U.S. v. Kellogg Brown & Root Services, Inc., 10-cv-530 (RCL) (D.D.C. 2012), presents the interesting case whether a defendant in an international litigation can or should counterclaim litigation, in this case against the U.S. government. The U.S. sued KBR for over $100 million in allegedly false claims arising from the war in Iraq. The government is seeking civil penalties and treble damages. Once the government sued, the defendant had the choice to counterclaim, which it did here. The government then moved to dismiss on a variety of grounds that arise with some frequency in international litigation.
Of particular interest is the government’s invocation of the political question doctine, which the government said “bars judicial second-guessing of the military’s decision making as regards the provision of force protection in Iraq”. As a result, argued the government, “KBR’s challenge to the military’s performance of its contractual obligation to provide force protection is nonjusticiable”.
The Court rejected these defenses...