The
Most Expensive War in 60 Years
by
Kevin B. Zeese
by Kevin B. Zeese
The
Institute for Policy Studies recently published an analysis of the
cost of the Iraq War and occupation, "The
Iraq Quagmire: The Mounting Costs of War and the Case for Bringing
Home the Troops." The study was co-authored by two prominent
researchers and writers, Phyllis Bennis and Eric Leaver. Bennis
is a fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), is the author
of the forthcoming Challenging
Empire: How People, Governments, and the U.N. Defy U.S. Power
(Interlink Publishing, Northampton MA, October 2005). Leaver
is a research fellow at IPS and serves as the policy outreach director
for the Foreign Policy In Focus project.
Kevin
Zeese: Your study, "The
Iraq Quagmire: The Mounting Costs of War and the Case for Bringing
Home the Troops," examines the economic and human costs of
the Iraq War and occupation. Let's start with the economic
costs. How does the cost of the Iraq War compare to previous
wars in the last Century?
Leaver:
The Iraq War is the most expensive military effort in the last 60
years.
To
put Iraq War spending figures in perspective, the monthly cost of
the Iraq and Afghan wars now rivals the average monthly cost of
the Vietnam War. Operations costs in Iraq are estimated at $5.6
billion per month in 2005 while the average cost of U.S. operations
in Vietnam was $5.1 billion per month, adjusting for inflation.
In current dollars, the Vietnam War cost $600 billion.
Zeese:
There have been numerous spending bills related to the Iraq War.
How much has been appropriated so far? What is coming down the pipeline?
Where is the money going?
Leaver:
In 2002, White House Economic Advisor Lawrence Lindsey was fired
after predicting that an Iraq war would cost between $100 billion
and $200 billion. As it turned out, Lindsey low-balled the cost.
Congress
has approved four spending bills for Iraq with funds totaling $204.4
billion and is in the process of approving a "bridge fund"
for an additional $45.3 billion to cover operations until another
supplemental spending package can be passed, most likely slated
for Spring 2006. Rumors have the next supplemental pegged at $30
billion.
The
lion’s share of the funding goes toward daily operations followed
next by purchases of new equipment. Money is also spent on maintenance
of equipment and in providing funds to coalition members and in
training Iraqi troops. Unlike the hurricane relief efforts where
money is specifically targeted to victims, Iraqis are not receiving
much of this funding.
Zeese:
What is the impact of the cost of the Iraq War on the federal budget?
We've heard talk that the budget cuts related to the Louisiana flooding
were impacted by the Iraq War; is there any truth to this?
Leaver:
These expenses have long-term effects on the U.S. economy. In August
2005, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that the cost of
continuing the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan at current levels would
nearly double the projected federal budget deficit over the next
10 years.
In
June 2004, Walter Maestri, emergency management chief for Jefferson
Parish, said to The Times-Picayune: "It appears that the
money has been moved in the president's budget to handle homeland
security and the war in Iraq, and I suppose that's the price we
pay." Ron Fournier of The Associated Press reported that the Army
Corps of Engineers asked for $105 million for hurricane and flood
programs in New Orleans last year. The White House carved it to
about $40 million. Clearly trade-offs were made in the budget process.
And while funds were being cut for projects at home, the administration
was pushing for facilities in Iraq such as the 500 million dollar
embassy.
Zeese:
How about the impact on other social programs and veterans' benefits?
Leaver:
The Bush administration’s combination of massive spending on the
war and tax cuts for the wealthy means less money for social spending.
The Administration’s FY 2006 budget, which does not include any
funding for the Iraq War, takes a hard line with domestic spending slashing
or eliminating more than 150 federal programs. It also virtually
freezes funding for domestic discretionary programs other than homeland
security. Among the programs the Bush administration seeks to eliminate:
vocational and adult education, a number of programs associated
with community development, environmental protection agency grants,
low-income home energy assistance, disease control, substance abuse,
Occupational Safety and Health Administration, and public safety.
The
VA projected that 23,553 veterans would return from Iraq and Afghanistan
in 2005 and seek medical care. In June 2005, the VA Secretary, Jim
Nicholson, revised this number to 103,000. The miscalculation led
to a shortfall of $273 million in the VA budget for 2005 and with
between ¼ and 1/3 of all returning soldiers needing care at a VA
facility these costs are going to skyrocket in future years.
