Billions In U.S. Aid To Pakistan Never Reached Army, Generals Say

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KATHY GANNON | 10/ 5/09 12:00 AM | AP

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The United States has long suspected that much of the billions of dollars it has sent Pakistan to battle militants has been diverted to the domestic economy and other causes, such as fighting India.

Now the scope and longevity of the misuse is becoming clear: Between 2002 and 2008, while al-Qaida regrouped, only $500 million of the $6.6 billion in American aid actually made it to the Pakistani military, two army generals tell The Associated Press.

The account of the generals, who asked to remain anonymous because military rules forbid them from speaking publicly, was backed up by other retired and active generals, former bureaucrats and government ministers.

At the time of the siphoning, Pervez Musharraf, a Washington ally, served as both chief of staff and president, making it easier to divert money intended for the military to bolster his sagging image at home through economic subsidies.

"The army itself got very little," said retired Gen. Mahmud Durrani, who was Pakistan's ambassador to the U.S. under Musharraf. "It went to things like subsidies, which is why everything looked hunky-dory. The military was financing the war on terror out of its own budget."

Generals and ministers say the diversion of the money hurt the military in very real ways:

_Helicopters critical to the battle in rugged border regions were not available. At one point in 2007, more than 200 soldiers were trapped by insurgents in the tribal regions without a helicopter lift to rescue them.

_The limited night vision equipment given to the army was taken away every three months for inventory and returned three weeks later.

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_Equipment was broken, and training was lacking. It was not until 2007 that money was given to the Frontier Corps, the front-line force, for training.

The details on misuse of American aid come as Washington again promises Pakistan money. Legislation to triple general aid to Pakistan cleared Congress last week. The legislation also authorizes "such sums as are necessary" for military assistance to Pakistan, upon several conditions. The conditions include certification that Pakistan is cooperating in stopping the proliferation of nuclear weapons, that Pakistan is making a sustained commitment to combating terrorist groups and that Pakistan security forces are not subverting the country's political or judicial processes.

The U.S. is also insisting on more accountability for reimbursing money spent. For example, Pakistan is still waiting for $1.7 billion for which it has billed the United States under a Coalition Support Fund to reimburse allies for money spent on the war on terror.

But the U.S. still can't follow what happens to the money it doles out.

"We don't have a mechanism for tracking the money after we have given it to them," Pentagon spokesman Lt. Col. Mark Wright said in a telephone interview.

Musharraf's spokesman, retired Gen. Rashid Quereshi, flatly denied that his former boss had shortchanged the army. He did not address the specific charges. "He has answered these questions. He has answered all the questions," the spokesman said. Musharraf took power in a bloodless coup in 1999 and resigned in August 2008.

The misuse of funding helps to explain how al-Qaida, dismantled in Afghanistan in 2001, was able to regroup, grow and take on the weak Pakistani army. Even today, the army complains of inadequate equipment to battle Taliban entrenched in tribal regions.

For its part, Washington did not ask many questions of a leader, Musharraf, whom it considered an ally, according to a U.S. Government Accountability Office report released last year.

Pakistan has received more money from the fund than any other nation. It is also the least expensive war front. The amount the U.S. spends per soldier per month is just $928, compared with $76,870 in Afghanistan and $85,640 in Iraq.

Yet by 2008, the United States had provided Pakistan with $8.6 billion in military money, and more than $12 billion in all.

"The army was sending in the bills," said one general who asked not to be identified because it is against military rules to speak publicly. "The army was taking from its coffers to pay for the war effort – the access roads construction, the fuel, everything. ... This is the reality – the army got peanuts."

Some of the money from the U.S. even went to buying weapons from the United States better suited to fighting India than in the border regions of Afghanistan – armor-piercing tow missiles, sophisticated surveillance equipment, air-to-air missiles, maritime patrol aircraft, anti-ship missiles and F-16 fighter aircraft.

"Pakistan insisted and America agreed. Pakistan said we also have a threat from other sources," Durrani said, referring to India, "and we have to strengthen our overall capacity. "The money was used to buy and support capability against India."

The army also suffered from mismanagement, Durrani said. As an example, he cited Pakistani attempts to buy badly needed attack helicopters.

Pakistan asked for Cobra helicopters because it knows how to maintain them, he said. But the helicopters were old, and to make them battle-ready, the Pentagon sent them to a company that had no experience with Cobras and took two years, he said.

