Home

Medical Pages

Car Reviews

Archives

New Archives

RSS Feed

Subscribe

Links

Letters

Advertise

Bogota Free Planet


CFP Menu


CFP Archives

CFP Automotive

CFP Magazine





terrorism




broken watermains
Profitable Property For Retirement…Overseas!
International Living
Jim Kouri  Bio
Email Article
Email Us
printPrint friendly

America's cost to fight Terrorism

Global War on Terrorism: The Cost of Freedom

 By Jim Kouri  Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Since 2001, Congress has provided the Department of Defense with hundreds of billions of dollars in supplemental and annual appropriations for military operations in support of the Global War on Terrorism. 



DOD’s reported annual obligations for GWOT have shown a steady increase from about $0.2 billion in fiscal year 2001 to about $139.8 billion in fiscal year 2007. To continue GWOT operations, the President requested $189.3 billion in appropriations for DOD in fiscal year 2008. 

Through December 2007, Congress has provided DOD with about $86.8 billion of this request, including $16.8 billion for Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles. As of February 2008, Congress has not taken action on the remaining $102.5 billion. 



The United States’ commitments to GWOT will likely involve the continued investment of significant resources, requiring decision makers to consider difficult trade-offs as the nation faces an increasing long-range fiscal challenge. The magnitude of future costs will depend on several direct and indirect cost variables and, in some cases, decisions that have not yet been made. 



DOD’s future costs will likely be affected by the pace and duration of operations, the types of facilities needed to support troops overseas, redeployment plans, and the amount of equipment to be repaired or replaced. DOD compiles and reports monthly and cumulative incremental obligations incurred to support GWOT in a monthly Supplemental and Cost of War Execution Report. DOD leadership uses this report, along with other information, to advise Congress on the costs of the war and to formulate future GWOT budget requests. 



DOD reports these obligations by appropriation, contingency operation, and military service or defense agency. The monthly cost reports are typically compiled within the 45 days after the end of the reporting month in which the obligations are incurred. DOD has prepared monthly reports on the obligations incurred for its involvement in GWOT since fiscal year 2001. 



Section 1221 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2006 requires that members of Congress receive reports on the costs of Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom based on DOD’s monthly Supplemental and Cost of War Execution Reports. This report, which responds to this requirement, contains our analysis of DOD’s reported obligations for military operations in support of GWOT through December 2007. 



From fiscal year 2001 through December 2007, Congress has provided DOD with about $635.9 billion for its efforts in support of GWOT. DOD has reported obligations of about $527 billion for military operations in support of the war from fiscal year 2001 through fiscal year 2007 and for fiscal year 2008 through December 2007. 



Of DOD’s total cumulative reported obligations for GWOT through December 2007 (about $527 billion), about $406.2 billion is for operations in and around Iraq as part of Operation Iraqi Freedom, and about $92.9 billion is for operations in Afghanistan, the Horn of Africa, the Philippines, and elsewhere as part of Operation Enduring Freedom. The remaining about $28 billion is for operations in defense of the homeland as part of Operation Noble Eagle. 



DOD’s reported obligations for Operation Iraqi Freedom have consistently increased each fiscal year since operations began. The increases in reported obligations for Operation Iraqi Freedom are in part because of continued costs for military personnel, such as military pay and allowances for mobilized reservists, and for rising operation and maintenance expenses, such as higher contract costs for housing, food, and services and higher fuel costs. 



In contrast, DOD’s reported obligations for Operation Noble Eagle have consistently decreased since fiscal year 2003, largely because of the completion of repairs to the Pentagon and upgrades in security at military installations that were onetime costs, as well as a reduction in combat air patrols and in the number of reserve personnel guarding government installations. 



In fiscal year 2008, through December 2007, DOD’s total reported obligations of about $34.8 billion are about one quarter of the total amount of obligations it reported for all of fiscal year 2007. 



Reported obligations for Operation Iraqi Freedom continue to account for the largest portion of total reported GWOT obligations by operation--about $28.1 billion. In contrast, reported obligations associated with Operation Enduring Freedom total about $6.6 billion, and reported obligations associated with Operation Noble Eagle total about $49.6 million. 



The Army accounts for the largest portion of reported obligations for fiscal year 2008 through December 2007--about $27.2 billion, nearly 11 times higher than the almost $2.5 billion in obligations reported for the Air Force, the military service with the next greatest reported amount.  



