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Author Topic:   The U,S, has wasted BILLIONS- one example
Node
Knowflake

Posts: 2150
From: 1,981 mi East of Truth or Consequences NM
Registered: Apr 2009

posted March 22, 2013 05:00 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Node     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
http://thinkprogress.org/security/2013/03/06/1679601/sigir-final-lessons-learn ed-iraq/?mobile=nc

U.S. Wasted Billions Rebuilding Iraq

By Hayes Brown on Mar 6, 2013 at 10:12 am


As the 10th anniversary of President George W. Bush’s invasion of Iraq approaches, the body charged with overseeing Iraq’s reconstruction has issued its final report, capping a tale of spending far too much money for very little results.

Appointed in Oct. 2004, over a year into War in Iraq, the Special Inspector-General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) was charged with being a watchdog over the use of funds provided for rebuilding the Iraqi state after the downfall of Saddam Hussein. Those reconstruction and stabilization efforts wound up costing nearly $60 billion — or about $15 million per day — with up to $10 billion of that amount wasted, according to SIGIR Stuart Bowen.

The examples provided of fraud and abuse of the system are staggering both in number and nature. Among the most telling boondoggles is an $108 million waste-water treatment facility in Fallujah, Iraq that will be completed eight years over schedule. Once finished in 2014, it will only service 9,000 homes and require an additional $87 million from Iraq to provide service to the rest of the buildings in the city.

In terms of outright abuse, Iraqis and Americans alike were culprits, with one former Iraqi Defense Minister’s squandering $1.3 billion. Earmarked to provide for an Iraqi “quick reaction force,” the money was instead spent on various bribes, kickbacks, and purchasing useless equipment. Likewise, former U.S. Army Major John Cockerham was sentenced to 17.5 years in prison for siphoning off millions of dollars from reconstruction projects by accepting bribes from various contractors.

The majority of Bowen’s lessons learned provided to Congress deal extensively with the completely unprepared way in which the United States chose to rebuild Iraq. Bowen gives seven ways to better perform rebuilding operations in the future:

1. Create an integrated civilian-military office to plan, execute, and be accountable for contingency rebuilding activities during stabilization and reconstruction operations.

2. Begin rebuilding only after establishing sufficient security, and focus first on small programs and projects.

3. Ensure full host-country engagement in program and project selection, securing commitments to share costs (possibly through loans) and agreements to sustain completed projects after their transfer.

4. Establish uniform contracting, personnel, and information management systems that all SRO participants use.

5. Require robust oversight of SRO activities from the operation’s inception.

6. Preserve and refine programs developed in Iraq, like the Commander’s Emergency Response Program and the Provincial Reconstruction Team program, that produced successes when used judiciously.

7. Plan in advance, plan comprehensively and in an integrated fashion, and have backup plans ready to go.

Many of those suggestions belie the cavalier attitude struck by Republicans at the beginning of the war in 2003, despite a near complete lack of planning by the Bush administration to provide for rebuilding Iraq. “Each day it gets better,” then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld said in May 2003 of the reconstruction efforts. Rumsfeld also insisted that “the bulk of the funds for Iraq’s reconstruction will come from Iraqis” in October of that year. $60 billion later, Iraq has proved to be nowhere near the “cakewalk” predicted by George W. Bush adviser Kenneth Adelman predicted in 2002.


Where is the Right outrage bout these abuses? Where are the fiscally conservative? They exist, but are shouted down.

Infrastructure [the ones that exist] are defined in U.S. terms and materials. Concrete with steel beams in building for one example. The Iraqis are not allowed to use native materials, that are not only more cost efficient, they are energy efficient, you don't have to use air conditioning etc for natural materials that have been used for centuries

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Faith
Knowflake

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Registered: Jul 2011

posted March 22, 2013 05:15 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Faith     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
From other reading I've done, and videos I've seen, I had the impression that there was even more waste involved than that.

It goes without saying that it's absolutely horrific what the US did to Iraq. And some of it can't be fixed or rebuilt no matter what the cost.

Children Deformed by Depleted Uranium in Iraq

"Birth defects in Fallujah 14x higher than in Hiroshima or Nagasaki after atomic bombs were dropped."

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katatonic
Knowflake

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posted March 22, 2013 08:17 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for katatonic     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Not to mention he sold us to china without so much as a by-your-leave.

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