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Sunday, June 7, 2009

APNewsBreak: Major problems found in war spending

By RICHARD LARDNER, Associated Press Writer – 1 hr 18 mins ago

WASHINGTON – This is one Christmas gift U.S. taxpayers don't need. Construction of a $30 million dining facility at a U.S. base in Iraq is scheduled to be completed Dec. 25. But the decision to build it was based on bad planning and botched paperwork.

The project is too far along to stop, making the mess hall a future monument to the waste and inefficiency plaguing the war effort, according to an independent panel investigating contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In its first report to Congress, the Wartime Contracting Commission presents a bleak assessment of how tens of billions of dollars have been spent since 2001. The 111-page report, obtained by The Associated Press, documents poor management, weak oversight, and a failure to learn from past mistakes as recurring themes in wartime contracting.

The report is scheduled to be made public Wednesday at a hearing held by the House Oversight and Government Reform's national security subcommittee.
  • U.S. reliance on contractors has grown to "unprecedented proportions," says the bipartisan commission, established by Congress last year.
  • More than 240,000 private sector employees are supporting military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
  • Thousands more work for the State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development. But the government has no central data base of who all these contractors are, what services they provide, and how much they're paid.
  • The Pentagon has failed to provide enough trained staff to watch over them, creating conditions for waste and corruption, the commission says.