Audit: U.S. lost track of $9 billion in Iraq funds

PsychoSword

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Audit: U.S. lost track of $9 billion in Iraq funds
Pentagon, Bremer dispute inspector general's report
Sunday, January 30, 2005 Posted: 11:12 PM EST (0412 GMT)

http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/01/30/iraq.audit/index.html

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Nearly $9 billion of money spent on Iraqi reconstruction is unaccounted for because of inefficiencies and bad management, according to a watchdog report published Sunday.

An inspector general's report said the U.S.-led administration that ran Iraq until June 2004 is unable to account for the funds.

"Severe inefficiencies and poor management" by the Coalition Provisional Authority has left auditors with no guarantee the money was properly used," the report said.

"The CPA did not establish or implement sufficient managerial, financial and contractual controls to ensure that [Development Fund for Iraq] funds were used in a transparent manner," said Stuart W. Bowen Jr., director of the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction.

The $8.8 billion was reported to have been spent on salaries, operating and capital expenditures, and reconstruction projects between October 2003 and June 2004, Bowen's report concluded.

The money came from revenues from the United Nations' former oil-for-food program, oil sales and seized assets -- all Iraqi money. The audit did not examine the use of U.S. funds appropriated for reconstruction. (Full story)

Auditors were unable to verify that the Iraqi money was spent for its intended purpose. In one case, they raised the possibility that thousands of "ghost employees" were on an unnamed ministry's payroll.

"CPA staff identified at one ministry that although 8,206 guards were on the payroll, only 602 guards could be validated," the audit report states. "Consequently, there was no assurance funds were not provided for ghost employees."

The Defense Department, which was in charge of the reconstruction effort, and former Iraq civil administrator Paul Bremer have disputed the findings.

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman told CNN that the provisional authority was operating under "extraordinary conditions" and relied on Iraqi ministries to manage development money that was transferred to them.

"We simply disagree with the audit's conclusion that the CPA provided less-than-adequate controls over Iraqi funds that were provided to Iraqi ministries through the national budget process for hundreds of projects, essential services, Iraqi salaries and security forces," Whitman said.

The occupation government established "major reforms" in Iraq's budgeting system, setting up a transparent mechanism for decision-making and beginning efforts to fight corruption, Whitman said.

Under a U.N. Security Council resolution, the Development Fund for Iraq was to be used for humanitarian needs, economic reconstruction and repair of infrastructure, continued disarmament, costs of civilian administration and other programs benefiting Iraqis.

Bremer, in a written response included in the report, said Bowen's report failed to recognize the difficulties of operating in wartime.

"The IG auditors presume that the coalition could achieve a standard of budgetary transparency and execution that even peaceful Western nations would have trouble meeting within a year, especially in the midst of a war," Bremer wrote.

Bremer, who received a Presidential Medal of Freedom in December for his work in Iraq, stated that auditors did not interview him, any of his budget directors or deputies in preparing their draft report.

"On the whole, the office has done excellent work," he wrote. "But I do believe my colleagues at the CPA have a right to expect a level of professional judgment and awareness, which seems to be missing in the current draft report."

Bowen's report, which was prepared for Congress, acknowledged that the insurgency in Iraq poses "the most difficult challenge" to reconstruction.

"Even under the most favorable of conditions, rebuilding Iraq would be a job of daunting proportions," he wrote.

But the provisional authority did not clearly assign managerial responsibility, and its rules lacked clear guidance on procedures and controls for dispersing funds, he concluded.

Staffing shortages and turnover also resulted in inadequate oversight of budget execution by Iraqi ministries, he found -- and allegations of corruption in the oil-for-food program should have raised concerns about the Iraqi government's ability to manage the reconstruction funds.


Whoops...
 
'I'm SHOCKED, shocked I tell you, that funds are missing in a country where graft and corruption are actually two ministries in the government. ;)

Actually, this is old news, left over from last year...
It remains to be seen what the final accounting will be.

BTW...Doesn't Ron Paul belong to a group of folks who squander billions of dollars daily? I don't see you holding HIS feet to the fire.
 
Use it as bribe money to run the country and stage the elections then blame the Iraqi's for losing it. It's not like they're gonna dispute it and incriminate themselves..

Oh "we screwed up" "oh they screwed up" same thing as always

It's only 9 billion dollars...nothing to get excited about...
 
Again, with the wild eyed, unsubstantiated assertions.
Do you have any verifiable, documented proof of your charges or are you just raving again?
 
Just giving a possible hypothesis. Why is 'awe those gosh darn Iraqi's did it' not an equally "wild eyed, unsubstantiated assertion" in your mind?

The money is missing and like it or not, somebody somewhere had something to do with all of it... :rolleyes:
 
OMG, just thinking about your reaction....it's like "just write it off and look the other way". Just 9 BILLION dollars. Those wacky Iraqi's! I think an attitude like that blows the most ridiculous thing anyone could say out of the water.
 
