[Mb-civic] U.S. Reviewing 2nd Dubai Firm - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Mar 2 04:06:53 PST 2006
U.S. Reviewing 2nd Dubai Firm
Israeli Deal Also Faces Security Check
By Jonathan Weisman and Susan Schmidt
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, March 2, 2006; A01
The Bush administration, stung by the public outcry over the Dubai port
deal, has launched a national security investigation of another
Dubai-owned company set to take over plants in Georgia and Connecticut
that make precision components used in engines for military aircraft and
tanks.
The administration notified congressional committees this week that its
secretive Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS)
is investigating the security implications of Dubai International
Capital's $1.2 billion acquisition of London-based Doncasters Group
Ltd., which has subsidiaries in the United States. It is also
investigating an Israeli company's plans to buy the Maryland software
security firm Sourcefire, which does business with Defense Department
agencies.
Administration officials are privately briefing leaders of half a dozen
House and Senate committees this week about the two planned
transactions, concerned that both deals could stir controversy in a
political climate that remains supercharged over the Dubai port deal.
Republican and Democratic lawmakers angrily protested after learning
late last month that the administration had approved a $6.8 billion deal
to allow a maritime company based in the United Arab Emirates to take
over significant operations at six U.S. ports without a thorough
investigation and without consulting members of Congress. Last weekend,
the Dubai maritime company agreed to a 45-day investigation to stem the
protest and allay concerns of a possible breach of U.S. port security.
In the past, the foreign investment committee rarely told Congress of
such inquiries. Wary of another misstep, administration officials
decided to inform lawmakers of the two other pending transactions with
national security implications for the United States.
There have been suggestions in the trade press that the publicly traded
Israeli firm, Check Point Software Technologies, has been subjected to
more scrutiny than Dubai Ports World, the state-owned Arab company that
was initially cleared to take over operations at the six major U.S.
ports with no security investigation. That inquiry was initiated only
after an outcry about turning over port security to a country that has
been cited for ties to terrorism. Sources familiar with the Israeli
investigation said cybersecurity officials at the departments of
Defense, Justice and Homeland Security all raised serious concerns about
the purchase before the port controversy erupted.
Dubai International Capital's acquisition of Doncasters could present
some of the same political problems created by Dubai Ports World's
purchase of London-based Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Co.
Once again, a state-controlled Dubai company with deep pockets is
purchasing a British firm with U.S. holdings. Doncasters has operations
in nine U.S. locations and manufactures precision parts for defense
contractors such as Boeing, Honeywell, Pratt & Whitney and General Electric.
A spokesman for Doncasters' corporate office in Connecticut said the
company had no comment on the security investigation.
Although many foreign companies manufacture parts used in U.S. military
equipment, in this instance CFIUS members decided to look more carefully
at the Doncasters transaction. The CFIUS met last week and tentatively
decided to subject that proposal to a 45-day investigation, and it
finalized that decision in a conference call late Monday. The decision
came on the final day of the regular 30-day review period. Aides on the
Senate banking committee said the panel was notified late Monday that
the CFIUS had initiated both national security inquiries.
"The CFIUS process is charged with determining if there are national
security concerns in any transaction, and it takes that role very
seriously," said Tony Fratto, spokesman for the Treasury Department,
which leads the interagency committee. "It looks at each transaction on
a case-by-case basis, and if security concerns are raised by any member
of the committee at the end of an initial 30-day review, the case goes
into investigation."
The 45-day investigation of the Israeli deal began in early February,
several weeks before the controversy erupted over the Dubai port deal,
administration officials said. The investigation of the Dubai-Doncasters
deal began this week, at the height of the political turmoil over the
port issue.
Yet Fratto said that neither of the new investigations were started
"because of public reaction to some other transaction."
Of the 1,500 acquisitions that have been referred to the CFIUS, one has
been rejected. But deals with security implications tend to fall through
before the 45-day investigation. In 1989, 204 deals involving the
purchase of a company with significant U.S. operations triggered a
security investigation. Last year, only 65 went that far.
In the case of Check Point, the security questions were apparently
raised early on, according to people familiar with the review. Check
Point's proposed $225 million purchase of Laurel-based Sourcefire raised
red flags with government cybersecurity officials.
Check Point was built by Gil Shwed, whom Forbes magazine has described
as an Israeli billionaire who served in the electronic intelligence arm
of the Israeli Defense Forces.
Sourcefire makes network defense and intrusion detection software for an
array of customers, including the Defense Department. The company has
deep roots in the National Security Agency. Its founder and chief
technology officer, Martin Roesch, has served as an NSA contractor. Its
vice president of engineering, Tom Ashoff, developed software for the
secretive spy agency.
Last August, the Israeli government signed an agreement with the
Pentagon to alert the United States before selling other countries
technology related to national security. The United States asked for the
agreement after learning that Israel had sold unmanned aerial vehicles
to China in late 2004.
The CFIUS investigation is to be completed in mid-March.
Check Point officials declined to comment yesterday on the security
investigation. In announcing that its deal would be investigated, the
company released a statement pledging that "Check Point and Sourcefire
are both committed to working cooperatively with the committee during
the investigative period."
In the case of Dubai International Capital and Doncasters, an
acquisition that ordinarily may have been whisked through the process
without objection is now under security investigation, administration
sources said. Dubai International Capital is the financial arm of Dubai
Holding, an investment conglomerate that is the third-largest
shareholder of DaimlerChrysler Corp. and is a major investor in Holiday
Inn Express in the Middle East.
Doncasters' expertise is in forging, fabrication, machining and alloy
production. The company owns a plant that makes aerospace turbine blades
and components in Farmington, Conn.; a turbine and generator plant in
Rincon, Ga.; a steel foundry in Springfield, Mass.; and a metal-rolling
plant in Groton, Conn. The company's Web site says the Georgia and
Connecticut plants manufacture "engine ready airfoils," for aircraft,
helicopter and tank engines.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/01/AR2006030102192.html?nav=hcmodule
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