[Anyone] Wasting away in Iraqiville:

Thos Myers totem at laplaza.org
Wed Jan 31 09:35:35 MST 2007


U.S. Wasted Millions in Iraq Aid, Investigators Say
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Filed at 6:42 a.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The U.S. government wasted tens of millions of
dollars in Iraq reconstruction aid, including scores of unaccounted-for
weapons and a never-used camp for housing police trainers with an
Olympic-size swimming pool, investigators say.

The quarterly audit by Stuart Bowen Jr., the special inspector general
for Iraq reconstruction, is the latest to paint a grim picture of waste,
fraud and frustration in an Iraq war and reconstruction effort that has
cost taxpayers more than $300 billion and left the region near civil
war.

''The security situation in Iraq continues to deteriorate, hindering
progress in all reconstruction sectors and threatening the overall
reconstruction effort,'' according to the 579-page report, which was
being released Wednesday.

Calling Iraq's sectarian violence the greatest challenge, Bowen said in
a telephone interview that billions in U.S. aid spent on strengthening
security has had limited effect. Reconstruction now will fall largely on
Iraqis to manage -- and they're nowhere ready for the task.

The audit comes as President Bush is pressing Congress to approve $1.2
billion in new reconstruction aid as part of his broader plan to
stabilize Iraq by sending 21,500 more U.S. troops to Baghdad and Anbar
province.

Democrats in Congress have been skeptical. Virginia Sen. Jim Webb has
suggested that the U.S. is spending too much on Iraq reconstruction at
the expense of Hurricane Katrina rebuilding in New Orleans, while
California Rep. Henry Waxman plans in-depth hearings next week into
charges of Iraq waste and fraud.

According to the report, the State Department paid $43.8 million to
contractor DynCorp International for the residential camp for police
training personnel outside of Baghdad's Adnan Palace grounds that has
stood empty for months. About $4.2 million of the money was improperly
spent on 20 VIP trailers and an Olympic-size pool, all ordered by the
Iraqi Ministry of Interior but never authorized by the U.S.

U.S. officials spent another $36.4 million for weapons such as armored
vehicles, body armor and communications equipment that can't be
accounted for. DynCorp also may have prematurely billed $18 million in
other potentially unjustified costs, the report said.

Responding, the State Department said in the report that it was working
to improve controls. Already, it has developed a review process that
rejected a $1.1 million DynCorp bill earlier this month on a separate
contract because the billed rate was incorrect.

A spokesman for DynCorp, Greg Lagana, did not immediately return a phone
message seeking comment.

Bowen, whose office was nearly eliminated last month by
administration-friendly Republicans in Congress, called spending waste
in Iraq a continuing problem. Corruption is high among Iraqi officials,
while U.S. contract management remains somewhat weak.

With America's $21 billion rebuilding effort largely finished, it will
be up to the international community and the Iraqis to step up its
dollars to sustain reconstruction, Bowen said in the interview. ''That
will be a long-term and very expensive process,'' he said.

According to the report:

--Major U.S. contractors in Iraq, including Bechtel National and
Kellogg, Brown and Root Services Inc., said they devoted an average 12.5
percent of their total expenses for security.

--Bowen's office opened 27 new criminal probes in the last quarter,
bringing the total number of active cases to 78. Twenty-three are
awaiting prosecutorial action by the Justice Department, most of them
centering on charges of bribery and kickbacks.

Still, ''fraud has not been a significant component of the U.S.
experience in Iraq,'' Bowen said.

As of the end of 2006, contracts had been let for all of the $21 billion
Congress put into the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund it created in
2003. Some 80 percent of the money has been paid out, the report said.

Since 2003, use of the reconstruction aid changed several times as U.S.
officials shifted priorities to spend more on security problems or
programs critical to supporting elections or developing the new
government.

For example, money was cut from what had been originally planned for
electricity, water, oil projects and transportation and communication so
it could be used to help pay for such things as health care, elections,
democracy programs and training Iraqi security forces.

Overall, the largest single expense was security. The total was spent in
the following way:

--34 percent for security and justice.

--23 percent to try to generate and distribute electricity. Still, the
report noted, output in the last quarter averaged below pre-war levels.

--12 percent for water.

--12 percent for economic and societal development.

--9 percent for oil and gas.

--4 percent for transportation and communications.

--4 percent for health care.

Auditors had ''significant concern'' about the way ahead, partly because
of the Iraqi government's bad track record on budgeting for such
projects, the report said. It said the Iraqi government had ''billions
of budgeted dollars remained unspent at the end of 2006.''

Unemployment remains high, contributing to the insurgency because it
sours the population and leaves idle young men to their own devices,
according to the report.

The government's ''most significant challenge continues to be
strengthening rule-of-law institutions -- the judiciary, prisons and the
police,'' the report said. ''The United States has spent billions of
dollars in this area, with limited success to date.''

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