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U.S. Contractors Are Failing To Pay Afghans And 'Fueling The Insurgency'

First Posted: 07/08/10 01:55 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 06:00 PM ET

Afghanistan Daily Life

If you'll forgive a gross oversimplification, the basic task of the United States in Afghanistan is to establish some basic governing institutions in the country that will outpace the radical elements of the Taliban in providing for the Afghan people, in the hopes that we will "win hearts and minds."

Here's the bad news: according to the Washington Post, a new survey of Afghans emphasizes that Afghans "see their country's police and judicial officials as the most corrupt in the government."

But the really bad news is that the Afghan government is getting some serious competition in the corruption department, and it's coming from a homegrown source. As Carlotta Gall reports in today's New York Times, U.S. contractors are basically running amok, and screwing the Afghans out of all sorts of money!

A number of Afghan construction companies working on contracts for American and NATO military bases in Afghanistan have accused American middlemen of reneging on payments for supplies and services, and in one case of leaving the country owing Afghan companies hundreds of thousands, even millions, of dollars.

Well, that's terrific news. In this report, American contractors are said to have "left hundreds of Afghan workers unpaid," and -- even better -- left "dozens of factories and small businesses" in paralyzing debt. As you may surmise, Afghans aren't exactly in the position where they can avail themselves of top-flight legal recourse to seek remedy for claims because the country is, as they say, totally jacked up.

Do you ever wonder what it's like to be an Afghan small business owner, deep in debt to creditors, because an American contractor failed to perform the basic duty of their "contract," that is, paying people the money they are owed?"

One of the businessmen, Jalaluddin Saeed, said he was owed $1.5 million by Bennett-Fouch for four contracts to provide concrete barriers for American and NATO military bases last year. He said his life was now in danger and he had had to leave his home city of Kandahar and move his family to avoid his many angry creditors.

Yikes! It makes you wonder if any of this could potentially blowback on U.S. forces, who are tasked with assuring the Afghan people that we have their best interests at heart.

"Without being too dramatic, American contractors are contributing to fueling the insurgency," said [a military official with the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan], who could speak only on the condition of anonymity in keeping with the policy of his organization.

I'm sure our fighting men and women thank these contractors very much and will take solace in the increased profitability that comes from preying on the vulnerable people of a war-torn country!

RELATED:
Afghan Companies Say U.S. Did Not Pay Them [New York Times]
Survey of Afghans points to rampant corruption in government [Washington Post]

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If you'll forgive a gross oversimplification, the basic task of the United States in Afghanistan is to establish some basic governing institutions in the country that will outpace the radical elements...
If you'll forgive a gross oversimplification, the basic task of the United States in Afghanistan is to establish some basic governing institutions in the country that will outpace the radical elements...
 
 
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12:15 AM on 07/10/2010
It's a war, shoot looters on sight.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
msbeal
Let no neo-con lie go unchallenged
09:06 AM on 07/09/2010
Our belief that we can build or grow an oasis of modernity wedged between Iran, Pakistan and Uzbekistan is like trying to farm in the middle of the Sahara. Ask any farmer what the outcome is when you plant a crop on waterless sand.

The Taliban have been screaming to us what our best course of action is, leave them alone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Behnaz Tavakoli
06:03 PM on 07/09/2010
We do not try to grow anything over there.

We are just try to radicalize population and find excuses to stay longer for big war with Iran.
02:52 AM on 07/09/2010
Shadow Company : American Mercenaries

http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=7496ACDB34C24FB5
02:40 AM on 07/09/2010
Private Armies: WAR as business

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t8q4dnGNPAY&

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u5aTKrJjtGs&
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Behnaz Tavakoli
01:34 AM on 07/09/2010
Mattis, a three-star general at the time, told the audience that some Afghans deserved to die.

Mattis is a general who is seemingly straight out of central casting, a gravel-voiced warrior best known for leading troops into the battle of Fallouja in Iraq in 2004.

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-mattis-20100709,0,262292.story

what is going on, confusing signals about Afghanistan.

Fallouja was a disaster, the city was leveled to the ground but the resistance continued. Once people started to make deal with the insurgency leaders things were turned to better.

We have to be careful here, this time we are fighting the majority Sunnis.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michmod
Made in Detroit.
10:29 PM on 07/08/2010
Wow. This is some of the most maddening stuff I've read in a long time. Sounds like somebody belongs in prison. And I don't say that lightly. I hope there is an investigation of these allegations immediately. It is disappointing that, given the widespread abuses that went unchallenged for eight years that the dems and Obama haven't sought to clean up these contracts and have some accountability. Granted they have a lot on their plate but this would certainly undermine anything our troops are doing over there. Greed. It's an ugly thing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Behnaz Tavakoli
10:14 PM on 07/08/2010
I wonder why China continues to lend us the money we need for the wars.

