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    US review finds Iraq deadlier now than a year ago

    BAGHDAD (AP) — Frequent bombings, assassinations and a resurgence in violence by Shiite militias have made Iraq more dangerous now than it was just a year ago, a U.S. government watchdog concludes in a report released Saturday.

    The findings come during what U.S. Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction Stuart W. Bowen Jr. called "a summer of uncertainty" in Baghdad over whether American forces will stay past a year-end withdrawal deadline and continue military aid for the unstable nation.

    "Iraq remains an extraordinarily dangerous place to work," Bowen concluded in his 172-page quarterly report to Congress and the Obama administration on progress — and setbacks — in Iraq. "It is less safe, in my judgment, than 12 months ago."

    The report cited the deaths of 15 U.S. soldiers in June, the bloodiest month for the U.S. military in Iraq in two years. Nearly all of them were killed in attacks by Shiite militias bent on forcing out American troops on schedule.

    It also noted an increase in rockets launched against the heavily fortified Green Zone in Baghdad, where government offices and foreign embassies are located, as well as constant assassination attempts against Iraqi political leaders, security forces and judges.

    Additionally, the report called the northeastern province of Diyala, which borders Iran and has an often volatile mix of Sunni and Shiite Muslims and Kurds among its residents, "very unstable" with frequent bombings that bring double-digit death tolls.

    Bowen accused the U.S. military of glossing over Iraq's instability, noting a statement in late May by the U.S. military that described Iraq's security trends as "very, very positive" — but only when compared to 2007, when the country was on the brink of civil war. In contrast, Bowen talked of "the very real fragility" of national security in Iraq today.

    A spokesman for the U.S. military in Iraq declined to respond.

    If the U.S. military leaves on schedule, the American Embassy in Baghdad will pick up the responsibility of training Iraqi police. Bowen called the job "challenging" for the fewer than 200 advisers who would be based in three sites but tasked with supporting Iraqi police in 10 of Iraq's 18 provinces. There are an estimated 400,000 policemen in Iraq.

    Baghdad and Washington are negotiating whether to keep the U.S. military in Iraq beyond the December deadline. A Saturday discussion about the Obama administration's offer to keep 10,000 troops in Iraq to continue training security forces has been postponed, despite earlier hopes by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki that the meeting could yield an agreement.

    Al-Maliki says the decision ultimately will be put to parliament. While many officials from both nations believe Iraq is still too unstable to protect itself without U.S. help, keeping a large presence of American troops may be difficult to sell to an Iraqi public tired of eight years of war.

    Bowen also said his inspectors published six audits over the last three months, including reviews of U.S. government contractor Anham, LLC, which is based in suburban Washington. The review found that Anham allowed its subcontractors in Iraq to overcharge the U.S. government, including a $900 bill for a control switch that cost $7.05 and $3,000 for a circuit breaker worth $183.30.

    As a result, Bowen's inspectors are seeking to review all Anham contracts with the U.S. government in Iraq and Afghanistan, which total about $3.9 billion.

    Hassan S. Judeh, the administration director at Anham's headquarters in Vienna, Va., declined to respond to Bowen's examples because he said the company has not seen the report. But Judeh said Anham has a history of providing competitive prices for services, resulting so far in $132 million in savings to the government.

    "Anham prides itself on the fact that it watches every penny and strives to always give the government the best cost-benefit in a remarkably hostile war environment," Judeh said in a statement.

    ___

    Online:

    The Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction report can be found at http://www.sigir.mil/

     

