Foreign wars: It’s only money, ain’t it? | वसुधैव कुटुंबकम
21 minutes ago – My dear Zach Toombs,. I am Sid Harth. Only an insignificant (in size and volume) tip of the humongous iceberg. Don’t you worry. B Hppy, Oops …
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इदं न मम | I take no credit for this
mysistereileen.com/Syria, Seriously, US media led Propaganda@mysistereileen.com…. Manaf Tlass and former Ambassador to Iraq, Nawaf al-Fares — prompted many headlines …
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American Exceptionalism and I | वसुधैव कुटुंबकम
www.webworldismyoyster.com/2012/…/american-exceptionalism-an…Jul 3, 2012 – mysistermarilynmonroe.org/…/cyber-war-stuxnet-barack-obama-and… Jun 13, 2012 – 1 day ago – mysistereileen.com/. Syria, and Iraq, not to …
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Iraq Intrigue and I « हिन्दू तर्क शास्त्रद्न्य सिद्धार्थ
mysistermarilynmonroe.org/2012/05/09/iraq-intrigue-and-i/May 9, 2012 – Apr 27, 2012 – “Take That” Uncle Sam « इदं न मम – My Sister Eileen ….. hundreds of thousands of illicitly copied movies to troops in Iraq and …
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FOREIGN AFFARS AND I « वसुधैव कुटुंबकम
www.webworldismyoyster.com/2012/06/25/foreign-affars-and-i/Jun 25, 2012 – Jun 10, 2012 – May 30, 2012 – May 22, 2012 – Sid Harth – Iran war double talk@mysistereileen.com … Iran, like Iraq and Syria before it, will …
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Condi Rice, at What Price? « हिन्दू तर्क शास्त्रद्न्य …
mysistermarilynmonroe.org/2012/06/26/condi-rice-at-what-price/Jun 26, 2012 – War with Iran would replicate Iraq disaster on a bigger scale but is … …. 1 day ago – …and I am Sid Harth@mysistereileen.com. Stars and …
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US Exceptionalism, Real or Unreal and I | हिन्दू तर्क …
mysistermarilynmonroe.org/…/us-exceptionalism-real-or-unreal-and-…Jul 4, 2012 – 1 day ago – Jun 13, 2012 – 1 day ago – mysistereileen.com/. Syria, and Iraq, not to forget, Iran and Israel‘s internal and external political …
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Demolish Jewish Ghetto, Israel | हिन्दू तर्क शास्त्रद्न्य …
mysistermarilynmonroe.org/2012/07/…/demolish-jewish-ghetto-israel…Jul 3, 2012 – Mar 7, 2012 – The Jewish Chronicle – My Sister Eileen … …. Khomeini’s 1988 acceptance of a cease-fire decision in the Iran-Iraq war.
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Uncle Sam’s Foreign, Oops, (Osama bin-Laden) Affair and I …
mysistermarilynmonroe.org/…/uncle-sams-foreign-oops-osama-bin-l…Jul 6, 2012 – Jun 8, 2012 – Sue me. …and I am Sid Harth@mysistereileen.com … ….. “Hey, Osama ordered the 9/11 attacks so I went after Hussain in Iraq!
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Binya Minckey Rooney, Jewish Paranoia and I « हिन्दू तर्क …
mysistermarilynmonroe.org/…/binya-minckey-rooney-jewish-parano…Jun 28, 2012 – mysistermarilynmonroe.org/2012/05/09/iraq-intrigue-and-i/. May 9, 2012 – US Iran Syndrome and I « इदं न मम – My Sister Eileen … Mar 15 …
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Syria, Seriously, US media led Propaganda@mysistereileen.com …
mysistermarilynmonroe.org/…/syria-seriously-us-media-led-…2 days ago – इदं न मम – Of Osama, Obama and Sudhamama – My Sister Eileen … …. And U.S. blunders in Iraq, where violence persists nine years after a …
My dear Zach Toombs,
I am Sid Harth.
Only an insignificant (in size and volume) tip of the humongous iceberg. Don’t you worry. B Hppy, Oops, Hippy.
Big (bad?) Uncle is, as we speak, printing more green berets, Oops, money. No crime in making money. Not in America. The question of making money, does not bother none. Ask my good buddy, honorable GOP presumptive presidential nominee, Mitt (Make it, hide it, brag about it, show no tax returns) Romney.
