Daily Kos

Official Report to Congress: Iraq War Prepared In 2001

Thu Apr 27, 2006 at 09:10:28 AM PDT

via Moon of Alabama

The non-partisan Congressional Research Service has made a new estimate for the costs of the War on Iraq and War on Afghanistan. Like often, the Washington Post in reporting this buries the lead and the day's real headline in the second last paragraph of a page A16 story:

Of the total war spending, the CRS analysis found $4 billion that could not be tracked. It did identify $2.5 billion diverted from other spending authorizations in 2001 and 2002 to prepare for the invasion.

To my knowledge, this makes the CRS report the first official one to confirm the invasion of Iraq has been actively persued since 2001.

Old news you may say, but so far there were only anonymous sources and very few named people who had alleged this.

Now this is officialy acknowledged in a non-partisan report to Congress. Why does that fact not deserve an A01 headline?

To answer that question seems to be above my capabilities.

So let us take a look at the reported CRS estimate. It does include some money for diplomatic issues, but not longterm health and benefit costs for veterans like some other recent studies did.

The CRS comes away with $320 billion for Iraq after the recent emergency spending bill will have passed. But that is only the money needed up to this point. Even with troop reductions beginning this year, CRS estimates the total costs for War on Iraq and Afghanistan at $811 billion. Though troop number were much higher then, the inflation adjusted Vietnam total was a cheap $549 billion.

Still, this is only some $6,300 per taxpayer, $105 per month over 5 years. The U.S. will not go bankcrupt spending this, but it is an investment that is unlikely to give a good return, if any at all.

The more important economic impact is through gas prices. The war tax or "risk premium" included in crude prices these days may be some $25 per barrel or, with U.S. consumption at 22 million barrels per day, $550 million per day. Over five years this accumulates to a decent 1 Trillion (that is a one with twelve zeroes) U.S. Dollars.

Part of this sum, like part of the war costs, will go back to U.S. pockets. But only to those people who own Exxon Mobil or Halliburton shares.

This is probably the biggest transfer of wealth from the people to an elite the world has ever seen.

What is most disturbing to me in the CRS study is the intransparency of the spending.

"Although DOD has a financial system that tracks funds for each operation once they are obligated -- as pay or contractual costs -- DOD has not sent Congress the semiannual reports with cumulative and current obligations for [Iraq] and [Afghanistan], or estimates for the next year, or for the next five years that are required by statute," the CRS noted.

The Defense Department is, illegally, blocking any oversight.

The report goes on to outline a series of "key war cost questions" for Congress to pursue and "major unknowns" that CRS has not been able to answer: How much has Congress appropriated for each theater of war? How much has the Pentagon obligated for each mission per month? What will future costs be? How much will it cost to repair and replace equipment? And how can Congress receive accurate information on past and future troop levels?

CRS is the Congress' and the people's controlling element that must find answers to these questions. I find it incredible that they are not able to do so, even if they put specific efforts into it.

Of the total war spending, the CRS analysis found $4 billion that could not be tracked.

Could not be tracked? Four billion? That may be small change in the bigger picture, still, where did Rumsfeld spend that money?

Your guess? Moon of Alabama

Tags: Iraq, war start, Washington Post (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 22 comments

  •  ARGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH (10+ / 0-)

    (breathe in.....)
    ARGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
    (another breath...)
    ARGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH HHHHHHHHHHHHH
    (Banging head on keyboard.... (note to self: that hurts.)

  •  The legacy of George W. Bush (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    BurnetO
     From the diary :  This is probably the biggest transfer
    of wealth from the people to an elite the world has ever seen
    .
         Bush slammed the accelerator pedal to the floor,
    making this transfer of wealth possible. That's bad
    enough, but all the other negatives were accelerated
    as well. The worst kind of snowball (domino?) effect
    that I ever care to see coming from the USA. Where
    do we go from here? Watergate was follow the money,
    that can't be fully done here, how about : Cause and
    effect. (Pelosi's words the other day). Heavy on the
    effect.
  •  Some might be there (0+ / 0-)

    I just saw an article in the online USATODAY about the CIA and it's 1000 flights:
    http://www.usatoday.com/...

    They had to pay for those flight somewhere?

    It was a time of desperate need for heroes - any kind of heroes. "Twice Upon a Time"

    by doingbusinessas on Thu Apr 27, 2006 at 09:45:43 AM PDT

  •  Pay Me Now and Pay Me Later (0+ / 0-)

    Pay at the pump and pay back the debt- double tax without representation.

  •  The machinery of the Police State. (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    thor, BurnetO, Yellow Canary

    That's where the money goes. Dismantle FEMA and have the DoD take over its 'functions.' Dismantle most of government and have the DoD run the show, hiring mercenaries and other 'private contractors' who hold no allegiance to uphold the Constitution or behave in accordance with the UCMJ.

    MEK in Iran?
  •  This should be front paged!!! (8+ / 0-)

    This should be on Lou Dobbs, while he's pontificating on illegal aliens.

    And this is exhibit B in the class warfare that is going to erupt into more than words if Congress doesn't get a fricking clue and act in their role to protect citizens from abuses of power by the moneyed and their elected puppets.