As a result, in 2007, Pakistan had only one working helicopter – a debilitating handicap in the battle against insurgents who hide, train and attack from the hulking mountains that run like a seam along the Afghan-Pakistani border.

The army was also frustrated about not getting more money. Military spokesman Gen. Athar Abbas said the U.S. gave nothing to offset the cost of Pakistan's dead and wounded in the war on terror. He estimated 1,800 Pakistani soldiers had been killed since 2003 and 4,800 more wounded, most of them seriously.

The hospital and rehabilitation costs for the wounded have come to more than $25 million, Abbas said. Pakistan's military also gives land to the widows of the dead, educates their children and provides health care.

"These costs do not appear anywhere," he said. "There is no U.S. compensation for the casualties, assistance with aid to the grieving families."

Even while money was being siphoned off for other purposes on Pakistan's end, the U.S. imposed little control over or even had specific knowledge of what went where, according to reports by the U.S. Government Accountability Office. The reports covered 2002 through 2008.

The reports found that the Pentagon often ignored its own oversight rules, didn't get adequate documents and doled out money without asking for an explanation.

For more than a year, the Pentagon paid Pakistan's navy $19,000 a month per vehicle just for repair costs on a fleet of fewer than 20 vehicles. Monthly food bills doubled for no apparent reason, and for a year the Pentagon paid the bills without checking, according to the report.

Daniyal Aziz, a minister in Musharraf's government, said he warned U.S. officials that the money they were giving his government was being misused, but to no avail.

"They both deserved each other, Musharraf and the Americans," he said.

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The United States has long suspected that much of the billions of dollars it has sent Pakistan to battle militants has been diverted to the domestic economy and other cause...
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan — The United States has long suspected that much of the billions of dollars it has sent Pakistan to battle militants has been diverted to the domestic economy and other cause...
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same crap different country, War is a profit machine. iran, afghanistan, iraq, vietnam. really get some new ideas.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:56 PM on 10/05/2009
- andyboy I'm a Fan of andyboy 72 fans permalink

It's okay everybody. We have trillions in taxpayer money to throw away. We don't need healthcare. Or schools. Or roads. Just war. Kill baby Kill!...I 'm so proud I just got a bruised forehead from saluting the flag so hard. We murdered a dozen or so more civilians last week. Go USA!!!!!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:41 PM on 10/05/2009

8 Billion MISSING in IRAQ

Where is that?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 10/05/2009
- Photon55 I'm a Fan of Photon55 17 fans permalink

The phony war was hardly a day old when 12 billion was loaded on wooden pallets and shipped to Iraq which Bremer never knew where it went. The CID of the Army uncovered graft, theft and corruption in Iraq by a wide variety of those responsible for the funds. Some has been reviewed by congressional committees but most of it will never be revealed in the light of day. Halliburton, Blackwater and the Pentagon and the State Dept are the rogues of record.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:35 PM on 10/05/2009
- Photon55 I'm a Fan of Photon55 17 fans permalink

The republican mantra that you can never spend too much money on wars even if they aren't legitimate will ruin this country. The cost of the war in Iraq is estimated to be over two trillion, if it ever ends. We're now on a spending spree in Afghanistan with money we don't have. I don't know if the Red Chinese are agreeable to lending us more to fight unwinnable wars but where else would it come from except that printing press at the Fed. The unfortunate part of the total debacle is that so much of the money spent cannot be accounted for and is lost through fraud, corruption and theft in Iraq, Pakistan and Afghanistan. We will rue the day Bush/Cheney were ever elected to office.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 PM on 10/05/2009

The world warned us not to invade Iraq-

What did we do?

GOP renamed French Fries and invaded Iraq.

WSJ: DUMB it DOWN Mr. President-

WSJ advised President Obama to DUMB DOWN!

We were warned: Australians warned us not to allow Rupert Murdoch to infiltrate our free press standards

England warned us not to allow Rupert Murdoch to infiltrate our free press standards

Sir Richard Branson said something like "if we let him, Murdoch will destroy democracy".

We ignored Australia and England- look at the dumb down we got!

WSJ- Dumb it Down President!