Hi Mitt-Man how does your (green) garden grow? Wow! No kidding.
Goodbye foreign wars, Oops, hello new foreign wars.
Iran
Syria
Egypt
Pakistan
China, Oops, Chinese backwaters.
Mexico
Cuba
Venezuela
…and I am Sid Harth@webworldismyoyster.com
My dear Zach Toombs,
I am Sid Harth.
Only an insignificant (in size and volume) tip of the humongous iceberg. Don’t you worry. B Hppy, Oops, Hippy.
Big (bad?) Uncle is, as we speak, printing more green berets, Oops, money. No crime in making money. Not in America. The question of making money, does not bother none. Ask my good buddy, honorable GOP presumptive presidential nominee, Mitt (Make it, hide it, brag about it, show no tax returns) Romney.
Hi Mitt-Man how does your (green) garden grow? Wow! No kidding.
Goodbye foreign wars, Oops, hello new foreign wars.
Iran
Syria
Egypt
Pakistan
China, Oops, Chinese backwaters.
Mexico
Cuba
Venezuela
Foreign wars: It’s only money, ain’t it
…and I am Sid Harth@webworldismyoyster.com
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!
#403 – Wed Jul 18, 2012 7:50 AM EDT
Iraq war reconstruction: $6 billion to $8 billion wasted, US official says
AP file
The Khan Bani Saad Correctional Facility, about 12 miles northeast of Baghdad, is seen with unused building materials nearby. The site is a chronicle of U.S. government waste, misguided planning and construction shortcuts costing $40 million.
Center for Public Integrity
The official in charge of monitoring America’s $51 billion effort to reconstruct Iraq has estimated that $6 billion to $8 billion of that amount was lost to waste, fraud and abuse.
Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction (SIGIR) for the past eight years, gave that estimate in an interview with the Center for Public Integrity on Monday, shortly after releasing a new summary of his office’s many grim discoveries since it began work in in 2004.
In Friday’s report, Bowen said the exact funds lost to fraud and waste “can never be known,” largely because of poor record-keeping by the U.S. agencies involved in the effort. These include the Departments of State and Defense, along with the U.S. Agency for International Development.
According to the report, auditors repeatedly found that the State Department and Defense Department failed to properly review invoices from government contractors, often approving billions of dollars in services without checking if costs were accurate or efficient. “I think the consistent theme throughout our eight years of oversight work has been the inconsistent availability of records and information on contracts and costs,” said Bowen, a former Texas lawyer.Bowen said his efforts were hampered from the outset by the ineffectiveness of a clearinghouse created in Iraq for government departments to submit reconstruction bills and contracts for review and oversight. Known as the Iraq Reconstruction Management System, the system was often ignored, with the result that nearly a third of all the contracts could not be monitored adequately.
“Agencies often inconsistently used it — such as USAID. Sometimes projects were put in there, sometimes they weren’t,” said Bowen. Aides said his $6 billion to $8 billion figure is based on his review of audits and reconstruction costs, as well of estimates of waste in programs where key data is missing.
Bowen’s deputy inspector general, Glenn Furbish, said separately in the interview that the cost of many contracts was steadily increased due to frequent modifications. “Once U.S. agencies started down this road, they rarely stopped and said, ‘This is getting out of hand,’” Furbish said.
He also noted that many agencies sometimes skipped appropriate review of their bills in an effort to spend money within a deadline, so they did not have to return it to the Treasury.
Since its founding in 2004, SIGIR has investigated $635 million in spending, resulting in $176 million in “fines, forfeitures, and other monetary results.” In total, the agency estimates it has saved around $1.5 billion in taxpayer funds.
Friday’s report mostly detailed the persistent poor handling of government contracts. “In some instances, invoices were reviewed months after they were paid,” according to the report. “Poor and/or delayed invoice reviews add risk that the government may overpay, or pay unallowable and unreasonable costs.”
The report lays much of the blame on a lack of manpower dedicated to reviewing and overseeing government contracts. The State Department enlisted a single contracting officer to handle a $2.5 billion deal with DynCorp International to train Iraqi police forces, for example. Auditors called this decision “especially disturbing” because of problems in earlier DynCorp contracts. According to Furbish, after SIGIR singled out the contract, the State Department reviewed its original agreement with DynCorp and recovered more than $60 million from the company.
DynCorp spokeswoman Ashley Burke confirmed that her company returned funds to the government but said it had not engaged in misconduct.
