 2009, it was green-lighted by the State Department's trade office, officials said. Under rules governing defense trade, the deal still required congressional oversight before it could be clinched
-- because of the high cost involved and the fact that troop carriers were deemed major military equipment. But the deal soon bogged down in doubts. Officials noted that documents cited differing numbers of troop transports, ranging from 40 to 60
-- raising alarm that the Libyans might be padding the figures to obtain additional parts. The committees also pressed the State Department for a clearer sense of how the Libyans would use the armored carriers, but complained they did not get definitive answers. There were also concerns about BAE's role. After months of negotiations with the Justice Department, the parent firm of the British-owned defense giant pleaded guilty in March 2010 to conspiracy and false statements charges, agreeing to pay a $400 million fine in a case involving questionable payments to a Saudi official and offshore shell companies. The State Department then placed a "temporary administrative hold" on weapons export licenses sought by both BAE's British and U.S. entities. The department also said it was considering debarring BAE, a move that would limit the company's ability to export items with U.S.-made content. The State Department has not debarred the defense firm, but BAE's involvement added to uncertainty about the deal, officials said. "I'm a little surprised the right hand at State didn't coordinate with what the left hand at Justice was doing," said William Reinsch, president of the National Foreign Trade Council and a former senior Commerce Department official. In a statement, BAE said that "responsible and ethical business conduct is fundamental to the success of our company and is evident in every aspect of our business, including in our participation in the Foreign Military Sales Program and our compliance with defense export control laws." By summer 2010, the deal was effectively scuttled, stalled by too many doubts. "I think we should have been more careful," Hartung said. "If Gadhafi wanted a quid pro quo, we should have given him oil equipment."
[Associated
Press;
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