Zeese:
What is the impact of the war-occupation on the Iraqi economy?
Leaver:
Unemployment figures today range from 20 percent to 60 percent.
By comparison, during the Great Depression, U.S. unemployment peaked
at 25 percent. The effects have been disastrous for the Iraqi people.
Up to 60 percent of the population depends on food handouts and
the average income has dropped from $3,000 in the 1980s to $800
in 2004. The Iraqi government, under budgetary pressures, recently
warned that government ministries "can carry out their duties
with only about 4060 percent of their employees." This
would be devastating as the government employs nearly one-half of
Iraq’s 6.5 million strong workforce.
The
U.S. government says it has tried to respond by involving more Iraqis
in reconstruction, but acknowledges that it is only employing 122,533
Iraqis in the civilian sector. Furthermore, only $7.7 billion out
of $18.4 billion slated for reconstruction was spent by August 2005.
It
is clear that high levels of unemployment are fueling the resistance
by putting, in the words of one U.S. Army officer: "too many
angry young men, with no hope for the future, on the street."
This has become a deadly combination as the going rate in parts
of Baghdad for planting roadside bombs is between $100 and 300 while
the salary for an Iraqi soldier can reach $340 per month.
Zeese:
There have been inconsistent reports about whether the U.S. is building
permanent military bases in Iraq. I've had activists who have
talked to Senator John Warner who claims there are no permanent
bases being built. Other Members of Congress like Jim McGovern (D-WA)
say there is money being appropriated to build permanent bases.
What is the truth here? If such bases are being built, how many
are there and what is their purpose?
Leaver:
Despite what many U.S. officials state, militarily, the United States
is planning for a long-term stay in Iraq. The most recent spending
bill in Congress for the Iraq War contained $236.5 million for permanent
base construction. The original request for these funds from the
Department of Defense stated, "This proposal will allow the
Army to provide temporary facilities and in some very limited
cases, permanent facilities…These facilities include barracks,
administrative space, vehicle maintenance facilities, aviation facilities,
mobilization-demobilization barracks, and community support facilities."
Currently,
the U.S. operates out of approximately 106 locations across the
country. That’s a huge presence in a country the size of California.
Originally many of these bases were designated with unabashed names
like "Camp Slayer," "Forward Operating Base Steel
Dragon," and "Camp Headhunter." But by late 2004
many were renamed to more subtle names like Camp Prosperity, Camp
Liberty, and Camp Freedom. In May 2005, plans for concentrating
U.S. troops into four massive bases positioned geographically in
the North, South, East and West were reported.
Zeese:
What is the impact of the Iraq War on security? Is it undermining
terrorist networks or expanding them? Is it going to have
any impact on security in the United States or will it keep the
terrorists fighting us on foreign soil as the President claims?
Leaver:
While no Iraqi terror threat previously existed before the President
led our nation to war, a National Intelligence Officer for Transnational
Threats at the CIA said in January 2005 that the Iraq War has now
provided terrorists with "a training ground, a recruitment
ground, the opportunity for enhancing technical skills." Others
at the CIA agree. A May 2005 assessment says Iraq may prove to be
an even more effective training ground for Islamic extremists than
Afghanistan was.
Experts
from the non-partisan London think tank, Chatham House, wrote in
July 2005, "[The Iraq War] gave a boost to the al-Qaeda network’s
propaganda, recruitment and fundraising, caused a major split in
the coalition, provided an ideal targeting and training area for
al-Qaeda-linked terrorists and deflected resources and assistance
that could have been deployed to assist the Karzai government and
to bring bin Laden to justice."
While
foreign fighters are seen as the most violent groups in Iraq, their
numbers have been estimated to be around 1,000 out of a resistance
ranging between 16,000 and 40,000. Instead of being long-term mercenaries,
new investigations by the Saudi Arabian government and an Israeli
think tank found that the majority of foreign fighters are not former
terrorists and instead became radicalized by the war itself a troubling
statistic given that according to the Bush administration, one major
goal of this war is to stem future terrorism.
Coupled
with what we’ve seen in the aftermath of the hurricane the Iraq
War has clearly made us less safe, at home and abroad.
September
20, 2005
Kevin
Zeese [send him mail]
Director of Democracy Rising
visited Camp Casey in Crawford, TX on August 27. You can comment
on this article by visiting
the blog.
Copyright
2005 Kevin Zeese
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