The Defense Department’s
special inspector general for Afghan reconstruction (SIGAR)
released two more items today on wasteful spending in Afghanistan;
a teaching facility USAID has awarded about $3 million in contracts
to an Iraqi and multiple Afghan firms to build and repair that
remains unusable according to a new report
(pdf), and a “Commander’s Emergency Response Program” (CERP) for
which Congress appropriated money that was left unspent.
The inspector general says only $43.5 million out of $200
million that expired in September was spent, and that over the last
six fiscal years, only 59 percent of allocated funds were used. In
a letter to the ISAF commander, the DOD comptroller, and the
secretary of the army, the inspector general asks whether the
unspent money was “reprogrammed for other purposes or returned to
the U.S. Treasury,” as well as why the department requested $60
million for the 2014 fiscal year. Congress “only” appropriated $30
million, spending more money where it’s already spent money that
hasn’t been spent yet. The letter also asks why the money wasn’t
spent through the program for which it was allocated, and suggest
some answers:
“There are likely many reasons why these funds
were not used. For example, the accelerated U.S. troop
drawdown may have reduced the need for these funds, or military
commanders may have reduced the cost of various projects
through effective oversight. Another factor may have been the
overarching challenge of budgeting for small-scale reconstruction
projects in an unpredictable conflict zone plagued by
violence, corruption, and sustainability challenges”
Read the rest of the letter here.
More Reason on Afghanistan here.
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