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iraq getting robbed

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by wizardball, May 4, 2005.

  1. wizardball

    wizardball Member

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    Man you gotta feel for those Iraqi's ...they are gettin screwed from all sides.



    http://news.yahoo.com/s/krwashbureau/20050504/ts_krwashbureau/_bc_iraq_cash_wa_1



    Federal auditors can't trace $96.6 million earmarked for Iraq By Seth Borenstein, Knight Ridder Newspapers
    Wed May 4, 6:59 PM ET



    WASHINGTON - Nearly $100 million in Iraqi reconstruction cash - which was supposed to be handed out by U.S. workers in shrink-wrapped bricks of new hundred-dollar bills - can't be accounted for, federal auditors reported Wednesday.

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    A criminal investigation into possible fraud in a handful of cases is under way to determine what happened to some of the $96.6 million that was earmarked to rebuild south-central Iraq, according to a new report by the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction.

    The money came from Iraqi oil sales and other local revenues, not from U.S. taxpayers, and it was supposed to be distributed by the main financial office of the U.S. rebuilding effort in Iraq. That financial office - first part of the now-defunct Coalition Provisional Authority and now run by Joint Area Support Group-Central - hired a cadre of U.S. workers who pay cash to locals and contractors to repair Iraq and provide relief to Iraqis.

    But U.S. officials didn't watch where the cash went, the inspector general found.

    An examination of financial records between June 2003 and October 2004 showed poor bookkeeping, and investigators "found indicators of potential fraud," the report said.

    In two cases, U.S. workers left Iraq without telling their bosses what happened to $1.49 million in cash they were in charge of, according to the inspector general's office. When the inspector general's office looked into it, it found that those two "field paying agents" didn't sign the required forms to take on personal liability for any lost cash.

    Instead of trying to find out what happened to the money, the boss for the two agents tried to use other funds "to remove outstanding balances by simply washing accounts," the 36-page report said.

    On other occasions, wads of cash were handed out without being counted properly, according to the inspector general. One U.S. office wasn't cleared to receive cash - and had even asked not to be given any - but got some anyway. The Joint Area Support Group-Central said the delivery was supposed to be $3.5 million. When the money was counted, it came to only $3.25 million.

    Outside financial watchdogs, legislators and private contracting experts said they're no longer surprised or shocked by reports of financial mismanagement in Iraq.

    "You have a system that is broken down," said Brookings Institution senior fellow Peter Singer, the author of the book "Corporate Warriors." "It's what people warned about, it's what people knew was going on. Now I'm afraid it's too late."

    Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis., said the findings "paint a picture of disorganized, sloppy management."

    "The U.S. risks fostering a culture of corruption in Iraq," Feingold said.

    The inspector general examined a total of $119.9 million in cash, but auditors could properly account for only $23.3 million of that money.

    The inspector general's office was unable even to estimate how much of the missing $96.6 million was due to sloppy recordkeeping and how much was lost to criminal activity.

    Contracting officials told the inspector general where they think $89.4 million of the unaccounted-for money went - but couldn't provide adequate receipts or paperwork to prove it.

    Another $7.2 million vanished off the books.

    "We don't know where it is," Assistant Inspector General James Mitchell told Knight Ridder.

    Cash is necessary in Iraq because the country doesn't have electronic funds or automated teller machines, Mitchell said.

    Defense Department spokeswoman Lt. Col. Rose-Ann Lynch emphasized that all the money in question came from Iraqi funds, "not U.S. taxpayers' dollars," and said reconstruction managers in Iraq "did the best they could with what they had."

    "It was a tough situation with not enough people, people shooting. They had to move constantly. (It was) very challenging in an austere environment," Lynch said.

    The chaos of war also was a problem, Singer said. "But in many situations it's people taking advantage of the expediency of war," he added.

    The inspector general issued several recommendations for fixing cash controls, which military officials in Iraq promised to undertake.

    These problems might be expected a year-and-a-half ago, but not well after the fall of Baghdad, said Keith Ashdown, vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense.

    In the past, reports show that the U.S. government has "lost forklifts, misplaced generators," Ashdown said. "Now you're doing something you thought you could never do: You're misplacing millions of dollars."
     
  2. HayesStreet

    HayesStreet Member

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    Yeah whatever. Over $200 million in good ol US of A hundred dollar bills was found by the Army cache'd by Saddam. That was turned over to the Iraqis, so it sounds like their still up a buck or two.
     
  3. Invisible Fan

    Invisible Fan Member

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    How are they up a buck? Cultural and historical artifacts stolen and irrecoverably damaged since the invasion doesn't have a monetary price tag.
     
  4. Rocket River

    Rocket River Member

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    Isn't that how Don King gave
    out money under the table

    hhehehehehe

    Honestly
    Is anyone surprised that millions
    of dollars are just being passed around
    and
    some comes up missing?

    Rocket River
     
  5. RocketMan Tex

    RocketMan Tex Member

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    Somebody check Dick Cheney's briefcase....
     
  6. basso

    basso Member
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    or dick bavetta's...
     
  7. ima_drummer2k

    ima_drummer2k Member

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    Or, you guessed it.

    [​IMG]

    Frank Stallone
     
  8. JuanValdez

    JuanValdez Member

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    Man, that sucks. Even my company's accounting is better than that!
     
  9. pirc1

    pirc1 Member

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    Good job. Guess I should be trying to interview for these cash handling positions.:mad:
     
  10. wizardball

    wizardball Member

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    Man you are a sad individual...... their whole country has been bombed to rubble… and there are people being killed on all sides…and your keeping score on who owes who… getting away with 100 million from a country which has people dying from hunger is not right….which was my point of posting…. that is a big sum anyway you see it….but for you being the patriotic that you are…hey who cares if some money comes in “our” hands…. wont make a difference……typical.:rolleyes:
     

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