I spend a
bit of time most days perusing through the online versions of the world's major
mainstream media outlets and every so often, I cross paths with something that
I find interesting. Today was no exception.
I'll open
this posting by giving my readers a bit of background about the Royal Jordanian
Air Academy. You'll see why later.
The Royal Jordanian
Air Academy or RJAA was established in 1966 with its main
campus in Amman, the capital city of Jordan with a satellite campus in Aqaba.
The Academy is considered to be one of the leading aviation training
centres in the Middle East and it trains both private and commercial pilots as
well as maintenance technicians. RJAA is privately owned by the following individuals and companies:
RJAA's major
shareholder and Chairman, Mohammed Abu Ghazaleh, originally from Palestine, now
lives in San Francisco. Arabian Business magazine considers him to be one
of the world's most influential Arabs. His net worth in 2011 was $2.4 billion and, rather surprisingly, he is
the Chairman and CEO of Fresh Del Monte Produce Inc., purveyors of
bananas and pineapples among many other things.
Now you ask,
what does this have to do with anything?
Well, it
seems that American taxpayers will be forking over hundreds of millions of
dollars to one of Mr. Abu Ghazaleh's enterprises, the aforementioned Royal
Jordanian Air Academy. According to a release posted here on the U.S. Department of Defense
website, the U.S. Air Force has awarded RJAA a firm, fixed-price contract
to provide Type 1 Special English language and technical aviation training for
Iraqi Air Force technical personnel between now and August 8, 2013. The
total amount of the contract - $370,779,589 for the year, which works out
to $1.02 million per day. Note that this contract is not for
pilot training, just for English language and technical learning.
Interesting,
isn't it? The costs of war seem
to never end, do they?
It is curious what you turn up. An article a while back citing various works, stated that the final price tag for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will eventually total $5 trillion. The author went on to point out that all this was to essentially kill one man. I'm sure Jason Bourne could have done it for a lot less.
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