Wall Street Journal- Once the most trustworthy news in the WORLD

Pitiful and shameful WSJ: Dumb it Down Mr. President!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 10/05/2009
- MyVesta I'm a Fan of MyVesta 14 fans permalink

Billons of dollars which could have spent on healthcare in our own country, or education, or helping the unemployed.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 AM on 10/05/2009
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GOD damn it!
Will any of these American politicians, Bush/ Cheney regime, republican, Democratic crooks be held accountable?
They give away 100's of Billions, of taxpayer money to foreign countries like it was candy.

http://www.richmonk31.blogspot.com

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 AM on 10/05/2009
- Waltfl I'm a Fan of Waltfl 47 fans permalink
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That a lot of the money ended up funding the wrong guys doesn't come as a surprise for anyone who has ever lived in the Middle East, and knows how the system works down there. I'd bet we'll be hearing a lot in a couple of years, about how US-aid eventually ended up in the te^^orists pockets, through some backdoor.

Besides, 6.6 Billion disappearing in Pakistan is small change compared to what went missing in Iraq, between rebuilt, aid, no-bid contracts, and the Cheney-cronies KBR and Haliburton. In 2003 alone 8.8 Billion got lost. Nobody is accountable either. A tuck load with 8 Million in cash went missing. Gone. The responsible CPA didn't keep accounts of hundreds of millions of dollars of cash in its vault, which too got lost. As a later audit confirmed, payrolls where bolstered with hundreds of ghost employees, who didn't exist, but drew salaries. When Bush envoy Bremer, who was per se responsible for billions and billions of missing money, got asked he basically replied: "sh^t happens!" and received the Presidential Medal of Honor from Bush.

Of course you don't find a lot about that in American papers. Let's move on, right, the past is the past. After all, we've got Polanski to prosecute.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/jul/07/iraq.features11

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 AM on 10/05/2009
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Teaser: Musharraf got billions in overhead bailouts not accounted for by the US Government!
FireCat: Too bad our bridge overhead isn’t a tarp.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:52 AM on 10/05/2009
- outnow I'm a Fan of outnow 179 fans permalink

The US taxpayer is funding two or more sides in this fiasco. The money could have gone to GS or AIG for banker bonuses and then be funneled back in campaign contributions.

The entire system is rotten to the core. As Micheal Moore points out, there is a dark side to unregulated capitalism that eventually corrupts the government beyond repair.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:16 AM on 10/05/2009
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Is this a surprise to anyone that can count?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:18 AM on 10/05/2009
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Now THIS is something for all the armchair GWOT McArthurs to cry in their apple pie over. 'GEEZ, you can't even trust the 'flunkies'. We'll never blow up all the little brown people across the globe like this!'
Haven't we done our 'civic duty' to the world enough already?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:11 AM on 10/05/2009
- helonias I'm a Fan of helonias 229 fans permalink
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Can any one say Vietnam?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:08 AM on 10/05/2009
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In 1974 while in Haiti I walked the streets and wondered where all our recent millions of dollars of aid money had gone. Then I saw Papa Docs Palace, and I knew. I knew, yet our government did not? They knew of course but heh Papa Doc was elected democratically? Democracy the magic word to get U.S. billions

Another pipe dream.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:31 AM on 10/05/2009

Did the $100,000 paid by Pakistani Intelligence (ISI) Chief, General Mahmoud Ahmad to 911 mastermind Mohammed Atta before the attacks come from an American 'Aid Package' as well?

http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/CHO206A.html

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:04 AM on 10/05/2009
- robjh1 I'm a Fan of robjh1 16 fans permalink
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I never trusted this guy. He made me uneasy. And to think the US got into bed with him.

"and we are not saved..."

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:46 AM on 10/05/2009
- Waltfl I'm a Fan of Waltfl 47 fans permalink
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Which guy? Bush or Musharraf?

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:59 AM on 10/05/2009
- robjh1 I'm a Fan of robjh1 16 fans permalink
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Good question.

"and we are not saved..."

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:13 AM on 10/05/2009
- Donns I'm a Fan of Donns 7 fans permalink

Pakistan got our money to fight India. India got our jobs. We the people lost on all accounts. So much for our government serving us by giving out money and economic aid to "friends" of ours.

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:42 AM on 10/05/2009
- Solja I'm a Fan of Solja 112 fans permalink
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There's a critical debate going on right now about our role in Afghanistan. The administration and Congress need to know that regular Americans are paying close attention and that we want a clear military exit strategy.

That's why I signed a petition urging the President and Congress to lay out a plan with a military exit strategy. Will you join me at the link below?

http://pol.moveon.org/afghan_exit/?r_by=17429-9098714-zq5OBux&rc=comment_paste

Thanks!

    Reply    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:39 AM on 10/05/2009
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