    The first is the tiny, tiny percentage of filthy rich worthless pieces of Paris Hilton-ite crap who lobby against the estate tax. What did she ever do to earn the money she spends, while a teacher or firefighter works hard doing something that's actually useful? That actually protects and defends democracy by increasing literacy or saving lives?

    ARE THERE ANY OF YOU IN ELECTED OFFICE WHO ARE NOT THE BUTT BOYS OF THE RICH?

    I don't care if you are shocked or annoyed or put off by my language. I am a single mother of two who had no insurance for years after being a stay-at-home mom, whose marriage came apart because of a spouse's mental illness, and through no fault of my own, but who  tried and tried to help, who deals with an autistic child and his brother, who works a job, attends graduate school to get insurance now and a job that will pay a living wage soon, who sacrificed my goals so that my children could have some stability, and who then gets shat upon by my govt. who blames people like me for the vissitudes of life.

    I no more deserve what has happened in my life than the Paris Hilton twerps deserve what happened in theirs at the first moment of birth.

    I was a Phi Beta Kappa student. I was invited to apply for a Rhodes scholarship (I couldn't. I was married.) I received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (which, btw, is a very small grant) for my work as an emerging artist before everthing fell apart. Why should Paris Hilton deserve any of her largesse? How hard did she work to obtain anything? I came from a family whose grandparents did not have an indoor toilet....this was in the mid-1960s in the mid-south, fwiw.  I was in the first generation of my family to attend college. I'm white, btw, in case anyone's stereotypes are on dolby. I had no connections to anyone, no family friend to give me a easy-in to this place or that. I didn't want that, actually. I wanted to achieve soemthing for myself, but then, it would be sort of nice if this country did not glorify stupidity and vapidness.

    but then, look who's president.

    If this abuse by the rich and their toadies does not stop, a pox on all your houses. You do not deserve to represent the American people.

  •  four words we need to make commonplace (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    thor, Hornito, cotterperson

    Total.Cost.of.Ownership

    That gets you from the lowball number of 800 Billion to the still lowball number of 1 Trillion and headed towards the more realistic number of 2 Trillion.  

  •  FRONT PAGE THIS (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Hornito, BurnetO

    -9.00, -5.85
    The reward for courage is trust. -- John Edwards

    by Wintermute on Fri Apr 28, 2006 at 03:04:00 AM PDT

  •  I am wondering about something. (0+ / 0-)

    There is enough evidence available that certain people had planned
    this war in Iraq far ahead of 9/11 and those people were picked for
    positions in the Government from which they could make it happen.

    So what I have been wondering is.

    I understand that about the only way we can actually remove GWB is by
    impeachment, which isn't going to happen with a Repug control of both
    houses, but what if ?

    There was a massive outcry and I do mean that it would take a huge one,
    to demand a special prosecutor to investigate the group that led us into
    this mess. That would be all of them other than the that dimwit idoit we
    have inhabiting the White House. We can deal with him by judicial means
    once he is out of office if enough demand is there.

    Wouldn't it be some recourse where we could pursue the others in the
    group who conspired to have this war? I know that there must be some
    law that governs such actions, or at least I would think so.

    I am beginning to feel like a man with no country. That country died when we failed to stand up for what is right.

    by eaglecries on Fri Apr 28, 2006 at 04:34:13 AM PDT

  •  Front Page Please!! n/t (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    BurnetO

    ELECT LIBERAL PROGRESSIVES NOW!

    by Hornito on Fri Apr 28, 2006 at 04:34:32 AM PDT

  •  I remember reading that already in (0+ / 0-)

    early (~Feb) 2002 the US was beefing up the staging areas and US bases along the Kuwait-Iraq border areas and moving and prepositioning lots of equipment/supplies into the Middle East near Iraq.

    It would be very interesting to get the details and precise dates under which the  $2.4 Billion in invasion planning funds was rebudgeted for, encumbered and paid out during 2001/2002.  

  •  George 'Bechtel' Schultz sent Rummy a jun '02 fax (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    BurnetO

    to the Pentagon, which Col Karen Kwiatkoski saw at the time, in which George Schultz basically says to  Rummy  'lets get together and do lunch after the Iraq Victory'  That was in June of 2002.

    KWIATKOWSKI: Yes, those - and those are just the top guys. If you go down to the next level, you’re going to see guys that I actually know who were assigned into the Pentagon doing political appointed type work on policy, yes. Yes, very influential. And really, if you want to study neo-conservatism, you’ve got quite a few key names there, as well as some folks that people would consider to be more traditional conservatives. But, I can tell you, I’ll tell you something about George Shultz, that - there was a fax that came into the office. It wasn’t for me. I happened to get it, and I looked at this fax. It was a short note from George Shultz, who was on - who at that time, I don’t know if he still is - but he was on the Defense Policy Board, along with Richard Perle. It was a fax, a copy of a fax that he had sent to Don Rumsfeld in June of 2002, June of 2002 I believe it was. It was the summer of 2002.
    And on this fax, it was a short, one-note thing, from Shultz to Rummy. Basically, we have to get together and talk about what we do after the victory in Iraq, and this was in the summer of 2002, long before even the president and the vice president had begun their round of why we fight-type propaganda speeches.

    LAMB: As you started seeing this, did you take notes?

    Source: April 2, 2006 Kwiatkowski interview on CSPAN Q&A

Permalink | 22 comments