Yeah, Psychosword is obviously making all this up, tinfoil hatter that he is.

And the 9 billion wasn't really tacked onto the Americans tax bill, that's propaganda too. Besides, whats 9 billon when the American debt is up in the trillions?
 
At this time, I am inclined to say Psycho is as correct as anyone else. If the money is just plain gone, then no one can really disprove him wrong.
 
i notice they do not say who actually wrote this "report", nor do they detail any actual facts. plus, couple that this is a re-run of the "report" from last year.. I'ld say, its probably politically motivated.
 
Let's see. How do I put this. The report is factual, as far as it goes. Mr. Bowen is the Special IG responsible for issuing the audit report, and is doing a good job. This is the audit report for the Development Fund for Iraq, which is/was referred to as 'DFI' money. Essentially, it was remaining Oil for Food funds (not much) and materiel donated before the war (some junk), and money generated by the sale of Iraq's oil after the cessation of hostilities (most of the money in question). So, in truth, this money belonged to the 'Government of Iraq', however you want to define it. It was 'thier' money, not ours.

I don't feel free to say much about this except that CPA can (for the most part) account for the money right up to the point that it was handed to the Iraqi Ministies. See the audit report. After that is where the problem comes up. The Ministries, in general, did not have any modern (i.e. electronic) method of accounting for anything. Personnel, money, inventory, etc. If they had it (systems) before the war, it 'disappeared' very shortly thereafter. I can't tell you how many times I heard "It was looted". More times than it was true, I know that. The 'Diem' was 'Carpe'd' alot, by ministry employees, in many cases.

I do know the story behind this statement:

"CPA staff identified at one ministry that although 8,206 guards were on the payroll, only 602 guards could be validated," the audit report states. "Consequently, there was no assurance funds were not provided for ghost employees."

You have no idea how difficult it was to figure this out, either. I know the people who did figure it out, at some personal, physical risk to themselves. Some ministry employees became 'non' ministry employees over it, too. But given the situation, there wasn't a whole bunch else that could be done then, or now, since payments at the time were disbursed in cash, as there were no banks and checks were useless.

Ambassador Bremer is being correct and truthful in his comments quoted, based on my first-hand knowledge. The chaos was amazing. CPA never reached authorized staffing at any time, as far as I know. Travel was difficult at best, and impossible at times, for CPA staffers. I know. I was one. I travelled much more than others, and it weren't easy, believe me. None of us got out as much as we needed too. Got kind of 'sporting' at times, as well, if I can swipe an appropriate phrase from General Moore. I know lots of folks who had near-misses with IED's, gunfire, rockets, and mortars, and a few who got too near and aren't among us anymore. You could not follow up on things from an office, as the lack of communications infrastructure, language barriers, and electronic systems precluded that. We are talking about an entire country that was not destroyed by 'us', in the war, but that had been wasted by a dictator and his buddies for 35 years before we got there.

Now, you can choose to believe me or not. But it's true. Unfortunately, I'm not going to go into gory detail on the errornet. I've probably shot my mouth (fingers?) off more than I should. If you ever get to SW Missouri, PM me and I'll tell you stuff over drinks that will make you laugh, get p.o.'d, or maybe understand. Probably all three. I have over a thousand pictures of my time there. (No gory stuff, I didn't care for that. Anything I had of that nature stayed with those who showed it to me, and I deliberately avoided ugly pictures, as there were plenty out there already for history, and it really wasn't cool in my own mind. Besides, it was against the rules anyway).

But after yesterday, I feel good! Things went more like I thought they would than the naysayers did. Actually, much better than I thought they would. The average Iraqi is no more or less human than anyone else, and they have been getting sick of the bombers and shooters for a very long time. They showed that yesterday, and good on them!
 
What can I say, some people are perfectly fine with 9 BILLION dollars missing so long as the news doesn't make mention of it while their glorious homeland leader has a day in the sun in the controlled media spotlight.

And we should keep paying taxes???
 
Speaking of funds, I wonder how anyone can account with figures for the Federal budget if the CIA budget is a "secret". Seems to me that creates a problem.

On the other hand, much of the CIA's funding probably is of a non-appropriated nature; in other words, siphoned off private enterprize fronts. But that still does not answer the Federal funding and accounting problem.

Am I insinuating something? Aaaaahhhh no noooo noo noooo noooooooooo .......... yes.
 
psycho...
The money belonged to the Iraqis. The money was returned to the Iraqis. What happened to the money from that point is at issue. The money did not come from US tax dollars. It came from oil revenues. Read for comprehension once in awhile, would ya.

LAK...
Find another thread to hijack.
 
What happened to the money from that point is at issue.

That's one hell of a big What Happened. My post still stands, perhaps you should read for comprehension? Were you too caught up in the glory of the Iraqi staged election?
 
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