Now that it looks like
war of one sort or another has reappeared on the Iraqi stage, I wanted to take
a look back at a publication by the Special Inspector General for Iraq
Reconstruction (SIGIR) entitled "Hard Lessons: The Iraq Reconstruction Experience".
This report covers the funds that were appropriated (perhaps a better
word is "expropriated") by Congress to fund relief and reconstruction
in Iraq from mid-2002 to the fall of 2008. In total, American taxpayers
spent $50 billion to train Iraq's Army, rebuilding the nation's infrastructure
and supporting democracy-building efforts among a myriad of other things.
This was the largest relief effort made by the United States for a single
country in history.
As you may or may not
recall, when President George W. Bush ordered the Pentagon to plan for the
deposing of Saddam Hussein, it was widely accepted within the Pentagon that the
United States would rapidly transfer power to an interim Iraqi authority.
The American forces would function as liberators and would leave Iraq
within months of toppling the regime, meaning that the United States would not
have to act as the nation's administrator once hostilities were over. The
Department of State felt differently; Colin Powell, then Secretary of State,
pointed out that the power vacuum resulting from replacing the regime would end
up requiring a commitment of many years and that the cost of nation-building in
Iraq would be enormous. It was proposed that the high costs of
reconstruction would be offset by Iraq's massive oil reserves, limiting the
risks to American taxpayers. Unfortunately, the nation's oil
infrastructure was in such poor shape that Iraq could not come close to meeting
its production capacity thanks to years of sanctions and the outbreak of hostilities in 2003.
Prior to the 2003
invasion, Iraq had 1.3 million soldiers and police in its security forces.
After the invasion, there were only 7000 to 9000 remaining. The
Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) under David Bremer issued Order Number 2
on May 23, 2003 that abolished the Ministry of Defense, the Ministry of State
for Military Affairs, the Ministry of Information, the Iraqi Intelligence
Service and three more government ministries, putting every member of Iraq's
army, airforce, navy, air defense as well as the Republican Guard out of work.
This meant that 500,000 men were immediately unemployed, many without
compensation; no soldier with a rank of colonel or above was eligible for a
termination payment or a pension. To replace Iraq's army, the Coalition
would train 40,000 carefully vetted volunteer soldiers in a New Iraqi Army into
three light infantry divisions with the first division ready for deployment in
the fall of 2004, another in the fall of 2005 and the last in early 2006.
Major General David Petraeus later stated that the order to disband the
Iraqi military created "tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands,
of additional enemies of the Coalition.", a comment that now looks prophetic. The only remaining
"security forces" were the Iraqi police, under the auspices of the
Ministry of the Interior, a group of people that were both corrupt and not
efficient.
The New Iraqi Army was to
fall under the leadership of Major General Paul Eaton and had a budget of $173
million and a staff of only five to start with. Seventy-five percent of the new force
had prior military experience. When 45 former Iraqi lieutenant colonels
refused to serve as the new officer corps unless they were restored to their
previous rank and pay, the Coalition Military Assistance Training Team (CMATT)
lowered the rank requirement to major. When uprisings/insurgencies caused
greater security concerns during mid-2003, Major General Eaton requested the
assistance of Jordan who agreed to retrain former Iraqi military officers at a
base near Amman, a situation that was resented by Iraqi officers. As the insecurity
grew through the fall of 2003, an additional $2 billion of funding was
granted to the New Iraqi Army. On top of training troops, a new Iraqi
Ministry of Defense was required. The CPA focussed on ethnic balance,
trying to ensure that military promotions would be based on merit not on sect.
However, experience requirements for high level jobs meant that former
Sunni military officers filled most of the top military positions.
Training for the new leadership took place over a three week training
session in Washington, D.C. An assessment in July and August 2004
concluded that Iraqi forces were incapable of combating the insurgency.
