WASHINGTON, Feb 2: The United States has wasted billions of dollars in Iraq and is making the same mistakes in Afghanistan, warns a Congress-mandated report released on Monday.

The report by a Congress-auditor, known as Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction, blames both fraud and lack of planning for the waste.

The report, titled “Hard Lessons”, points out that the US was “unprepared and ill-equipped to deal” with post-Saddam Iraq.

As Iraq slipped into the grip of a deadly insurgency during 2005 and 2006; US officials responded by moving large sums of money into security programmes. This “ultimately consumed over half of the $50 billion” meant for reconstruction.

By 2008, when the security situation improved enough to allow reconstruction, most of the $50 billion had already been spent.

Auditor Stuart W. Bowen Jr. spent five years probing misappropriations, frauds and corruption committed in the two countries.

He has submitted 250,000 pages of audits to Congress.

One glaring example he gives is that of a maximum security prison in Diyala province, which the Iraqis sarcastically call “the whale”.

The “skeletal, half-built” shell of a maximum-security prison in Khan Bani Saad “will probably never house an inmate” even though the United States spent $40 million on the now-halted $73 million project, the report notes.

In a separate interview to Washington Post, Mr Bowen said the largest single-country relief and reconstruction project in US history was full of wasted funds, fraud and a lack of accountability under an “ad hoc-racy” of lax or nonexistent government planning and supervision.

Most of the construction projects were done by private US contractors and cost US taxpayers $50 billion.

And despite the Iraq experience, the United States is making many of the same mistakes again in Afghanistan, he warns. US reconstruction expenditures in Afghanistan stand at more than $30 billion and counting.

“It’s too late to do the structural part and make it quickly applicable to Afghanistan,” Mr Bowen says.

None of the substantive changes in oversight, contracting and reconstruction planning or personnel assignments that Congress, auditors and outside experts proposed as the Iraq debacle unfolded has been implemented in Afghanistan, he adds.

Opinion

Money and man

Money and man

There is no ambiguity about whether very high inflation devastates society; but economists are not entirely sure how much influence high interest rates hold in controlling inflation.

Editorial

Another approach
Updated 01 Jun, 2024

Another approach

Conflating the genuine threat it poses with the online actions of a few misguided individuals or miscreants seems to be taking the matter too far.
Torching girls’ schools
01 Jun, 2024

Torching girls’ schools

PAKISTAN has, in the past few weeks, witnessed ill-omened reminders of a demoralising aspect of militancy: the war ...
Convict Trump
01 Jun, 2024

Convict Trump

AFTER a five-week trial saga, a New York jury on Thursday found former US president Donald Trump guilty of ...
Uncertain budget plans
Updated 31 May, 2024

Uncertain budget plans

It is abundantly clear that the prime minister, caught between public expectations and harsh IMF demands, is in a fix.
‘Mob justice’ courts
31 May, 2024

‘Mob justice’ courts

IN order to tackle the plague of ‘mob justice’ that has spread across the country, the Council of Islamic...
Up in smoke
31 May, 2024

Up in smoke

ON World No Tobacco Day, it is imperative that Pakistan confront the creeping threat of tobacco use. This year’s...