Audit Finds U.S. Hid Cost of Iraq Projects

dahunan

Lifer
Jan 10, 2002
18,191
3
0
As long as Haliburton gets paid then why should anybody care?

As long as Lockheed Martin and all other Defense Contractors and Oil Industry Corps(e) post record earnings then who cares

Death by USA is big money
 

Rainsford

Lifer
Apr 25, 2001
17,515
0
0
Anyone think we need to bring back the concept of war profiteering? Finally some real treason for the conservatives to get all bloodthirsty about... ;)
 

jackschmittusa

Diamond Member
Apr 16, 2003
5,972
1
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Just another example of the lackeys following the lead of their bosses, who have made it clear that honesty and integrety have no value. I doubt that anybody is worried about being punished either.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
81
Originally posted by: Rainsford
Anyone think we need to bring back the concept of war profiteering? Finally some real treason for the conservatives to get all bloodthirsty about... ;)

It's funny how ignorant some people are - some people where I work, at a warehouse, didn't understand the concept of how anyone could make money off of a war. Seriously. They didn't just think that it wasn't happening. They didn't understand that it was even possible.
This is the kind of ignorance that needs to be countered. It's quite a daunting task to build public support against something that a significant portion of the population doesn't even comprehend.
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
For those who don't have access to the NY Times, here's the entire story.

This article cites an earlier Times article I posted on the forum.

http://forums.anandtech.com/messageview...atid=52&threadid=1901166&enterthread=y

The level of corruption and deceit in Iraq matches the level of corruption and deceit used to instigate the conflict. When will the American people hold those responsible accountable? We will never be able to correct the debacle the bush administration has created in Iraq until we do.

Audit Finds U.S. Hid Cost of Iraq Projects
By JAMES GLANZ

BAGHDAD, Iraq, July 29 ? The State Department agency in charge of $1.4 billion in reconstruction money in Iraq used an accounting shell game to hide ballooning cost overruns on its projects there and knowingly withheld information on schedule delays from Congress, a federal audit released late Friday has found.

The agency hid construction overruns by listing them as overhead or administrative costs, according to the audit, written by the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction, an independent office that reports to Congress, the Pentagon and the State Department.

Called the United States Agency for International Development, or A.I.D., the agency administers foreign aid projects around the world. It has been working in Iraq on reconstruction since shortly after the 2003 invasion.

The report by the inspector general?s office does not give a full accounting of all projects financed by the agency?s $1.4 billion budget, but cites several examples.

The findings appeared in an audit of a children?s hospital in Basra, but they referred to the wider reconstruction activities of the development agency in Iraq. American and Iraqi officials reported this week that the State Department planned to drop Bechtel, its contractor on that project, as signs of budget and scheduling problems began to surface.

The United States Embassy in Baghdad referred questions about the audit to the State Department in Washington, where a spokesman, Justin Higgins, said Saturday, ?We have not yet had a chance to fully review this report, but certainly will consider it carefully, as we do all the findings of the inspector general.?

Bechtel has said that because of the deteriorating security in Basra, the hospital project could not be completed as envisioned. But Mr. Higgins said: ?Despite the challenges, we are committed to completing this project so that sick children in Basra can receive the medical help they need. The necessary funding is now in place to ensure that will happen.?

In March 2005, A.I.D. asked the Iraq Reconstruction and Management Office at the United States Embassy in Baghdad for permission to downsize some projects to ease widespread financing problems. In its request, it said that it had to ?absorb greatly increased construction costs? at the Basra hospital and that it would make a modest shift of priorities and reduce ?contractor overhead? on the project.

The embassy office approved the request. But the audit found that the agency interpreted the document as permission to change reporting of costs across its program.

Referring to the embassy office?s approval, the inspector general wrote, ?The memorandum was not intended to give U.S.A.I.D. blanket permission to change the reporting of all indirect costs.?

The hospital?s construction budget was $50 million. By April of this year, Bechtel had told the aid agency that because of escalating costs for security and other problems, the project would actually cost $98 million to complete. But in an official report to Congress that month, the agency ?was reporting the hospital project cost as $50 million,?
the inspector general wrote in his report.

The rest was reclassified as overhead, or ?indirect costs.? According to a contracting officer at the agency who was cited in the report, the agency ?did not report these costs so it could stay within the $50 million authorization.?

