US Wars in Afghanistan, Iraq to Cost $6 trillion 

By Sabir Shah

September 20, 2013 " <http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/> Information
Clearing House - "
<http://www.thenews.com.pk/Todays-News-2-203012-US-wars-in-Afghanistan-Iraq-
to-cost-$6-trillion> The News" - LAHORE: The decade-long American wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq would end up costing as much as $6 trillion, the
equivalent of $75,000 for every American household, calculates the
prestigious Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government. 

Remember, when President George Bush’s National Economic Council Director,
Lawrence Lindsey, had told the country’s largest newspaper “The Wall Street
Journal” that the war would cost between $100 billion and $200 billion, he
had found himself under intense fire from his colleagues in the
administration who claimed that this was a gross overestimation. 

Consequently, Lawrence Lindsey was forced to resign.It is also imperative to
recall that the Bush administration had claimed at the very outset that the
Iraq war would finance itself out of Iraqi oil revenues, but Washington DC
had instead ended up borrowing some $2 trillion to finance the two wars, the
bulk of it from foreign lenders. 

According to the Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government 2013
report, this accounted for roughly 20 per cent of the total amount added to
the US national debt between 2001 and 2012. 

According to the report, the US “has already paid $260 billion in interest
on the war debt,” andfuture interest payments would amount to trillions of
dollars.This Harvard University report has also been carried on its website
by the Centre for Research on Globalisation, which is a widely-quoted
Montreal-based independent research and media organisation. 

In its report under review, the 377-year old Harvard University has viewed
that these afore-mentioned wars had not only left the United States heavily
indebted, but would also have a profound impact on the federal government’s
fiscal and budgetary crises over a protracted period. 

The report has attributed the largest share of the trillions of dollars in
continuing costs to care and compensation for hundreds of thousands of
troops left physically and psychologically damaged by the two wars being
discussed here. 

The report states: “The Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, taken together, will
be the most expensive wars in US history—totaling somewhere between $4
trillion and $6 trillion. This includes long-term medical care and
disability compensation for service members, veterans and families, military
replenishment and social and economic costs. The largest portion of that
bill is yet to be paid.” 

It asserts: “Another major share of the long-term costs of the wars comes
from paying off trillions of dollars in debt incurred as the US government
failed to include their cost in annual budgets and simultaneously
implemented sweeping tax cuts for the rich. In addition, huge expenditures
are being made to replace military equipment used in the two wars. The
report also cites improvements in military pay and benefits made in 2004 to
counter declining recruitment rates as casualties rose in the Iraq war.” 

The authors of this report have warned that the legacy of decisions taken
during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars would dominate future federal budgets
for decades to come. 

According to the Harvard University report, some 1.56 million US troops—56
per cent of all Afghanistan and Iraq veterans—were receiving medical
treatment at Veterans Administration facilities and would be granted
benefits for the rest of their lives. 

It reveals: “One out of every two veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan has
already applied for permanent disability benefits. The official figure of
50,000 American troops “wounded in action” vastly underestimates the real
human costs of the two US wars. One-third of returning veterans are being
diagnosed with mental health issues—suffering from anxiety, depression,
and/or post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).” 

The report notes that in addition, over a quarter of a million troops have
suffered traumatic brain injuries (TBI), which, in many cases, were combined
with PTSD, posing greater problems in treatment and recovery. 

“Constituting a particularly grim facet of this mental health crisis is the
doubling of the suicide rate for US Army personnel, with many who attempted
suicide suffering serious injuries,” opine the report authors. 

It maintains: “Overall, the Veterans Administration’s budget has more than
doubled over the past decade, from $61.4 billion in 2001 to $140.3 billion
in 2013. As a share of the total US budget it has grown from 2.5 percent to
3.5 percent over the same period. Soaring medical costs for veterans is
attributable to several factors. Among them is that, thanks to advancements
in medical technology and rapid treatment, soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan
have survived wounds that would have cost their lives in earlier conflicts.”


The Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government report has estimated:
“While the US government has already spent $134 billion on medical care and
disability benefits for Iraq and Afghanistan veterans, this figure will
climb by an additional $836 billion over the coming decades.” 

It notes that the largest expenditures on health care for World War II
veterans took place in the 1980s, roughly four decades after the war, and
that spending on medical care and disability payments for Vietnam War
veterans was still on the rise. 

Here follows the description: “The most common medical problems suffered by
troops returning from the two wars include: diseases of the musculoskeletal
system (principally joint and back disorders); mental health disorders;
central nervous system and endocrine system disorders; as well as
respiratory, digestive, skin and hearing disorders. Overall, some 29 per
cent of these troops have been diagnosed with PTSD.” 

The report goes on to argue: “Among the most severely wounded are 6,476
soldiers and Marines who have suffered “severe penetrating brain injury,”
and another 1,715 who have had one or more limbs amputated. Over 30,000
veterans are listed as suffering 100 percent service-related disabilities,
while another 145,000 are listed as 70 to 90 percent disabled.” 

It reads: “The worst of these casualties have taken place under the Obama
administration as a result of the so-called surge that the Democratic
president ordered in Afghanistan.” 

It mentions that the Walter Reed Medical Centre, US Army’s flagship hospital
at Washington DC, was treating hundreds of recent amputees and severe
casualties, adding that this facility had received 100 amputees for
treatment during 2010; 170 amputees in 2011; and 107 amputees in 2012. 

The report has also stated that the US Marines have suffered an especially
high toll. 

The report points out: “Massive direct spending on the two imperialist
interventions continues. With over 60,000 US troops remain in Afghanistan,
it is estimated that the cost of deploying one American soldier for one year
in this war amounts to $1 million. These troops continue suffering
casualties—including in so-called “green on blue” attacks by Afghan security
forces on their ostensible allies. As they are brought home, they will
further drive up the costs of medical care and disability compensation. The
US is maintaining a vast diplomatic presence in Iraq, including at least
10,000 private contractors providing support in security, IT, logistics,
engineering and other occupations; as well as logistics support and payments
for leased facilities in Kuwait.” 

In its conclusion, the report not only seeks to dispel illusions that ending
full-scale wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would produce any kind of “peace
dividend” that could help ameliorate conditions of poverty, unemployment and
declining living standards for working people in the US itself, but makes it
clear that the legacy of decisions made during the Iraq and Afghanistan
conflicts would impose significant long-term costs on the federal government
for many years to come. 

The News International - Copyright @ 2010-2012

           Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni and Dr. Kiiza Besigye Uganda is in anarchy"
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