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Mon 22 Aug, 2005 03:03 pm
Quote:The Trillion-Dollar War
By LINDA BILMES
Cambridge, Mass.
08/20/05 "New York Times" -- -- THE human cost of the more than 2,000 American military personnel killed and 14,500 wounded so far in Iraq and Afghanistan is all too apparent. But the financial toll is still largely hidden from public view and, like the suffering of those who have lost loved ones, will persist long after the fighting is over.
The cost goes well beyond the more than $250 billion already spent on military operations and reconstruction. Basic running costs of the current conflicts are $6 billion a month - a figure that reflects the Pentagon's unprecedented reliance on expensive private contractors. Other factors keeping costs high include inducements for recruits and for military personnel serving second and third deployments, extra pay for reservists and members of the National Guard, as well as more than $2 billion a year in additional foreign aid to Jordan, Pakistan, Turkey and others to reward their cooperation in Iraq and Afghanistan. The bill for repairing and replacing military hardware is $20 billion a year, according to figures from the Congressional Budget Office.
But the biggest long-term costs are disability and health payments for returning troops, which will be incurred even if hostilities were to stop tomorrow. The United States currently pays more than $2 billion in disability claims per year for 159,000 veterans of the 1991 gulf war, even though that conflict lasted only five weeks, with 148 dead and 467 wounded. Even assuming that the 525,000 American troops who have so far served in Iraq and Afghanistan will require treatment only on the same scale as their predecessors from the gulf war, these payments are likely to run at $7 billion a year for the next 45 years.
All of this spending will need to be financed by adding to the federal debt. Extra interest payments will total $200 billion or more even if the borrowing is repaid quickly. Conflict in the Middle East has also played a part in doubling the price of oil from $30 a barrel just prior to the invasion of Iraq in March 2003 to $60 a barrel today. Each $5 increase in the price of oil reduces our national income by about $17 billion a year.
Even by this simple yardstick, if the American military presence in the region lasts another five years, the total outlay for the war could stretch to more than $1.3 trillion, or $11,300 for every household in the United States.
Linda Bilmes, an assistant secretary at the Department of Commerce from 1999 to 2001, teaches budgeting and public finance at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard.
Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company
Makes you wonder what all this cost has accomplished, doesn't it?
Again, it's for the Iraqi People, right?
cicerone imposter wrote:Makes you wonder what all this cost has accomplished, doesn't it?
Again, it's for the Iraqi People, right?
Oh, sure, ci. We're just one big humanitarian conglomerate. But you knew that -- right?
Let's do a little simple math: This war has been going on for 2.5 years. This administration and the experts think it'll last at the very minimum another five or more years. If it's $11,500 now, a good estimate at the end of five more years will cost $34,500 for every household. Americans are so rich, that's cheap!
We don't need no terrorist to ruin our economy; we're doing it all by ourselves!
When we're all broke, maybe the French and Germans will help feed us.
Hey, maybe you guys were right. Maybe it was all about oil. Maybe that's why gas is so cheap, all of a sudden.
roger, I think you have something there. I hear the oil companies are getting rich.
The latest info I heard, though, is that the oil fields don't have electricity. A bummer.