Corruption
costs Iraq $4 billion annually. $8.8 billion the U.S. gave the Iraqi government
cannot be fully accounted for. More than 20% of the government’s Ministry
of Interior staff are “ghost employees”—nonexistent workers who collect
paychecks. As much as 30% of Iraq’s refined oil ends up on the black market
or is illegally taken out of the country. The U.S. government says the
insurgency raises $25 to $100 million a year smuggling oil. $9 billion
in oil revenues has been lost, almost as much as Saddam Hussein stole
from the U.N. Oil-for-Food program over five years.
With
Friends Like These
41 cents of every dollar of American reconstruction money is spent
on the Iraqi military or police. 3 cents goes to “democracy building.”
A newly recruited Iraqi soldier makes $60 a month. Iraqi units report
that half of their soldiers go awol when sent to new combat areas.
The Pentagon says it’s trying to instill “a more deployable mindset.”
Of the 323,000 members of Iraq’s security forces, 1/3 are considered
“technically proficient” and only 10,000 are “politically dependable.”
American trainers report that 70% of the police force has been infiltrated
by militias. 90,000 rifles and 80,000 pistols supplied to the Iraqi
security forces cannot be accounted for.
Coalition
of the Dwindling:
When the War’s Supporters at Home and Abroad Got Cold Feet
Babylonian
Captivity
France reportedly paid a total of $25 million three of its kidnapped
citizens; Italy paid Germany paid $8 million to free three.
Blood
Money: What a Life Is Worth in Iraq
Economists have estimated each life lost in the war to
be worth around $6 million. The reality on the ground is much different.
Bill
Me Later: What the White House Said the War Would Cost