    1,616 comments

    • Peter  •  10 mths ago
      Our astronomical national deficit mandates that we stop spending money we don't have to support troops in unstable arab countries. This is the same as enabling an addict - lose-lose!!
      • Kimberly 10 mths ago
        Peter, I can see where your coming from but for me loosing the lives of multiple troops every week in these unstable Arab countries, places that seem unlikely to change no matter what and as others say doesn't really want us there is even more sad and disturbing.
      • Joe Rocker 10 mths ago
        The Army is not a police force. You can't "win the hearts and minds" of a conquered people. The sooner we realize this...the quicker we can end this bullsh!t.
      • mich 10 mths ago
        The problem is the soldiers really have no say in the matter, if they get orders to go they HAVE to go, no way the military or government would ever grant conscientious objector to every soldier who thinks these wars are bullshit...they go to jail, lose pay, if they refuse a deployment. I wished people would see this. My husband is deployed over there, we think it's bull but can't stop it. We lose countless men/boys...and those people never change. For the most part, a lot of the guys I know would love to just drop a nuke and be done with it...
    • Capt  •  10 mths ago
      We cannot govern Iraq. We are somewhere where we don't belong, and cannot win!! So bring em home!
      • shane c 10 mths ago
        Iraq is governing themselves, they have had an autonomous government since 2006. They have a President and Prime Minister who are running their affirs, the US is there in a SOFA (status of forces agreement) negotiated with the Iraqi government.
      • Capt 10 mths ago
        Right, we have no say-so and really, why are we even there? When we leave it will be a civil war all over again!
      • Fartface M 10 mths ago
        govern Iraq????? HA, We cant govern ourselves!
    • Okie Viet Vet  •  10 mths ago
      So now I guess America will fund and protect Iraq with taxpayer dollars and military lives. If they cannot protect their own country after ten years of 'training' and monetary support from the USA. they want us to stay indefinatey. HORSE PUCKY! They will never protect their own country, but they will fight right down to the last American dollar or soldier, which ever comes last. We have to get out of that rathole and bring our troops and equiptment home. Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, will always be what they always have been, and always will be. Our government needs to start listening to the people, instead of their corporate buddies.
      • Charles Stucker 10 mths ago
        Iraq was a stable powerful country.
        In antiquity.
        Then Islam hit it.
      • Okie Viet Vet 10 mths ago
        Charkes Stucker, right on. Now Islam wants America, and it seems Obama is all for it.
      • Uncle Reamus 10 mths ago
        How about that brand new Embassy in Bagdhad thats as large as the Vatican?
        Meanwhile our infrastructure continues to crumble, don't even get me started on Afghanistan
    • Fred  •  10 mths ago
      Bring our troops home and send Congress there. That will fix them.
      • Afsasf 10 mths ago
        That will happen when the military decides to start making it's own orders and stop taking them from corrupt leaders. The military needs to defend 2 things.. itself and the citizens. Any orders contrary to that should be ignored.
      • WILD ONE 10 mths ago
        obumbler could lead the charge
      • Tim 10 mths ago
        Best suggestion I've heard in weeks! Kudos! Bush in charge, since he started the mess, and Obama can follow if he desires.
    • scrnwritr  •  10 mths ago
      what a bunch of dumb idiots we have in Washington......If a country doesn't want u there, then get the heck out....If a country doesn't appreciate what u do for them, then why would anyone in their right minds be so stupid as to continue to pump mega money into that country....oh!...only the U.S.....Our current leaders are proving in Congress right now that they don't have the brains to solve our economic problems, so how in the world can they manage other countries....
      • Sam Da Man 10 mths ago
        why go there in the first place?
      • Afsasf 10 mths ago
        it's all about the money... the transfer from your pocket to theirs
      • Mike 10 mths ago
        I agree... South Korea no longer wants us there... even though we stopped N. Korea from completely annihilating them... and US Servicemembers are a large portion of their Income. A lot of countries are just ungrateful...
    • Liber8tor  •  10 mths ago
      $30 Billion a MONTH.. flushed down the toilet in Iraq/Afghanistan.

      At home, our roads crumble, schools close and firemen are laid off.