Three initiatives were suggested to beef up the Iraqi Security Forces
(ISF); increasing the Iraqi police forces from 90,000 to 135,000, the Iraqi
National Guard to 65 battalions from 45 and the number of border patrol
officers would double to 32,000. All of the 271,000 forces would receive
counterinsurgency training. While the forces may have been reasonably well-trained, the Iraqi
Air Force and Navy were ill-equipped; the Iraqi Air Force had no fixed-wing
fighters or bombers because they were considered "unnecessary and
incapable of influencing the counterinsurgency fight".
All of this military rebuilding was very
costly; in total, by the end of 2008, various appropriations for training Iraqi
forces to be responsible for their nation's security cost American taxpayers
$17.9 billion plus an additional $5 billion from the Iraqi Relief and
Reconstruction Fund.
Here is a chart showing the total expenses on
reconstruction and relief in Iraq by major category to the end of fiscal 2012:
Here is a graph showing
the average daily expenditures on the Iraqi nation-building experiment:
If we want to get a sense
of what a circus the Iraqi reconstruction efforts were, here is a quote from
the SIGIR report showing the logistical challenges faced when trying to send
billions of dollars to Iraq:
"The CPA relied on
the DFI to fund the operations of Iraq’s ministries and to pay for
reconstruction projects. Held in a Federal Reserve Bank account in New York,
DFI cash was flown to Baghdad in very large sums whenever the CPA requested.
These shipments—the largest airborne transfer of currency in history—proved an
enormous logistical challenge. A typical pallet of DFI cash had 640 bundles,
with a thousand bills in each bundle. Each loaded pallet weighed about 1,500
pounds. The pallets were flown into Baghdad’s airport at night and were then
driven to the Central Bank of Iraq for deposit.
The first emergency
air-lift of money to Iraq was for $20 million, but the shipments rapidly grew
in size. In December 2003, the CPA requested a $1.5 billion shipment, at the
time the largest single payout of U.S. currency in Federal Reserve Bank
history. But
that record was soon broken when, in June 2004, more than $4 billion was flown
to Iraq, just before the CPA’s transfer of sovereignty to the Iraqi Interim
Government."
It is interesting to note
that the question asked at the beginning of the report "Did the program
meet the goals it set for itself?" is answered "Generally no on the
infrastructure front, but generally yes regarding the development of Iraq's
security forces" and that "Iraq's security forces have achieved
substantial operational capabilities...". Given that Iraq's military
has essentially capitulated in the face of ISIS military operations, it would
appear that the funds used to train the Iraqi Armed Forces (IAF) were
essentially wasted.
In closing, here is a
quote from Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in a conversation with Jay
Garner, head of the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance:
Rumsfeld: "What do
you think it will cost (to redo the whole country of Iraq")?"
Garner: I think it's
going to cost billions
Rumsfeld: My friend, if
you think we're going to spend a billion dollars of our money over there, you
are sadly mistaken.".
The failure of the Iraqi nation-building experiment seems to have gone hand-in-hand with a failure in leadership, a
mistake that we could well be revisiting.
I think only a true moron would still belive the US did the right thing in toppling Saddam. Although Saddam wasn't a nice guy he kept things stable. Lets move from that and look at Libya, Gaddafi not a nice guy but again kept things stable. Well look at the on going mess there. Now the last non-Western friendly Strongman left is Assad, why in the hell after seeing removing these guys only creates a large mess is this still a US Goal. Lesser of multiple evils comes to mind. But again all of this started with the removal of Saddam.
ReplyDelete"This was the largest relief effort made by the United States for a single country in history."
ReplyDeleteTrue, but not by much. In 2014 dollars, the US spent $29 billion on the UK, $20B on France, $13B on Western Germany; $113 billion total on Western Europe plus another $53 billion on Asian countries with the most going to Japan. Was that $163 billion worth it? Most people would probably say yes but I'm not sure. Certainly we protected our investment in those countries in that we still have troops in them whereas we cut and ran from Iraq. I guess old, senile, stupid John McCain is vindicated with his statement that we should stay in Iraq for 100 years. We've been in Germany and Japan almost 70 and they sure as heck turned out better than Iraq.