SIGIR’s investigation also uncovered instances of bid-rigging and bribe-taking by State and Pentagon officials.
Fraudulent activities uncovered by the special inspector general resulted in 87 indictments, according to the report. Of those cases, 61 involved contract kickbacks, 11 involved contract fraud and nine were related to embezzlement. Both military officers and defense contractors were frequently implicated.
The report details one such case, involving U.S. Army Major Roderick Sanchez, who served from 2004 to 2007 as a contracting officer in Afghanistan, Iraq and Kuwait. Sanchez used his authority to solicit cash payments, Rolex watches and other expensive gifts in exchange for steering Pentagon contracts to foreign companies, reaping benefits worth more than $200,000, according to the report. He was sentenced to five years in prison and a fine of $15,000.
A Navy lieutenant commander named Frankie Hand, stationed at Camp Taji in Iraq as a contracting officer, entered into a secret agreement with two U.S. contractors — Michelle Adams and Peter Dunn — agreeing to rig government contracts to their benefit in exchange for a cut of the profits, the report said. The two contractors paid Hand $757,525 after obtaining two contracts improperly. An Air Force master sergeant received $50,000 in bribe money for “assistance” in the deal, the report said.
Hand received three years in prison and forfeited his share of contract profits, while Adams and Dunn received 15 and 14 months in prison, respectively.
Friday’s report, titled “Final Forensic Audit Report of Iraq Reconstruction Funds”, was wider in scope than most of SIGIR’s work, covering not just a specific project, but a broader picture of Iraq’s reconstruction. SIGIR spokesman Chris Griffith said, however, that Bowen’ has one more major report to publish in January.
Many of the challenges described in the Iraq report mirror those depicted in similar reports by its cousin, the office of the special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction. In a May report to Congress, for example, that office concluded that “corruption remains a major threat to the reconstruction effort” and said contractors were taking advantage of lax oversight in Afghanistan.
Truthout
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It’s a Great Day to Act to Cut the Pentagon Budget
Robert Naiman: If you want cuts in military spending to be on the table, now is the time to speak up.
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It’s a Great Day to Act to Cut the Pentagon Budget
Wednesday, 18 July 2012 00:00 By Robert Naiman, Truthout | Op-Ed
Support Truthout’s work by making a tax-deductible donation: click here to contribute.
(Photo: mindfrieze)This week, a series of showdowns is expected in the House over the Pentagon budget, when House Members vote on amendments to the defense appropriations bill to cut the overall level of military spending, end or limit the war in Afghanistan and draw down troops permanently stationed in Europe.
What happens in these votes will have a big influence on the expected negotiations over replacing the impending “sequester” automatic cuts of the Budget Control Act with a package of revenue increases and spending cuts. If you want cuts in military spending to be on the table, now is the time to speak up.
Until now, the bigfoot military contractors and their most stalwart allies in Congress have fought with great success to keep real cuts in military spending away from the table. What has mostly happened until now is that most of the previously projected increases in spending have been cut, so that under the president’s plan, military spending would rise roughly with inflation. It’s an important start, certainly, to stop the previously projected increase, but it’s not a real cut from past spending levels. If the automatic cuts were to go through, that would cause a real cut in military spending, although military spending would still be above what it was during the cold war. But the conventional wisdom is that the automatic cuts won’t happen; at the end of the day, they will be replaced by a package of revenue increases and spending cuts.
The question is what is going to be in that package.
Until now, the GOP leadership position has been that cuts in military spending are off the table.
Until now, the Democratic leadership position has been more murky. The Democratic leadership – and the big Democratic constituency groups – have emphasized the need for revenue increases. But no one thinks the final deal is going to meet deficit reduction targets with revenue increases alone. That means that there are still going to be cuts, and those cuts are going to be cuts in military spending, or they are going to be cuts in domestic spending. Every dollar that isn’t cut from the military budget is going to be cut from the domestic budget.
So, you might think that Democratic leaders and the big Democratic constituency groups – who don’t want to cut the domestic budget – would be very vocal right now about the need to cut the military budget.
If so, so far you’d be wrong. Until now, the Democratic leadership has been mostly quiet about the need for military cuts. What they’re afraid of is all the money the military contractors have to throw around on lobbying and political ads. And of course, the military contractors’ money is our money – our tax dollars that have made the military contractors fat, money that they are now using to lobby against putting them on a very modest diet.
