How the US sent $12bn in cash to Iraq. And watched it vanish

Special flights brought in tonnes of banknotes which disappeared into
the war zone

David Pallister
Thursday February 8, 2007
The Guardian

An armed guard poses beside pallets of $100 bills in Baghdad
An armed guard poses beside pallets of $100 bills in Baghdad. Almost
$12bn in cash was spent by the US-led authority
 

The US flew nearly $12bn in shrink-wrapped $100 bills into Iraq, then
distributed the cash with no proper control over who was receiving it
and how it was being spent.

The staggering scale of the biggest transfer of cash in the history of
the Federal Reserve has been graphically laid bare by a US
congressional committee.

In the year after the invasion of Iraq in 2003 nearly 281 million
notes, weighing 363 tonnes, were sent from New York to Baghdad for
disbursement to Iraqi ministries and US contractors. Using C-130
planes, the deliveries took place once or twice a month with the
biggest of $2,401,600,000 on June 22 2004, six days before the handover.

Details of the shipments have emerged in a memorandum prepared for the
meeting of the House committee on oversight and government reform
which is examining Iraqi reconstruction. Its chairman, Henry Waxman, a
fierce critic of the war, said the way the cash had been handled was
mind-boggling. "The numbers are so large that it doesn't seem possible
that they're true. Who in their right mind would send 363 tonnes of
cash into a war zone?"

The memorandum details the casual manner in which the US-led Coalition
Provisional Authority disbursed the money, which came from Iraqi oil
sales, surplus funds from the UN oil-for-food programme and seized
Iraqi assets.

"One CPA official described an environment awash in $100 bills," the
memorandum says. "One contractor received a $2m payment in a duffel
bag stuffed with shrink-wrapped bundles of currency. Auditors
discovered that the key to a vault was kept in an unsecured backpack.

"They also found that $774,300 in cash had been stolen from one
division's vault. Cash payments were made from the back of a pickup
truck, and cash was stored in unguarded sacks in Iraqi ministry
offices. One official was given $6.75m in cash, and was ordered to
spend it in one week before the interim Iraqi government took control
of Iraqi funds."

The minutes from a May 2004 CPA meeting reveal "a single disbursement
of $500m in security funding labelled merely 'TBD', meaning 'to be
determined'."

The memorandum concludes: "Many of the funds appear to have been lost
to corruption and waste ... thousands of 'ghost employees' were
receiving pay cheques from Iraqi ministries under the CPA's control.
Some of the funds could have enriched both criminals and insurgents
fighting the United States."

According to Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq
reconstruction, the $8.8bn funds to Iraqi ministries were disbursed
"without assurance the monies were properly used or accounted for".
But, according to the memorandum, "he now believes that the lack of
accountability and transparency extended to the entire $20bn expended
by the CPA".

To oversee the expenditure the CPA was supposed to appoint an
independent certified public accounting firm. "Instead the CPA hired
an obscure consulting firm called North Star Consultants Inc. The firm
was so small that it reportedly operates out of a private home in San
Diego." Mr Bowen found that the company "did not perform a review of
internal controls as required by the contract".

However, evidence before the committee suggests that senior American
officials were unconcerned about the situation because the billions
were not US taxpayers' money. Paul Bremer, the head of the CPA,
reminded the committee that "the subject of today's hearing is the
CPA's use and accounting for funds belonging to the Iraqi people held
in the so-called Development Fund for Iraq. These are not appropriated
American funds. They are Iraqi funds. I believe the CPA discharged its
responsibilities to manage these Iraqi funds on behalf of the Iraqi
people."

Bremer's financial adviser, retired Admiral David Oliver, is even more
direct. The memorandum quotes an interview with the BBC World Service.
Asked what had happened to the $8.8bn he replied: "I have no idea. I
can't tell you whether or not the money went to the right things or
didn't - nor do I actually think it's important."

Q: "But the fact is billions of dollars have disappeared without trace."

Oliver: "Of their money. Billions of dollars of their money, yeah I
understand. I'm saying what difference does it make?"

Mr Bremer, whose disbanding of the Iraqi armed forces and
de-Ba'athification programme have been blamed as contributing to the
present chaos, told the committee: "I acknowledge that I made mistakes
and that with the benefit of hindsight, I would have made some
decisions differently. Our top priority was to get the economy moving
again. The first step was to get money into the hands of the Iraqi
people as quickly as possible."

Millions of civil service families had not received salaries or
pensions for months and there was no effective banking system. "It was
not a perfect solution," he said. "Delay might well have exacerbated
the nascent insurgency and thereby increased the danger to Americans."

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