The BBC puts a number on corruption in the new Iraq: US$23 billion lost, stolen or missing.
As the BBC points out, the total cost of this theft and systemic mismanagement is much higher than the total of dollars leaked away -- because much of this money was intended for essential projects, like rebuilding the Iraqi security forces. Obviously, these forces haven't been effective to stabilize the country, suggesting that cost must now be measured in blood as well as dollars.
BBC uncovers lost Iraq billions
BCC/Panorama video
Image: US Army helicopters over Samarra, Iraq (cc James Gordon).
-- by Jonathan Werve --
Friday, June 13, 2008
$23 Billion Lost in Iraq. Give or Take a Billion.
Wednesday, January 23, 2008
The War Card: Orchestrated Deception on the Path to War
Global Integrity co-founder Charles Lewis is not one to let untold stories slip from sight. At the moment, the popular mood has turned against the Bush administration's rush to war in Iraq. But history is slippery and subject to revision, where truth becomes a game of that's-your-opinion, and 'balance' means giving the truth equal time with carefully orchestrated lies.
Unless, of course, single-minded journalists like Lewis stake down the truth in such clear and meticulously researched language that there is no room for spin. Their result is unequivocal:
President George W. Bush and seven of his administration's top officials, including Vice President Dick Cheney, National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice, and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, made at least 935 false statements in the two years following September 11, 2001, about the national security threat posed by Saddam Hussein's Iraq. Nearly five years after the U.S. invasion of Iraq, an exhaustive examination of the record shows that the statements were part of an orchestrated campaign that effectively galvanized public opinion and, in the process, led the nation to war under decidedly false pretenses.Read the report at The War Card, published by The Center for Public Integrity.
We are proud to have Charles Lewis as a member of Global Integrity's advisory board.
Thursday, December 20, 2007
Blackwater in Iraq: Poor oversight sets the stage for deadly abuse of power
WASHINGTON: On September 17, 2007, in western Baghdad, private contractors hired to protect a convoy of U.S. State Department officials opened fire on nearby cars. When the smoke cleared, the Iraqi government reported that 17 civilians were dead and demanded that their American employer, Blackwater USA, leave Iraq. Subsequent investigations by Congress describe a pattern of excessive force by Blackwater guards abetted by lax oversight by the State Department.
"There is no evidence... that the State Department sought to restrain Blackwater's actions, raised concerns about the number of shooting incidents involving Blackwater or the company's high rate of shooting first," wrote Democrats on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform (.PDF of report).
More fundamentally, no one is quite sure what the U.S. has been receiving for the billions it spends on more than 25,000 private security contractors in Iraq. Data on U.S. procurement in the 2006 Global Integrity Report suggest that these problems are rooted in a failure to enforce the rigorous procurement laws the United States has on the books. Despite a large federal bureaucracy and vast technological resources dedicated to streamlining public procurement, conflicts-of-interest continue to undermine the U.S. government's ability to detect fraud and abuses.
Non-competitive bidding in U.S. public procurement has exploded in the first half of this decade, with the value of such contracts growing from US$67 billion in fiscal year 2000 to US$145 billion in fiscal year 2005. Perhaps nowhere has the trend towards privatizing government crystallized more clearly than in matters of national security, where one finds closed bidding procedures, backroom deals, and the habit of high-ranking procurement officials passing through the "revolving door" to work for large government contractors after retirement.
A good example of this, as reported in the New York Times, is the long-standing sweetheart deals between the Air Force and Boeing, which won a lucrative contract from the Air Force last November to supply search-and-rescue helicopters. The contract is being contested by Boeing rivals Lockheed and Sikorsky on the grounds of unfair competition and conflict-of-interest.
The Blackwater debacle is, thus, only the latest in a string of controversies related to the allotment of contracts to private actors with close connections to government. Data from the 2006 Global Integrity Report suggest systemic problems in the U.S. procurement process. Even though the U.S. earned a "Very Strong" rating in procurement - in large part due to robust legal measures on the books - it scored less well in the enforcement of penalties for major violations and of conflicts-of-interest regulations amongst bidders. On occasion, these procurement violations have involved the "complicity (or at least acquiescence) of federal officials" as well, according to Global Integrity data.
The Project on Government Oversight, the country's leading non-government watchdog tracking the federal procurement process, notes that "as of September 2007, the top 50 federal government contractors [...] have since 1995 paid civil, criminal, and administrative fines, penalties, restitution, and settlements totaling almost US$13 billion. This amount is somewhat understated, as many cases involve confidential out-of-court settlements, or penalties that were anonymously split between two or more companies." When put in context, the U.S. ranks alongside countries such as Armenia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Georgia, Guatemala, Sudan, and Tajikistan in earning low scores when it comes to enforcing procurement regulations.
If the U.S. is serious about enacting substantive governance reform to ensure that incidents like Blackwater are to be avoided in the future, it might do well to strengthen the enforcement of oversight and accountability measures in public procurement, where the boundaries between public and private interests have dissolved with increasing speed during the past decade.
Further Reading
Center for American Progress. "Shining Light on Blackwater USA" (2 October 2007)Center for Public Integrity (Windfalls of War: US Contractors in Afghanistan and Iraq)
Michael A. Cohen and Maria Figueroa Kupcu. "Privatizing Foreign Policy," World Policy Journal, vol. 22, no. 3 (Fall 2005): 34-52
Neil Gordon. "Tracking the Misconduct of Federal Contractors," Nieman Watchdog (September 26, 2007)
David Johnston. "Immunity Deals Offered to Blackwater Guards," The New York Times (October 30, 2007)
Scott Lilly. A Return to Competitive Contracting: Congress Needs to Clean Up the Procurement Process Mess, Center for American Progress, May 2007
Daniel Politi. "Winning Contractors - An Update" (Center for Public Integrity, 2004)
Federal Contractor Misconduct Database, Project on Government Oversight (POGO)
Peter W. Singer. Corporate Warriors: The Rise of the Privatized Military Industry (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2003) [amazon.com]
Paul R. Verkuil. Outsourcing Sovereignty: Why Privatization of Government Functions Threatens Democracy and What We Can Do about It (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007) [amazon.com]
Andre Verloy. "Documents Reveal Concern Regarding Halliburton Contracts" (Center for Public Integrity, 2004)
Leslie Wayne. "Again, Boeing is Scrutinized on a Contract," The New York Times (3 March 2007)
Janine R. Wedel. "Dangers of Private Agendas in Foreign Policy," Financial Times (11 August 2004)
Nathaniel