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Pentagon seeks $99.7b for Iraq, Afghan wars
Foreign Desk Report
WASHINGTON—The Pentagon wants the White House to seek an additional
$99.7 billion to fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to
information provided to The Associated Press. The military’s request, if
embraced by President Bush and approved by Congress, would boost this
year’s budget for those wars to about $170 billion.
Military planners assembled the proposal at a time when Bush is
developing new strategies for Iraq, such as sending thousands of more
U.S. troops there, although it was put together before the president
said the troop surge was under consideration.
Overall, the war in Iraq has cost about $350 billion. Combined with the
conflict in Afghanistan and operations against terrorism elsewhere, the
cost has topped $500 billion, according to the nonpartisan Congressional
Research Service.
The additional funds, if approved, would push this year’s cost of the
war in Iraq to about $50 billion over last year’s record. In September,
Congress approved an initial $70 billion for the current budget year,
which began Oct. 1.
A description of the Pentagon request was provided by a person familiar
with the proposal who asked for anonymity because the person was not
authorized to release the information.
The cost of the war has risen dramatically as the security situation has
deteriorated and more equipment is destroyed or worn out in harsh
conditions. The Army, which has borne the brunt of the fighting, would
receive about half of the request, a reflection of the wear and tear
that the war has had on soldiers and their equipment.
An additional $9.8 billion is being sought for training and equipping
Iraq’s and Afghanistan’s security forces. The administration’s request
for more Iraq money will be submitted along with Bush’s budget in
February for the 2008 budget year, which starts next Oct. 1. The White
House can add or subtract from the Pentagon request as it sees fit, and
the total could grow if money is added for reconstruction costs.
In a memo several weeks ago, Deputy Defense Secretary Gordon England
encouraged the services to include in their budget requests projects
connected to the broader fight against terrorism, as opposed to costs
strictly limited to Iraq and Afghanistan. Critics have said that could
be interpreted to cover almost anything.
Earlier requests submitted by service branches to Pentagon brass were
considerably higher, but were trimmed back after meeting resistance at
the White House and from key lawmakers. The budget request includes:
_$41.5 billion to cover the costs of ongoing military operations. _$26.7
billion for replacing and repairing equipment damaged or destroyed in
Iraq and Afghanistan._$10 billion for body armor and other equipment to
protect U.S. troops from attack._$2.5 billion to combat roadside bombs
and other improvised explosive devices._$2.7 billion for intelligence
activities. Whatever request emerges from the Bush administration will
go to a new Congress controlled by Democrats highly critical of the Iraq
war and Bush’s handling of it.
Even so, there is much sentiment among Democrats to protect troops and
much fear about being portrayed as unsympathetic to men and women in
uniform. These factors probably would overwhelm any efforts by anti-war
Democrats to use the debate over the Iraq money to take on Bush’s
conduct of the war. Democrats have promised, however, to give the
upcoming request greater scrutiny than Republicans did when considering
Bush’s previous requests.
“Democrats are committed to ensuring our troops have all that they need,
but we’re going to return oversight to spending on the war,” said Jim
Manley, spokesman for incoming Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.
“Our troops must have everything they need, but Halliburton shouldn’t
get everything it wants.” Halliburton Co. is a Texas-based oil services
conglomerate once led by Vice President Dick Cheney. Bush administration
officials have come under fire since the beginning of the war in Iraq
for awarding more than $10 billion to the company and its subsidiaries
in 2003 and 2004, some of it in a no-bid contract. There have been
allegations of fraud, poor work, overpricing and other abuse, which the
company has denied.
Democrats such as incoming Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad
of North Dakota have grown increasingly critical of the fact that Iraq
spending is kept on a set of books separate from the rest of government
operations.
The Vietnam War cost an inflation-adjusted $121 billion at its height in
1968, according to the Congressional Research Service. The overall tally
for Vietnam is $663 billion, adjusted for inflation, and Iraq costs are
rapidly catching up. |