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Helping enemies in Iraq
Cincinnati Post ^

Posted on 08/10/2007 9:13:52 PM PDT by sonsofliberty2000

For years, the list of enemies targeting U.S. troops in Iraq has included Sunni insurgents, Shiite militia and, more recently, a group that calls itself al-Qaida of Mesopotamia. The enemies list in Iraq also includes outsiders such as Iran and Syria, who President Bush and Vice President Cheney have blamed for providing those combatant enemies with weapons that are used to kill U.S. troops in Iraq. Now there is one more, according to infuriating new intelligence.

An investigation by the U.S. Government Accountability Office identified a new culprit who has been shipping into Iraq massive numbers of weapons that U.S. officials now fear are being used to kill American troops. It is our Pentagon.

The Defense Department has no clue about what happened to at least 190,000 guns - 110,000 AK47s and 80,000 pistols - that it gave Iraqi security forces in 2004 and 2005, according to a GAO report released Monday. And U.S. officials now concede that at least some of the missing weapons are now being used to kill American troops.

"One senior Pentagon official acknowledged that some of the weapons probably are being used against U.S. forces," the Washington Post reported Monday. "He cited the Iraqi brigade created at Fallujah that quickly dissolved in September 2004 and turned its weapons against the Americans."

The statistics are both shocking and enraging. The Pentagon cannot account for 110,000 of the 185,000 AK47 rifles it gave the Iraqis; 80,000 of the 170,000 pistols; 135,000 of the 215,000 items of body armor; 115,000 of the 140,000 helmets.

According to the GAO, these security-assistance programs are traditionally overseen by the State Department. But during the reign of then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, his department insisted it could provide the flexibility that could best do the job. Those were the days when nobody said no to Rummy, so it came to pass.

But the GAO report chronicled haphazard and often nonexistent property-accounting procedures as the Pentagon rushed to create, arm and equip Iraqi security forces. Pentagon officials told GAO investigators they didn't have enough personnel to keep track of the weapons they were handing out in Iraq and that their computers were inadequate for the task. Defense officials didn't create central records to track the weapons until December 2005.

Responsibility for the massive failure of accountability lies with the general in charge of creating and equipping the Iraqi security forces. It was Gen. David Petraeus, who is now in command of the entire U.S. military effort in Iraq. Petraeus, who until this finding has always enjoyed an excellent reputation in military circles, will be providing that much-awaited Sept. 15 report on the status of the U.S. military effort in Iraq.

The GAO report of the Pentagon's failure to account for the weapons reads like a classic in witless bureaucracy. "During our review, DOD officials expressed differing opinions about whether DOD regulations applied to the train-and-equip program for Iraq," the report said. The officials were unable to decide which set of procedures applied to their mission - so they basically used none of them and got no guidance from superiors. As of last month, the report said, defense officials still had not identified which set of procedures to use.

No wonder the final two recommendations in the GAO report are so pathetically obvious that, written in officialese, they could pass for comic-strip satire. Hardly "Pogo," but maybe "Doonesbury Meets Stephen Colbert": "Determine which DOD accountability procedures apply or should apply to the program. After defining the required accountability procedures, ensure that sufficient staff, functioning distribution networks, standard operating procedures and proper technology are available to meet the new requirements."

But the bottom line is no laughing matter. It is tragically infuriating and sadly ironic. This was a war that began to go badly when the Bush administration disbanded the Iraqi army but never thought to guard that army's arsenals, which were looted for later use against our troops by insurgents and militia.

Now this. We may never know how many of our courageous men and women fighting in Iraq were killed or maimed by unfriendly fire from friendly weapons, guns that were made in, and supplied by, the U.S.A.

Martin Schram writes for Scripps Howard News Service. His e-mail address is martin.schram@gmail.com.


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 08/10/2007 9:13:52 PM PDT by sonsofliberty2000
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To: sonsofliberty2000
Responsibility for the massive failure of accountability lies with the general in charge of creating and equipping the Iraqi security forces. It was Gen. David Petraeus, who is now in command of the entire U.S. military effort in Iraq. Petraeus, who until this finding has always enjoyed an excellent reputation in military circles, will be providing that much-awaited Sept. 15 report on the status of the U.S. military effort in Iraq.

Could this be true? Or is this MSM misinfo ahead of the Sept. report to undermine our troops?

