Amazon wants Trump to testify on 'order to screw Amazon' in Pentagon deal

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A US judge on Thursday granted Amazon's request to temporarily halt the US Department of Defence and Microsoft Corp from moving forward on a cloud computing deal that Amazon claims reflected influence by US President.
Amazon.com alleged that President Donald Trump (right), who has publicly derided Amazon head Jeff Bezos and repeatedly criticised the company, exerted undue influence on the decision to deny it the US$10 billion contract. PHOTOS: REUTERS, AFP

WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - Amazon Web Services said on Monday (Feb 10) it was seeking the testimony of United States President Donald Trump and Defence Secretary Mark Esper in its lawsuit over whether the President was trying "to screw Amazon" when the Pentagon awarded a contract for cloud computing to rival Microsoft Corp.

The Amazon.com alleged that Mr Trump, who has publicly derided Amazon head Jeff Bezos and repeatedly criticised the company, exerted undue influence on the decision to deny it the US$10 billion (S$13.8 billion) contract.

Known as the Joint Enterprise Defence Infrastructure Cloud, or JEDI, the contract is intended to give the military better access to data and technology from remote locations.

In the lawsuit, Amazon said it seeks discovery "demonstrating exactly how President Trump's order to 'screw Amazon' was carried out during the decision making process".

Without this, "the Court cannot objectively and fully evaluate AWS' credible and well-grounded allegations about bias and bad faith", the lawsuit said.

Mr Bezos also owns the Washington Post, whose coverage has been critical of Mr Trump.

Along with Mr Trump and Mr Esper, Amazon seeks to question former defence secretary James Mattis, Pentagon chief information officer Dana Deasy and four other procurement officials, court records show.

An Amazon spokesman said: "President Trump has repeatedly demonstrated his willingness to use his position as President and Commander in Chief to interfere with government functions - including federal procurements - to advance his personal agenda.

"The question is whether the President of the United States should be allowed to use the budget of the DoD to pursue his own personal and political ends," the spokesman added.

The lawsuit also says Amazon's protest against the decision occurs against the background of impeachment, "which is grounded in the President's repeated refusal to separate his personal interests from the national interest". President Trump has been acquitted on impeachment charges by the Republican-controlled Senate.

The lawsuit also mentions other instances of alleged interference from Mr Trump.

For example, his alleged interference in the US Army Corps of Engineers' award of a US$400 million border wall contract to Fisher Industries in December 2019 and a report that he intervened in the General Services Administration's solicitation of bids to move the FBI's headquarters to a new campus in the suburbs.

The current FBI offices are near a Washington hotel owned by Mr Trump's company.

The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The White House declined to comment.

Last month, Amazon filed a motion in court to delay the Department of Defence deal with Microsoft until a court rules on its protest of the contract award.

The procurement process has been delayed by legal complaints and conflict of interest allegations. Mr Esper has denied there was bias and said the Pentagon made its choice fairly and freely without external influence.

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