Of the $43.6 billion provided to DOD for procurement in fiscal year 2007, approximately 21 percent, or $9.1 billion, has yet to be obligated and remains available in fiscal year 2008, according to the General Accountability Office.


Posted 04/15 at 07:38 PM   Email  (Permalink

 This piece is in Category: World News




What's New On CFP:
  1. A bureaucrat, not a soldier (Canada) May 16, 2008
  2. CBC man will have to teach Al-Jazeera English before he gets into his sales pitch (Cover Story) May 16, 2008
  3. Burmese Government Denies Cyclone Relief Aid to Karen Christians (Christianity) May 16, 2008
  4. From the heart of a woman who is tired of the racism (American Politics) May 16, 2008
  5. The True American Maverick (American Politics) May 16, 2008
  6. President Bush, Condoleezza Rice and Forgotten Letters (American Politics) May 16, 2008
  7. Tearing Race Asunder – The Problems That Liberal Demagogues Cause (American Politics) May 16, 2008
  8. Is self-defense against peace? (Middle East) May 16, 2008
  9. McCain’s Embarrassing Climate Speech (Science) May 16, 2008
  10. Schumer Chucks the FDA? (Science) May 16, 2008
  11. Where Obama should start (American Politics) May 16, 2008
  12. Extreme Planet Events (Energy & Environment) May 16, 2008
  13. 2 Ex-terrorists featured at University of Colorado: a big success (American Politics) May 16, 2008
  14. Don’t Pity the Polar Bear, Pity the Endangered Liberal (American Politics) May 15, 2008
  15. Purchasing Democratic Socialism In America (American Politics) May 15, 2008
  16. Ceasefire in Gaza (Middle East) May 15, 2008
  17. Happy Anniversary to CFP readers everywhere! (Canada) May 15, 2008
  18. An “Inside the Wire” update (American Politics) May 15, 2008
  19. Gold rushes back above $880/oz (Business News) May 15, 2008
  20. Finding Jihadists online requires the sleuthing of an Archangel (Cover Story) May 15, 2008
  21. Bush Puts Alaskan Oil Out of Reach! (Energy & Environment) May 15, 2008
  22. Christian Ministry to Disabled Drops its Code of Conduct Under Human Rights Tribunal Pressure (Christianity) May 14, 2008
  23. 8000-Strong March for Life Gets another National Media Blackout in Canada (Canada) May 14, 2008
  24. Inhofe Says Listing of Polar Bear Based on Politics, Not Science (Global Warming) May 14, 2008
  25. When Candidates are Dangerously Wrong (American Politics) May 14, 2008
  26. Wilders Looks for European Allies, Suggests Reuniting Flanders and Netherlands (Europe) May 14, 2008
  27. CAIR: U.S., Israel are the Terrorists (American Politics) May 14, 2008
  28. New Ethics Complaint Targets Ramos-Compean Prosecutor (American Politics) May 14, 2008
  29. Vatican: It’s OK to Believe in Aliens (World News) May 14, 2008
  30. Belgium Accuses China of Cyberattacks (China) May 14, 2008
  31. The Vancouver Drug Injection Site Must be Shut Down (Canada) May 14, 2008
  32. Gag law in Alberta? Say it ain’t so, Ed (Canada) May 14, 2008
  33. Two Polish Holocaust heroes (Europe) May 14, 2008
  34. Tulip Festival extends apology to Falun Gong (China) May 14, 2008
  35. National security – it’s now a private matter (Canada) May 14, 2008
  36. Why the US Postal Service Always Loses Money! (American Politics) May 14, 2008
  37. This Means War (Middle East) May 14, 2008
  38. Gunsmoke and The Rifleman (American Politics) May 14, 2008
  39. UC Police look the other way at guns on campus. Violation state, federal law (Cover Story) May 14, 2008
  40. Just Why Didn’t the Earth Freeze in the Past? (Natural Science) May 14, 2008

Pursuant to Title 17 U.S.C. 107, other copyrighted work is provided for educational purposes, research, critical comment, or debate without profit or payment. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for your own purposes beyond the 'fair use' exception, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

Views are those of authors and not necessarily those of Canada Free Press. Content is Copyright 2008 the individual authors.

Site Copyright 2008 CanadaFreePress.Com Privacy Statement
 
Fear no man












Powered by ExpressionEngine