With
the conflict in Afghanistan now grinding into its 16th year despite the fact
that the war was officially over in 2014 and the Trump Adminstration putting its own spin on Afghanistan's future, recent developments show that
taxpayers who have already ponied up $1.07 trillion to put the Taliban "in their place" are spending money on luxury items that they cannot
afford themselves.
On August 9, 2017, U.S. Senator Claire Connor
McCaskill (D-Missouri), the top ranking Democrat on the Senate Homeland
Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, released information that should
cause American taxpayers to have an apoplectic stroke. According to her
press release, Senator McCaskill had demanded answers back in May 2015 when it became apparent that an
audit of the money spent in Afghanistan on national reconstruction by the
Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) was
"questionable" and that at least some of the spending on the
Afghanistan Infrastructure Fund was unsustainable, recommending that further
taxpayer funding be prohibited and that a further investigation of spending be undertaken. Under this request, the Defense Contract
Audit Agency (DCAA) reviewed the "Legacy East" contract, a contract
which was given to subcontractor New Century Consulting. The purpose of
the Legacy East project was to provide counterinsurgency exports to mentor and train the
Afghan National Security Forces.
According to Senator McCaskill, when
the DCAA audited the contract and subcontractor, they found that New Century
Consulting had billed the U.S. government for over $50 million in questionable
costs including the following:
1.)
purchases of seven luxury cars including Porsches, Alfa Romeos, a Bentley, an
Aston Martin and a Land Rover
2.)
expenditures of $42,000 in cash on automatic weapons and $1500 on alcohol
despite regulations or contract provisions that forbade such expenditures.
3.)
NCC kept its CEO and CFO on payroll as "executive assistants" at
salaries that reached an average of approximately $420,000 in 2012.
According to the press release, these employees worked at home and never
travelled to customer locations. As well, no documentation exists to
prove that any work was actually done by the individuals.
According to the latest report by SIGAR, NCC spent $143.3 million on the Afghanistan Source Operations Management (ASOM) training and mentoring program as a subcontractor o Jorge Scientific Corporation. The report did conclude that NCC "successfully performed the tasks required by the contracts", however, we find that following:
"...CTTSO’s (Combatting Terrorism Technical Support Office) attempts to
assess contractor performance relied, in part, on contractor-provided data,
such as NCC’s self-assessments created by its mentors and compliance officers.
SIGAR reviewed the self-assessments and found that NCC deemed the Legacy and
ASOM programs a success, but provided few specifics to support its claim."
Here
is a screen capture of New Century's website:
Here is some background information on NCC's executive
and management teams:
And,
in case you wondered, here is NCC's response to the accusations made by Senator
McCaskill:
Here
is a quote from the company's letter to Mr. John Sopko, the Special Inspector
General for Afghanistan Reconstruction:
"With respect,
we regret the general negative tone of the wording in your report, and the way
it has portrayed both New Century and the highly professional US Government
entities who have managed programmatic delivery, such as ARL and CTTSO. This
has led to sensationalized press comment labeling the programs a “failure” when
these programs are regarded by all exposed to them in an operational setting as
hugely successful and a sound investment by the US Government.
We have
always striven to deliver a valuable and cost-effective service in support of
what have been (and continues to be) very challenging missions. We are fully
aware that if we do not consistently deliver tangible, positive results then
our services will no longer be in demand. We are proud that the majority of our
work comes from second and subsequent contracts with the same clients, so we
are reassured that what we offer is valued, relevant and effective.
Our personnel
had deployed in support of Coalition Forces in Afghanistan in a very
challenging and hostile environment, initially to a province where some other
contractors would not even deploy due to the level of threat. We are
disappointed that the audit report has failed to acknowledge the dedication,
professionalism and commitment of the mentors and trainers who delivered the
programs; or recognize that in their delivery one of our personnel, Ken
McGonigle, paid the ultimate sacrifice whilst preventing an RPG attack on an
Osprey aircraft carrying Vice-Admiral Robert Harward and his staff. Despite
being a contractor, Ken was decorated by the US
Government for his bravery and was posthumously awarded the Queen’s Gallantry
Medal in the United Kingdom."
Only
time will tell if Senator McCaskill's assessment of the New Century Consulting
expenditures is correct. If it proves to be correct, it is yet another
prime example of why the war in Afghanistan continues to be among the most
costly in history.
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