      We can no longer afford these wars of choice. OBL is dead. Declare victory and bring our troops home.
    • VietVet  •  10 mths ago
      The problem with these two wars is 1. Things will return to what they were before we got involved and no politician wants to get the blame for this failure. And believe me blame will run rampant. 2. What to do with all the troops when they are released from service and they will release a bunch, it wouldn't take all those men to guard both our boaders. What jobs are out there for soldiers with their skills? Imagine if we brought all the troops back world wide!!
    • Jack D  •  10 mths ago
      They will be fighting in Iraq and Pakistan for the next 100yrs weather we or any body else is there to try and control the fighting.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  10 mths ago
      Ahem, why are we there again???
    • dewey  •  10 mths ago
      the sad thing is that the money (millions) we are no longer spending in iraq is nowhere to be found hmm
    • Two'sACrowd  •  10 mths ago
      Bush: We will introduce a democratic system into Irag and hope the rest of the Arab world will follow suit.
      Ha ha ha. Democracy and Islam is like oil and water.
    • Claypigeon21  •  10 mths ago
      Our country asked us...no...told us to go over there to do a job and we did. For the past 10 years we have sucked up deployment after deployment with out balking. Now that the check is coming due what does our country do? Look at cutting the war fighters benefits. Hell I don't know if I will even have a pay check at the end of next month as I sit here deployed in the forgotten war. I joined at 17 years old and 17 years later with 10 years at war and this is the thanks we are given? Thanks for spitting in our face Washington. This is the reason why I think to even consider to be the POTUS you should have been a Grunt first. At least that way you know what is at stake before you make promises you can't back up.
    • Josh_Menelas  •  10 mths ago
      It was always bound for that happen regardless if you kept troops there or not. I will always support the troops but not the actions of our feeble-minded government that keep making horrible decisions in this day and age.
    • Dann Rivera  •  10 mths ago
      GET OUT AND SAVE $3.9 BILLION!
    • rbtrage  •  10 mths ago
      Why are we still there? Obama supporters? Anyone?
    • soilent green is people  •  10 mths ago
      No weapons of mass destruction. One trillion dollars thrown away forever. China got half the oil contracts. All the christains have been killed, or fled the country. 5,000 dead Americans. 150,000 dead Iraqis. Only Halliburton got rich in this stupid war. Only Halliburton got rich.
    • clash city rocker  •  10 mths ago
      #$%$.i can't even remember my OWN country I've been gone so long..I want a life back..even serving my country..but plrase don't lie to me about why I had to go their in the first place..yes saddam was a ruthless SOB, but Burma, Sudan, Syria, have the same type of ruthles Pol pots..we can't take down all of them,let them fight their wars and i will vow to protect AMERICAN PEOPLE and AMERICAN soil, not someone elses, these are CIVIL WARS, let them fight it out amongst their own..if Bushes own kids didn't serve then why did I have to, he couldn't persuade them but somehow cheney and Rumsfeld and paul horowitz? persuaded Bush..why were none of their won family members even remtely involved or convinced tto fight this great evil
    • Just Me  •  10 mths ago
      I gathered MOST Americans don't want all those wars and wasting of military aid/fund to other nations which are draining the country away. Only a small minorities (the top miltary brass, certain corrrupted politicians & the weapon manufacturers aka the merchants of death) want the country / government to continue for reasons all of us know very well.

      Since USA is democratic nation, how come the vast majority can't stop this small minority group of people? Is the US government is real dictatorship in a sheep form?
    • Prometheus  •  10 mths ago
      First, this is not surprising. Second, you cannot blame Obama. This war was ill-advised, unnecessary, counterproductive, it was poorly planned and worse executed from the very start, with no exit strategy -- just a headlong heedless push for war by that little, stupid president. It should NEVER have happened, and the fact that Bush was the driving force behind it, with his lies and his personal motives is the only way it came to be, a war that did not need to be and has caused nothing but death, grief, and money to the United States. Like the Republican deregulation-driven recession, the Iraq war was inherited by Obama, who has tried to bring it to a close. But the fact is that we can never win it, we should have known we could not win it from the start, but it is what Bush needed for his picayune ego, and so we all got stuck with it and have been paying for it. Had we never invaded Iraq, we might even have been able to do some good in Afghanistan. So don't blame President Obama, you fools -- unless you blame him for not shutting down the foolish operation immediately after his election.

      The Bush family bag of dirty tricks already was evident -- he got us into Somalia and left the problem for Bill Clinton, and Bush failed to win his ill-advised war in Iraq and left it for President Obama.

      When something is unwise and ill-advised at the beginning, that is the time to be wise and not do it. (Yes, some Democrats voted for the authorization, and that's just politics -- with an America so full of right-wing idiots, they knew that it is always politically dangerous to vote against a war.) But Obama was not among those who caved, and this war and its inevitable, unavoidable failure, is NOT his fault in the least.
    • Judy Jones  •  10 mths ago
      Obama better bring the troops home like he said instead of delaying it any longer.
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