Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Oracle loses appeal over Pentagon cloud contract

- NAOMI NIX AND SUSAN DECKER

A U.S. appeals court rejected Oracle Corp.’s challenges to the Pentagon’s disputed $10 billion cloud-computing contract.

Oracle had raised a number of issues, including allegation­s of conflicts of interest involving Amazon.com Inc., and claims the Pentagon violated its own rules when it set up the contract to be awarded to a single firm. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit on Wednesday affirmed a lower court ruling that Oracle wasn’t harmed by any errors the Pentagon made in developing the contract proposal because it wouldn’t have qualified for the contract anyway.

“Notwithsta­nding the extensive array of claims raised by Oracle, we find no reversible error” in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims’s decision to reject those arguments, Circuit Judge William Bryson wrote for the three-judge panel.

Oracle was fighting its exclusion from seeking the lucrative cloud-computing deal, known as the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastruc­ture, or JEDI. The Pentagon awarded the contract to Microsoft Corp. in October over market leader Amazon Web Services. The project, which is valued at as much as $10 billion over a decade, is designed to help the Pentagon consolidat­e its technology programs and quickly move informatio­n to military units around the world.

Oracle argued that the Defense Department unfairly and unnecessar­ily tailored the minimum contract requiremen­ts for Amazon and Microsoft. The company also alleged that the bidding process was fatally tainted by conflicts of interest, including former Pentagon employees who went on to work for Amazon after helping to craft the bid.

The Federal Circuit agreed with the Defense Department that it “used competitiv­e procedures,” rejecting Oracle’s argument that a requiremen­t for data center capabiliti­es ensured only Amazon and Microsoft would qualify for bidding. The panel also found the conflict-of-interest allegation­s raised by Oracle to be “troubling” but ultimately “had no effect on the JEDI Cloud solicitati­on.”

Defense Department spokesman Russell Goemaere said in a statement that the appeals court affirmed the Federal Claims Court’s earlier ruling and rejected Oracle’s arguments.

Amazon and Microsoft declined to comment. Representa­tives from Oracle didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The ruling is a win for the Pentagon, which over the past three years has faced criticism from lawmakers, industry and even President Donald

Trump over its decision to choose just one company for the lucrative cloud deal. The Defense Department has said picking one vendor for the project would reduce its technical complexity and security risks.

The Pentagon also faces vendor bias allegation­s in a separate lawsuit by Amazon Web Services, Amazon’s cloud unit. That suit involves claims the Defense Department failed to fairly judge its bid because Trump viewed Amazon chief executive Jeff Bezos as his “political enemy.” Trump has long criticized Bezos over everything from the shipping rates his company pays the U.S. Postal Service to his ownership of

The Washington Post, which heavily scrutinize­s his administra­tion.

A Federal Claims court judge paused proceeding­s in that case while the Pentagon revisits its decision to award the deal to Microsoft.

Government lawyers said the Defense Department wanted to reevaluate elements of the bidders’ price proposals and online marketplac­es. The Pentagon has until Sept. 16th to complete its review.

The Defense Department’s inspector general found in April that the contract award wasn’t affected by any interferen­ce from Trump, though it said its probe was limited by the White House.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States