The Follow the Money Project is investigating where the money appropriated for the Iraq and
Afghanistan wars is going -- especially money that should be going to the Troops.
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LOGCAP Oversight Team issues Stunning After-Action Report
A startling example of dysfunctional and ineffective oversight was revealed at the Senate Subcommitte hearing
on "Management and Oversight of Contingency Contracting in Hostile Zones" Thursday, January 24, 2008. A 2005 LOGCAP
Support Unit Team Detachment after-action report, written by team members who were on duty in Iraq between June 2004 and June
2005, was submitted to their chain of command that documented a lack of support and such issues as LOGCAP Program Managers
"leading the charge" for KBR and supporting their "boondoggles."
There was no doubt that LOGCAP program officials were upset with the report and its unknown if it was eventually
edited and trashed so that it would never see the light of day. Click on the After-Action Report at the left side
of this site to read the full report.
Check out our blog to see what is new in oversight of the money for our soldiers.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Hemorraging $12 Billion a Month: Triage on How to Slow the Bleeding
According to new estimates, we will soon be spending up to $12 billion a month on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and if
current trends continue, this war effort will surpass the money spent in Vietnam. When I started looking at where the war
money was going five years ago, we were spending less than 4 billion dollars a month with pretty much the same amount of troops
deployed. (There are now about 160,000 troops in Iraq and about 160,000 contractor employees, the most in history.) I will
let the politicians sort out when we should get out of Iraq but I can tell you what the Congress can do to slow the bleeding
until more help comes.
The war service industry, otherwise known as the contractors in these wars, have had an out-of-control money meter running
since the build-up of the war. I have sources inside the DOD who have told me that there was no serious, on-the-ground auditing
by the DOD in Iraq until the fall of 2006, which happens to be when the Democrats won the Congress back and various chairmen
such as Henry Waxman promised to hold oversight hearings. My sources also tell me that the limited auditing that has been
done has shown examples of large amounts of questioned costs that the Army just keeps paying anyway. Why does the Army keep
paying? One reason might be what you will read at the bottom of this post.
While others may say that this is not important in the middle of the war, I will tell you that the contractors, by running
up their historical costs on the first round of task orders, have guaranteed that the future work in this war will be inflated
with all this fraud, abuse and waste. The Center for Public Integrity has found that "U.S. government contracts for work in
Iraq and Afghanistan have grown more than 50 percent annually, from $11 billion in 2004 to almost $17 billion in 2005 and
more than $25 billion in 2006."
This trend will continue until the Congress forces the DOD to get serious about scrubbing the costs billed by the contractors.
This war has been a perfect storm for overbilling: In the rush to war, the generals used contractors in vastly larger numbers
than ever before, put them in battlefield situations where it is very hard to audit them, gave them indefinite quantity/indefinite
delivery contracts, and ignored most of the puny auditing that has been done and paid most of their inflated bills. KBR, by
far the largest contractor in Iraq, recent reported profits of $71 million. But they also said that they had to deduct $22
million in potential disallowed costs in Iraq in 2003. Considering that the KBR contract in Iraq has exploded to approximately
$26 billion with them billing the government over half a billion dollars a month, this potentially small recover is peanuts.
Meanwhile, the contractors are estimating that their new task orders based on these old, unscrubbed costs and adding on more
for inflation and other "unseen" problems. That is called contract nourishment in the trade and will make it so that the contractors
will exponentially spiral up their costs and the $12 billion a month will go to $15 billion a month and upward. And, if we
end up needing contractors anywhere else in the world for whatever reason, these inflated costs will be become the new baseline
for future contracts.
So what should we do? There is some heavy lifting ahead for the Congress. They need to put in all future DOD appropriations,
including the war supplemental bills, requirements that the DOD go back and scrub all the bills from Iraq to the present,
force the contract managers to accept the auditors' disallowed costs, recover the money, adjust the new task orders and contracts
to reflect the real costs for their services, and push the Department of Justice to prosecute the dozens of Iraq war whistleblower
suits that are laying fallow in that building. The new Wartime Contract Commission, started by freshman Democratic Senators
Webb and McCaskill, can also do some of the long time heavy lifting to make sure that the DOD institutes all the necessary
changes to get control of the money.
We also need to pull the contractors out of war zones into safe bases, Kuwait and the Green Zone, so that their costs can
be watched and we don't put our soldiers at risk with contractors that do less than a full job and contractor employees quit
and leave the troops without the necessary supplies. (Want to know more about that? I wrote a whole book about it....Betraying
Our Troops: The Destructive Results of Privatizing War.) Congress should also force KBR to not have their employees paid by
offshore companies to avoid paying Social Security and Medicare.
Some people suggest that we pull all contractors out of Iraq. This is not realistic or necessary. The Army has outsourced
way too much of its vital logistics to contractors and they need to rein it in and get control of the contractors. The contractors
need to be out of the battlefield and only used to supplement the Army's war effort. The Army has literally been held hostage
to these contractors for the length of this war. Don't believe me? Read this opening vignette at the beginning my book . I
was able to verify this practice was happening on bases all over Iraq:
Camp Spiecher, Iraq, late summer 2004.
The air in the room hung with tension. Even the air conditioning in the heat-baked environment did not stop the sweat from
forming on the foreheads of the Army staff. The brigadier general in charge of the meeting shifted uncomfortably in his chair.
The Army's logistics' contract manager at the camp could not believe what he was hearing. A KBR manager responsible for supplying
the troops in this camp with food, water, and all other services and supplies, had just threatened to stop KBR's work at Camp
Speicher - to stop cooking and feeding the troops, to stop supplying the troops outside the base - unless the Army paid KBR's
submitted invoices.
Granted, his company, KBR, a subsidiary of Halliburton [KBR is now an independent company], was operating "at risk" by overrunning
it's budgeted spending and had been late in sending its invoices to the Army. And the Army was slow in paying because of its
concerns over the accuracy of the company's invoices. Even so, the KBR manager had just threatened the Army brass that his
employees were going to stay in their housing containers and do nothing until the money was paid. Essentially this would amount
to a work stoppage, or labor strike, on the battlefield - perhaps the Army's biggest fear regarding the Pentagon's new experiment
of having private contractors supply the basic needs of its troops on the battlefield...
...The Army logistics contract manager and the camp's general officer faced the disaster of having to explain to their men,
their superior officers, that there might not be any food, water, or other vital supplies the next day because the Army didn't
have a backup plan. Since the Army had outsourced these traditionally Army-provided services to one company, they did not
have any choice. The Army was short of troops, so there were no backup soldiers to take on these tasks.
KBR ended up working the next day because the Army ultimately relented and agreed to come up with the money to pay its invoices.
But this was not the first or last time the company would threaten the Army with work stoppages. It was like negotiating with
the only plumber within a thousand miles while your basement was filing with water. KBR was in the driver's seat and the company
knew it.
Comments are encouraged. Contact us at admin@followthemoneyproject.org
Troops! We need to hear from you about what you saw in Iraq or Afghanistan on supplies and
equipment. We also want to hear from contractor employees who have returned and troubled by what they saw in Iraq or Afghanstan.
We will keep all letters confidential. Email us at admin@followthemoneyproject.org .
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