2 posted on 08/10/2007 9:33:07 PM PDT by blade_tenner
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To: blade_tenner
What do you think? It is an attack on Patraeus who has done the greatest job of any American General since WW II. There was no shortage of weapons in Iraq and the terrorists did not need AK47 from the Pentagon to cause death and destruction. Those tens of thousands of AK47 and pistols were part of Saddam Army and Police and Saddam gave thousands of weapons to the Sunni Iraqi tribes and foreign terrorists before the fall of his regime.
3 posted on 08/10/2007 9:38:52 PM PDT by jveritas (God bless our brave troops and President Bush.)
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To: jveritas
The other question should be of the unaccounted weapons how many are really in enemy hands, how many are lost in the bureaucracy, and how many are in the hands of walk-offs who went home and put the weapons in their closet.
4 posted on 08/10/2007 9:43:26 PM PDT by USNBandit (sarcasm engaged at all times)
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To: USNBandit

Exactly. The GAO is a bureaucratic political organization that serves the democrats hiding under the fake cover of “Accountability” and “impartiality”.


5 posted on 08/10/2007 9:52:30 PM PDT by jveritas (God bless our brave troops and President Bush.)
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To: jveritas

Rather than blame the OIC of a difficult and complex effort, I’d first place the noose of accusation around the necks of the “hurry hurry, faster faster, you’re not DOING ANYTHING!” politicos and all the usless idiots that fall for their crap.


6 posted on 08/10/2007 10:13:50 PM PDT by Grimmy (equivocation is but the first step along the road to capitulation)
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To: blade_tenner

Methinks this is the best the enemies of winning in Iraq can muster against General Petraeus. He is Bushes Grant and must be destroyed..I don’t think this will even scratch him.


7 posted on 08/11/2007 4:50:30 AM PDT by conservativehusker (GO BIG RED!!!!)
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To: sonsofliberty2000; All
Here are the facts from Petraeus that the MSM doesn't want you to know: - From the Alan Colmes transcript of the interview with General Petraeus (h/t Townhall):

COLMES: “General Petraeus, “The Washington Post” reported on Monday of this week that the Pentagon lost track of about 190,000 AK-47s, assault rifles and pistols given to the Iraqi security forces in 2004 and 2005. The U.S. Accountability Office says U.S. military officials don’t know what happened to 30 percent of the weapons and I quote from the piece that says, “The GAO says weapons distribution was haphazard and rushed and failed to follow established procedures, particularly from 2004 to 2005 when security training was led by General David H. Petraeus.” What happened?”

GENERAL PETRAEUS: “Well, what happened was we were in a period where, as you’ll recall, the Iraqi units of April 2004 had really crumbled when they were ordered into operations during the first Fallujah uprising and when we came in a started standing up the train and equip mission that came to be known as the Multinational Security Transition Command in Iraq in the summer of 2004, there was not much in the way of structure.

We did start to receive equipment, both from - ordered by the CPA initially and also by the Iraqi government and it was a tough situation.

August was the time when Muqtada al Sadr took over the mosque in Najaf and again forces had to go into action. By that time we then had some Iraqi forces that were ready to fight but they didn’t have equipment and that was the beginning of a number of decisions to help provide equipment top Iraqi forces, sometimes literally under fire.

In one case actually flying into Najaf, into a helipad at night, a hot LZ, literally, in Chinook helicopters and actually kicking two battalions worth of equipment off the ramp and getting out of there while we still could.

That type of decision was something that we made at the time because those forces needed those weapons and that equipment. We weren’t going to stay there in the dark and make guys do a serial number inventory and sign them up and that is what happened. We believe those weapons all certainly were given to Iraqi units. Those units did have advisors, but they did not have the property book officer, they did not have the property book records that we would associate with normal procedures and yet they were units that needed to go into the fight, the Iraqi government was under enormous pressure. They made their request known to us and frankly it seemed to us that we needed to get the weapons into their hands and so that is what we did. And that’s what resulted was an inability to track by serial number some percentage of those weapons that were issued during that time.”

----------------

IN OTHER WORDS: In the middle of a war, do you want us to take the time to sit down and write down all the serial numbers of each weapon and the name of each person who gets it, OR get the weapons in the hands of the Iraqi Units to fight the enemy. Your choice.

These people in the MSM really are against the USA. They never dig up the facts, just paint the USA as the bad and evil.

One last thing. When you read the actual report, the summary recommends that (1) the DOD determine what DOD accountability procedures apply or should apply and (2) and they determine which procedure is best, ensure sufficient staff to do the work.

http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d07711.pdf

8 posted on 08/11/2007 9:20:00 AM PDT by bobsunshine
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To: sonsofliberty2000

Yep, it war. Bad crap happens. Same crap has happened in every war. Just another Know Nothing bit of hysteria from the Democrats and their tody’s in the Politicallly Corrupt media. Since they cannot win the debate over Iraq on the facts, they go for the gutter politics to try and slime any General who says what they do not want to hear


9 posted on 08/11/2007 10:44:11 AM PDT by MNJohnnie ("Todays (military's) task is three dimensional chess in the dark". General Rick Lynch in Baghdad)
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