?We find the entire agreement unclear,? the inspector general wrote of the A.I.D. request approved by the embassy. ?The document states that hospital project cost increases would be offset by reducing contractor overhead allocated to the project, but project reports for the period show no effort to reduce overhead.?

The report said it suspected that other unreported costs on the hospital could drive the tab even higher. In another case cited in the report, a power station project in Musayyib, the direct construction cost cited by the development agency was $6.6 million, while the overhead cost was $27.6 million.

One result is that the project?s overhead, a figure that normally runs to a maximum of 30 percent, was a stunning 418 percent.

The figures were even adjusted in the opposite direction when that helped the agency balance its books, the inspector general found. On an electricity project at the Baghdad South power station, direct construction costs were reported by the agency as $164.3 million and indirect or overhead costs as $1.4 million.

That is just 0.8 percent overhead in a country where security costs are often staggering. A contracting officer told the inspector general that the agency adjusted the figures ?to stay within the authorization for each project.?


The overall effect, the report said, was a ?serious misstatement of hospital project costs.? The true cost could rise as high as $169.5 million, even after accounting for at least $30 million pledged for medical equipment by a charitable organization.

The inspector general also found that the agency had not reported known schedule delays to Congress. On March 26, 2006, Bechtel informed the agency that the hospital project was 273 days behind, the inspector general wrote. But in its April report to Congress on the status of all projects, ?U.S.A.I.D. reported no problems with the project schedule.?

In a letter responding to the inspector general?s findings, Joseph A. Saloom, the newly appointed director of the reconstruction office at the United States Embassy, said he would take steps to improve the reporting of the costs of reconstruction projects in Iraq. Mr. Saloom took little exception to the main findings.

In the letter, Mr. Saloom said his office had been given new powers by the American ambassador in Baghdad, Zalmay Khalilzad, to request clear financing information on American reconstruction projects. Mr. Saloom wrote that he agreed with the inspector general?s conclusion that this shift would help ?preclude surprises such as occurred on the Basra hospital project.?

?The U.S. Mission agrees that accurate monitoring of projects requires allocating indirect costs in a systematic way that reflects accurately the true indirect costs attributable to specific activities and projects, such as a Basra children?s hospital,? Mr. Saloom wrote.


The United States Embassy in Baghdad referred questions about the audit to the State Department in Washington, where a spokesman, Justin Higgins, said Saturday, ?We have not yet had a chance to fully review this report, but certainly will consider it carefully, as we do all the findings of the inspector general.?

This excuse the bush administration keeps using, "We haven't had time to review the report", is really getting hilariuos. Every time they're caught red-handed they buy time by repeating this nonsense then they just wait until the story drops from the front page and continue with the same corrupt "business as usual".

When will America WTFU?
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: catnap1972
Originally posted by: BBond

When will America WTFU?

Not until American Idol and Desperate Housewives are both canceled, I'm afraid. :frown:

And even then they'll only switch to watching the re-runs.
 

GroundedSailor

Platinum Member
Feb 18, 2001
2,502
0
76
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Originally posted by: Rainsford
Anyone think we need to bring back the concept of war profiteering? Finally some real treason for the conservatives to get all bloodthirsty about... ;)

It's funny how ignorant some people are - some people where I work, at a warehouse, didn't understand the concept of how anyone could make money off of a war. Seriously. They didn't just think that it wasn't happening. They didn't understand that it was even possible.
This is the kind of ignorance that needs to be countered. It's quite a daunting task to build public support against something that a significant portion of the population doesn't even comprehend.

That is one of the reasons why politicians can pull the wool over the majority's eyes. Also one of the reasons for the high level of secrecy of this administration. If people were told, and understood, the truth, you can be sure the current regime would not have been elected.

 

DealMonkey

Lifer
Nov 25, 2001
13,136
1
0
I guess those running this State Dep't learned at the Enron school of financial shell games. Great, just great. So when will we see some charges filed against these idiots?
 

kage69

Lifer
Jul 17, 2003
31,462
47,874
136
Remember how the repugs howled in laughter when Kerry called this admin on the cost (and future costs) of this escapade?

Notice how the apologists have yet to sound off - I think even they have realized they can't bring Clinton into it somehow...

Unbelieveable. This admin continually hits new lows, it would be funny if there wasn't so much much blood and money being lost. There needs to be some jail sentences handed out here, and soon.