The U.S. “Government Accountability Office” today released an intriguing new study titled Stabilizing Iraq: An Assessment of the Security Situation.
This report is described as a “Statement for the Record by David M. Walker, Comptroller General of the United States”. And it is indeed good to have this document on the record, even if none of the fairly pertinent questions that Walker asks in it gever gets satisfactorily answered. But heck, some of them might at least get asked, now that he has given the members of the US Congress some hints as to what some good questions might be.
On p.1 of the report (p.3 of the PDF file), he writes,
- The Department of Defense (DOD) has reported obligations of about $227 billion for U.S. military operations in Iraq for fiscal years 2003 through June 2006. U.S. assistance appropriated for Iraqi security forces and law enforcement has grown from $3.24 billion in January 2004 to about $13.7 billion in June 2006.
So that’s around $5 billion we taxpayers are laying out each month to fund Cheney and Rumsfeld’s sick fantasies there… Almost beyond belief.
On p.3 of the report Walker lays out three of the key questions he thinks prudent members of Congress should be asking about the use of these generously obligated funds:
- • What political, economic and security conditions must be achieved before the United States can draw down and withdraw military forces from Iraq?
• Why have security conditions continued to worsen even as Iraq has met political milestones, increased the number of trained and equipped forces, and increasingly assumed the lead for security?
• If existing U.S. political, economic, and security measures are not reducing violence in Iraq, what additional measures, if any, will the administration propose for stemming the violence?
It strikes me that, while those might be good questions to start with, there are also a whole class of much bigger questions that could and should be asked… Including,
- “Actually, taken altogether, what have we achieved in Iraq with the outlay of all these funds?”
“How could those funds have been more effectively used to further the real interests of the US citizenry at home and abroad (i.e. What have been the opportunity costs of the decision to do these things in Iraq)?” and most of all,
“Who are the near-criminally incompetent nincompoops who got us all into this mess and why the heck are they still in office?”
Oh well, I suppose that’s not the kind of language a “Comptroller General” gets to use.
P.6 has a sobering graphic, showing how the number of aattacks against the US and its allies and civilians jumped in April 2004 from about 1,000/month to about 2,000/month– and how it has stayed at or much higher than that latter figure ever since then. (In July 2006, it was around 4,000.)
The report notes with an air of near-wonderment:
- The security situation has deteriorated even as Iraq has made progress in meeting key political milestones and in developing its security forces… [A]ccording to the Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), the December 2005 elections appeared to heighten sectarian tensions and polarize sectarian divides. According to a U.S. Institute of Peace report, the focus on ethnic and sectarian identity has sharpened as a result of Iraq’s political process, while nationalism and a sense of Iraqi identity have weakened.
So much for elections as any kind of panacea.
If you want to see the US government’s multi-color map of the sectarian/ethnic breakdown (break-up?) of Iraq, you’ll find it on p.13.
On p.15 the report notes some of the problems with the data provided to the GAO regarding the preparation of new Iraqi security forces. (So who was the nincompoop who disbanded the old Iraqi security forces, anyway?)
On pp.19-21, the report lays out its recommendations for the questions that diligent Congressional overseers ought to be asking the DOD about Iraq. In addition to the ones already listed, these include a few other good ones, as well.
But as I noted above, the questions asked are still not pitched at anything like a broad enough strategic and political level.
Helena,
While the report saying “The security situation has deteriorated” for the last three years of occupations US/UK all they continually saying we are in Iraq for the security situation their if we leave from there will be civil war.
So what the done for three years then?
This not the only reports or the only officials from US/UK specks about this subject, what stricken me and ironically both US/UK knows the security situation has deteriorated for three years day after day and there is no hope to become better.
So the question is, is there well really and faithfully to stabilised Iraq?
My answer NO I think this situation its mush likeable for the occupier and their long terms goal in the region.
Just in case you miss my link I posted before this is the report which looks to me more reliable and give us the truth what’s going on in Iraq today.
Lifting seven veils of the Iraqi illusion
By Michael Schwartz
Michael Schwartz, Professor of Sociology at the State University of New York at Stony Brook, has written extensively on popular protest and insurgency, and on American business and government dynamics. His work on Iraq has appeared on the internet at numerous sites including TomDispatch, Asia Times, MotherJones, and ZNet; and in print at Contexts and Z magazine.
“What is new is that the Iraqi tribal conference, held in the framework of national reconciliation with about 600 heads of tribes present, signed at the end of its sessions a code of honors in its articles and called for the cancellation of the De-Ba’thification Law. Perhaps this could be a beginning of a change in the policy adopted against the Ba’th Party in Iraq.”
http://www.niqash.org/content.php?contentTypeID=135&id=1422
Ms. Cobban,
I think you highlight an important point when you focus on what the economist in me calls the return on investment of the War on Terror. Bastiat’s broken window analogy applies to wars. What have the citizens of these United States gotten from the nearly half trillion $s spent? And how much more resource will need to be directed away from other needs fixing what has been destroyed?
Ms. Cobban,
I think you highlight an important point when you focus on what the economist in me calls the return on investment of the War on Terror. Bastiat’s broken window analogy applies to wars. What have the citizens of these United States gotten from the nearly half trillion $s spent? And how much more resource will need to be directed away from other needs fixing what has been destroyed?
As if the president’s speech yesterday wasn’t far enough removed from reality, Bill Kristol has popped up at the WP to give us another glimpse into the bizarre neocon fantasy world. His solution to the debacle unfolding in Baghdad and Anbar Province? The president should “order a substantial surge in overall troop levels in Iraq.” Like, just decree it. See, you have to be a real smart neocon like Kristol to think of solutions like this.
I am reminded of the movie “Downfall” about Hitler’s last days in the bunker. As the Russians close in on Berlin, Hitler asks “Where is the Ninth Army?”
Besides his military acumen, Bill has his finger on the pulse of public opinion in Iraq. “[A]ll signs are that American troops are more trusted and more welcome than Iraqis,” he says. In Iraq. Got that?
Krauthammer may be the most overtly fascist of this bunch, but for sheer lunacy, it’s hard to beat Kristol.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/11/AR2006091100879.html
At this point, there is really only one question that “diligent Congressional overseers ought to be asking the DOD about Iraq,” and that is: What is your plan for a complete withdrawal?