Produced by: 
KBOO
Program:: 
Air date: 
Wed, 02/25/2009 - 8:00am to 9:00am
Pratap Chatterjee talks about why the privatized, outsourced military Barack Obama has inherited from the Bush administration will prove a done deal. Pratap Chatterjee's article, "The Military's Expanding Waistline, What Will Obama Do with KBR?," appears at http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175036.
 Pratap Chatterjee is an investigative journalist and producer and  the program, director/managing editor of Corpwatch. He is the author of Iraq  Inc.: A Profitable Occupation and The Earth Brokers. He hosted a  weekly radio show on Berkeley station KPFA, was a global environment editor for  InterPress Service, and wrote for the Financial Times, the  Guardian, and the Independent of London. He has won five Project  Censored awards as well as a Silver Reel from the National Federation of  Community Broadcasters for his work in Afghanistan, and the best business story  award from the National Newspaper Association (U.S.), among others. He has  appeared as a commentator on numerous radio and television shows ranging from  BBC World Service, CNN International, Democracy Now!, Fox, and MSNBC. The winner  of a Lannan Cultural Freedom Award in 2006, he lives in Oakland,  California.
Pratap Chatterjee is an investigative journalist and producer and  the program, director/managing editor of Corpwatch. He is the author of Iraq  Inc.: A Profitable Occupation and The Earth Brokers. He hosted a  weekly radio show on Berkeley station KPFA, was a global environment editor for  InterPress Service, and wrote for the Financial Times, the  Guardian, and the Independent of London. He has won five Project  Censored awards as well as a Silver Reel from the National Federation of  Community Broadcasters for his work in Afghanistan, and the best business story  award from the National Newspaper Association (U.S.), among others. He has  appeared as a commentator on numerous radio and television shows ranging from  BBC World Service, CNN International, Democracy Now!, Fox, and MSNBC. The winner  of a Lannan Cultural Freedom Award in 2006, he lives in Oakland,  California. 
         