What do you think China wants from us in return?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pflickner
Democratic Candidate for AZ State House LD15
02:05 AM on 07/09/2010
Bush never bothered to ask and he probably figured he'd never live long enough for when China decided to collect. We're going to owe, and owe big time. Unless we rewrite the world's economy -- and I don't have any presumptions that we will be alive to see that -- Bush put us in a kind of debt that can never be repaid.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
caffeineod
03:50 AM on 07/09/2010
Whether that is true or not is debatable, but he is gone now and Obama and the Dems have made no real move to address many of the problems they were sent there to deal with....they have made them worse in most cases
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gschear
Max Baucus: What's in your wallet?
11:03 AM on 07/09/2010
Conquest through repossession is cheaper than conquest through military force.
Khrushchev pounded his shoe at the UN and delared the Soviet Union would bury us.
Corporate China includes a small paragraph in fine print stating the same thing in a politer but more obtuse language.
Interest rates subject to change, additional fees and fines may apply.
10:12 PM on 07/08/2010
Despite our "best" intentions it is just about impossible to overcome the greed and mismanagement of these low-level contractors. Why do so many people need their cut? The last thing I ever want to do is screw someone over...people can be so misguided.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michmod
Made in Detroit.
10:33 PM on 07/08/2010
I disagree. They are defrauding the government and should be put on notice criminal penalties will be sought. The problem is they have gotten away with this for almost a decade. The government has allowed the bonanza.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
caffeineod
03:51 AM on 07/09/2010
uh, what do you think campaign contributions are for and where do you think they come from...our system is built upon corruption. It was not always so..but it is now...from top to bottom. Still, no one really cares...we are an apathetic nation and a dying nation as a result
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
satanlite
Liberal blogger
09:59 PM on 07/08/2010
Our biggest export seems to be runaway criminal capitalism.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Behnaz Tavakoli
10:10 PM on 07/08/2010
Maybe China wants them. We are out of money, they should find another country to milk.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lendiggy
09:32 PM on 07/08/2010
But this was the "good" war. Yeah, that's why I side with Cindy Sheehan and the real progressives instead of the pro-war Obamatrons
09:43 PM on 07/08/2010
Agreed. Cindy Sheehan has never wavered in her position, it didn't matter which of the "one party with two different names" was in power.
09:29 PM on 07/08/2010
Naomi Klein covered this quite nicely in her book "The Shock Doctrine - The Rise of Disaster Capitalism". Apparently almost everyone in Washington can not read. They only know how to look the other way while putting their hand out for their reward for doing so!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Behnaz Tavakoli
09:24 PM on 07/08/2010
We cannot win anyway.

I think they know how to win against US.

The same way they disintegrated USSR.

We are spending the money we do not have over there.
TRRoughRider
Truth be Known
09:20 PM on 07/08/2010
Why is this news? Military contractors have been doing it do the american taxpayer for centuries. The Afghanis better get use to it if they want to install an American like democracy there.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Silverfloss
retired
09:18 PM on 07/08/2010
We had to hire a contractor to bar code all 20,000+ personel files for Wildlife Services (APHIS, USDA) in 2003. Labels were to be ready in July; they were ready 6 months later, in December. The contractor hired some 20-somethings to put the newly printed with bar codes labels on all the personel files during Chirstmas week, when personel business is slow. A few days after they finished we discovered that the birthdate of every employee was wrong, some showing birthdates in 1901!!!!. So, over the next 18 months, we clerks had to reprint every bar coded label with the correct birthdate, social security number, name----all typed in by hand and all stuck on by hand, at an additional cost to USDA of our time and new labels (6 to a page). Cost of the conversion to new bar code labels was more than twice what we paid the contractor, who was not only late, but also miss-printed 20,000+ labels. We had to, by law, accept the lowest bidder for this contract. Contractors are screwing the American taxpayer, royally.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
Red45
We can turn the tide
09:36 PM on 07/08/2010
Did they think the lowest bidder would also do a good job? Or just good enough for government work?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Silverfloss
retired
01:00 PM on 07/12/2010
Whether the lowest bidder would do a good job or not is a question that is moot. The question can't be entertained since the contract has to go to the lowest bidder, by law (Congress writes the laws, remember?).
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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10:35 PM on 07/08/2010
Interesting example. Was anything ever done by GSA or whatever organization to recoup the payment to the contractor? I doubt it, but got to ask anyway just out of curiosity.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Silverfloss
retired
01:02 PM on 07/12/2010
If anything was done, we lowly clerks would not be told. GS 5's and GS 6's.
09:15 PM on 07/08/2010
War Crimes and the Cover-Up of the Dasht-e-Leili Massacre in Afghanistan

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EdZlIEVtzN8