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Iraq: Five years later

By PETER KADZIS  |  March 12, 2008

You hold that this war is the second most expensive war in our nation’s history, that only World War II was more expensive. How can this be so? How can we be spending more in Iraq, where we have about 160,000 troops, than we did in Korea, with 1.5 million soldiers, or Vietnam, with 550,000?
The main reason is we are spending more per soldier by an order of magnitude. Previous wars cost about $50,000 per troop. We’re spending $400,000 per troop. Now you can ask, why is that? Part of it has to do with the way we use expensive private contractors to do what the military used to do. Expensive contractors or single-source bidding is an invitation to high prices. You don’t have competitive forces at play. We have even reduced the number of financial auditors.

Then there is the conduct of being penny-wise and pound-foolish. For instance, at the beginning of the war we deferred maintenance. We used up our equipment faster than we repaired it. You can do that for a while. And Washington may have thought they could get away with it because they thought the war would be short. Washington figured it could bury these costs into the overall defense budget so it wouldn’t go under the Iraq War bill. But five years later, five years after “Mission Accomplished,” that strategy of deferral backfires.

Everybody knows that the reason why you want to keep maintenance up to date is that, if you postpone maintenance, the bills get larger. And that is precisely what happened. At the beginning of the war we were spending about $4 billion a month. Now we’re spending $12 billion in Iraq alone — $16 billion with Afghanistan. The cost of everything in the war zones is skyrocketing.

How do we leave Iraq now?
It’s very clear the Bush administration didn’t think very much about an exit strategy. It has punted the ball, left the problem with the next president.

Most people recognize that we will have to exit at some point. We may not have a choice. Iraq may tell us to go. It’s a lot better for us to go before we are told to go. I don’t think we want to be in the business of replacing governments that tell us to go. We’ve already been in one regime change.

To stay in Iraq for four more years will cost $1.2 trillion. That’s $12 billion a month in upfront costs, plus that amount again in veteran’s benefits and health-care costs. So the total cost per month is $25 billion. The total annual cost is $300 billion. These numbers don’t take into account the fact that costs are rising every month, so these numbers are conservative.

Okay, that’s a lot of money. When we leave, there may be chaos or things may get better. Most Iraqis think when we leave things will get better, but no one can know for sure. But that’s not the issue. The issue is, if we leave now versus leaving four years from now, will things be that much better four years from now? Or that much less bad, that it’s worth spending $1.2 trillion?

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Comments
Iraq: Five years later
The point of the war was/is oil: Produce it and sell it by "American" companies,the neocons "Halliburton Energy Services" is one of them.
By Dr. Yehia Badran on 03/13/2008 at 1:18:23
Iraq: Five years later
The often cited reason for the war was to establish a democracy in the Middle East.We now know for sure that the Shiite clerics are calling a lot of the shots in Iraq and it will result in at best a theoracy. Our founding fathers were very careful and wise to avoid religious influence in goverment. What are our people dieing for ?
By Gabe on 03/13/2008 at 10:17:49
Iraq: Five years later
At the outset, the war was branded "Shock and Awe." As good an explanation as any might be this transposed passage from "Tree of Smoke" by Denis Johnson: "Intelligence data, analysis be damned; to hell with reason, categories, synthesis, common sense. All was ideology and imagery and conjuring. Fires to light the minds and heat the acts of men. And cow their consciences. Fireworks, all of it--not just the stuff of history, but the stuff of reality itself..."
By C Lovett on 03/13/2008 at 11:20:44
Iraq: Five years later
I truly believe that Bush went into Iraq on a personal note. The fact that Saddam threatened Bush sr. naturally his neo-con son saw fit to avenge his father. For the blame "the blame America first" crowd who else should we blame? Now that Iraq is clearly on its way to becoming Irans friend in the region and an Islamic Republic just like its neighbor congratulations to George Bush and his mis-guided party for beliving that these people want, need or even understand what democracy is never mind practice it you failed miserably and many have died for it and now as an American middle class citizen I struggle day in and day out trying to make ends meet but to spend trillions on a country that has more oil than sand it boggles the mind, just one question how much of those trillions did Halliburton get?
By snappa on 03/14/2008 at 8:35:16
Iraq: Five years later
We chased the Taliban out of Afghanastan, we chased Al-Queda out of Afghanastan, we chased Saddam out of Iraq, now what we are left with. Pakistan must deal with both the Taliban and Al-Queda trying to destabalize Pakistan which I might add is a NUCLEAR country once its overthrown Bin-Laden will have access to all the NUCLEAR bombs he will ever need. In Iraq we have Al-Maliki kissing up to Irans president because they so much in common thanks to bush why these people are not indicted is beyond me. President Clinton lied about having sex with some female George Bush has the blood of THOUSANDS of people on his hands for NO GOOD REASON and yet he is still the president????? WHAT A COUNTRY.
By snappa on 03/14/2008 at 8:50:10

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