OBAMA PISSES AWAY $104 BILLION OF YOUR TAX DOLLARS IN AFGHANISTAN

With Eyes on ISIS, America’s $104B in Afghanistan Is Failing

By Brianna Ehley,
The Fiscal Times
September 15, 2014

While the eyes of the world are on Iraq and President Obama’s plans to defeat ISIS, the chief auditor in charge of overseeing the U.S. reconstruction efforts in Afghanistan has a warning to policy makers: Don’t forget about the other war-torn country that has already cost hundreds of billions of dollars and has serious problems with corruption and sustainability.

So far, the United States has poured more than $104 billion into Afghanistan reconstruction efforts – that’s more than all the money spent on reconstructing Europe after World War II. Much of that money, as auditors have noted, has been lost to waste, fraud and abuse. In 2010, SIGAR accountants told The Fiscal Times they could only account for less than 10 percent of that money.

That’s a shocking sum, especially since Congress has already authorized another $16 billion to spend in Afghanistan in the next few years. Still, despite spending an “unprecedented” amount of money to rebuild this country, it has no strategy to weed out corruption – leaving hundreds of billions of tax dollars vulnerable, John Sopko, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) told an audience at Georgetown University on Friday.

“This is astonishing, given that Afghanistan is one of the most corrupt countries in the world and a country that the United States is spending billions of dollars in,” the auditor said. He added that “things could get worse with the drawdown” that is scheduled for the end of 2015.

It’s not just corruption that threatens to derail all of the gains the U.S. has made in the country. Afghanistan, as Sopko noted, has a major problem with sustainability.

Right now, the United States and other international donors fund more than 60 percent of Afghanistan’s national budget of around $7.6 billion. Last year, for example, the Afghan government raised $2 billion in revenues; the rest came from foreign aid, mostly from the United States.

Sopko says in the next few years, the Afghan National Security Forces are going to require a force of 374,000 – at a cost of roughly $5 billion a year. “At these levels, if the Afghan government were to dedicate all of its domestic revenue toward sustaining the Afghan army and police, it still could only pay for about a third of the cost. Moreover, all other costs from paying civil servants to maintaining all roads, schools, hospitals and other non-military infrastructure would also have to come from international donors,” Sopko said. “The bottom line is, it appears we’ve created a government that the Afghans simply cannot afford.”

Sopko is known for being extremely critical of the government agencies involved in reconstruction efforts. He told the audience that the U.S. government has failed to address Afghanistan’s corruption and sustainability issues – which threaten to “jeopardize every gain” the U.S. has made. Meanwhile, he said the government’s counter-narcotics effort has also been a failure and if unaddressed could completely derail any progress the U.S. has made.

“The U.S. has already spent nearly $7.6 billion to combat the opium industry. Yet, by every conceivable metric, we’ve failed,” Sopko said.

Sopko and his team frequently churn out scathing reports highlighting the failures of the Defense and the State Departments in Afghanistan – and many of them receive a wide swath of media attention. This has unsurprisingly sparked some tension between the auditors and officials from the departments being audited who routinely have problems with the IG’s findings. They say that responding to IG reports “chews up countless hours, and that the inspector general’s work ultimately undermines the effort to build stronger civilian institutions here by creating the impression that the United States is simply pouring money down the well,” The New York Times reported.

Sopko says, “SIGAR welcomes publicity because publicity gives our reports and work impact in this town and in Kabul and around the world.” He added, “I admit, some ambassadors and generals and nameless, faceless bureaucrats and contractors are unhappy with the fact we get press coverage, even though our two-person press shop pales in comparison to the squadrons of PR people at Embassy Kabul, ISAF, or the Pentagon. But that is the cost of transparency and open government.”
– See more at: http://www.thefiscaltimes.com/Articles/2014/09/15/Eyes-ISIS-America-s-104B-Afghanistan-Failing#sthash.riTYbKt6.dpuf

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7 Comments
Dutchman
Dutchman
September 16, 2014 3:00 pm

Talk about pissing away money – how about people’s health?

I have come to the realization that these children with the D68 respiratory virus have gotten it from the illegals that are now in their classrooms.

I bet more children will come down with other ‘unusual’ illnesses, that aren’t normally seen in this country.

bb
bb
September 16, 2014 4:41 pm

Hey ,GOD I love me ,I’m so great. After talking real sweet to a gal at the IRS she lowered my tax bill for back taxes they claimed I owed. She cut it from 6000+ down to 3000+..3000 may not seem like A lot of money but finally I feel like I won something. Never felt like this before after taking the IRS .I still got to pay taxes so we can fight wars but right now I feel great.

Ottomatik
Ottomatik
September 16, 2014 8:40 pm

Im sure all of the opium processing and dustribution facilities avcount for a lot of the “missing” funds.

mabuk
mabuk
September 16, 2014 9:13 pm

“The bottom line is, it appears we’ve created a government that the Afghans simply cannot afford.”

In seeking to avoid the mistakes of previous empires, we succeed in inventing an entirely new class of blunders. American foreign policy of the past several decades has been a cargo cult of wishful thinking, from Vietnam forward. We have engineered for the people of Afghanistan a perfect unfunded system, a reflection of our own ethereal society, one built without earthly concerns about cost and sustainability lacking only our paper-to-wealth alchemy. What made these Ivy League armchair nation-builders think that our magical system of fiat currency and rule of law could be easily grafted onto these faraway and ancient societies, or that the exchange would be a sterile affair, that their systems of corruption, purposefully opaque, indirect and byzantine, would not seep back from client to host again? 100 billion dollars unaccounted for and no one cares, that is a signal that the vox populi has been silenced, dollars stuffed in their mouths to buy off their silence — the majority of Americans no doubt recognize their complicity in all of this corruption.

Econman
Econman
September 16, 2014 11:50 pm

Cuban SIGARS are still the best!

Econman
Econman
September 16, 2014 11:54 pm

Afghanistan literally has an FSA courtesy of the USA.

Insane McCain will take a picture with them, Obomber will armvthem, & later will say we have to take down the notorious Free Shit Army.