People often get cynical when they think about all that money sloshing around. What’s the point of writing and calling my representative in Congress? They’re not going to listen to me. They’re going to listen to the money. You can’t beat City Hall.
But the fact of the matter is that you can beat City Hall. It’s been done before. The interests of the few will tend to beat out the interests of the many when the many are unorganized and not mobilized. When the many are mobilized and organized, they can turn things around. That happened on the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the Protect Intellectual Property Act (PIPA). It happened on the tar sands pipeline. Eventually, it happened on the Iraq war. The narrow interests of the few were defeated by the broad interests of the many.
Why not on the military budget? Let’s raise a ruckus and see what happens.
Right now, today, we can start to turn this around. If we can get a majority of members of the House to vote for any cut in military spending at all, that will be a key benchmark for future negotiations. If we can get the majority of the House Democratic Caucus to vote for a deeper cut, that will be another key benchmark for future negotiations.
An amendment to cut $1.1 billion – a freeze at fiscal year 2012 levels – is expected to be offered by Mick Mulvaney (R-South Carolina and Barney Frank (D-Massachusetts). This very modest amendment stands the best chance of passing. Compared to the Pentagon budget, this would be a very modest cut, a fraction of a percent. But when you compare it to domestic spending cuts being considered – like spending on food stamps – $1.1 billion is real money.
An amendment is expected to cut roughly $7 billion to align the bill to spending caps under the Budget Control Act. This will be a key test. Who is really concerned about the deficit, and who is just looking for an excuse to cut programs that benefit the majority of Americans? There was a Congressional deal to cut spending, and the current level of military spending breaks the deal. If Congress can’t be held to the level of military spending that it already agreed to in the Budget Control Act, that doesn’t bode well for the negotiations ahead on replacing the automatic cuts to come. If Democrats can’t be held to backing the caps on military spending in the Budget Control Act, that is even worse. But if Democrats can be held to this, then it is more likely that, in the negotiations, they can be held to the principle that there should be at least $1 in military cuts for every $1 in domestic cuts. And if we can get a substantial bloc of Republicans to break ranks with the leadership on holding military spending to the Budget Control Act caps, the vote would be close, and the amendment might even pass; that would set a very good precedent for the negotiations.
An amendment to cut $19 billion – corresponding to program cuts proposed by the Project on Defense Alternatives and the Cato Institute – is expected from Barbara Lee (D-California). If this amendment wins support from the majority of Democrats and a smattering of Republicans, it will put these cuts on the table for serious consideration.
Your representative, by voting for amendments that cut the Pentagon budget, will be putting Pentagon cuts on the table for the final negotiations. And that will help protect domestic spending.
Then there is the question of the war in Afghanistan.
Lee is expected to offer an amendment to cut all funding for the war except for what is needed for a safe and responsible drawdown. Almost the entire House Democratic Caucus and two dozen Republicans are on record saying that they want to end the war. This vote will be a test of how many are now willing to back their demand to end the war by a vote to cut money for it.
Walter Jones (R-North Carolina) and Rosa DeLauro (D-Connecticut) are expected to offer an amendment preventing the use of funds past 2014 in support of any mission that does not have explicit Congressional approval. This will be a test of whether Congress can force the 2014 timeline for when (most?) “combat” troops are expected be withdrawn to become a real deadline for ending the war.
In addition, an amendment is expected to force the Pentagon to draw down troops “permanently stationed” in Europe. How much money this would actually save is a matter of murky dispute; during the wars, a lot of the troops weren’t in Europe anyway because they were off fighting the wars. But regardless of how you count the actual savings, the principle is clear-cut: 70 years after the end of World War II, we shouldn’t be paying for a major permanent deployment of US troops in Europe.
We are in a historically new situation. In the past, the interests of the majority in cutting military spending were not so direct, because the bloated military budget was financed by borrowing. Now a dollar that isn’t cut from the military budget is a dollar that will be cut from the domestic budget. If you don’t want food stamps to be cut, if you don’t want funding for mothers’ and infants’ nutrition to be cut, if you don’t want Social Security benefits to be cut, write and call your representative and urge a yes vote on amendments to cut the military budget.
Copyright, Truthout. May not be reprinted without permission. 
Robert Naiman
Robert Naiman is policy director at Just Foreign Policy and president of Truthout’s board of directors.
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…and I am Sid Harth@webworldismyoyster.com

