WASHINGTON - The boost in troop levels in Iraq has increased the cost of war
there and in Afghanistan to $12 billion a month, and the total for Iraq alone is
nearing a half-trillion dollars, congressional analysts say.
Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., right, accompanied by Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid of Nev., discusses legislation to change the course of
the War in Iraq, Monday, July 9, 2007, during a news conference on Capitol
Hill in Washington. [AP]
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All told, Congress has
appropriated $610 billion in war-related money since the Sept. 11, 2001, terror
assaults, roughly the same as the war in Vietnam. Iraq alone has cost $450
billion.
The figures come from the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service, which
provides research and analysis to lawmakers.
For the 2007 budget year, CRS says, the $166 billion appropriated to the
Pentagon represents a 40 percent increase over 2006.
The Vietnam War, after accounting for inflation, cost taxpayers $650 billion,
according to separate CRS estimates.
The $12 billion a month "burn rate" includes $10 billion for Iraq and almost
$2 billion for Afghanistan, plus other minor costs. That's higher than Pentagon
estimates earlier this year of $10 billion a month for both operations. Two
years ago, the average monthly cost was about $8 billion.
Among the reasons for the higher costs is the cost of repairing and replacing
equipment worn out in harsh conditions or destroyed in combat.
But the estimates call into question the Pentagon's estimate that the
increase in troop strength and intensifying pace of operations in Baghdad and
Anbar province would cost only $5.6 billion through the end of September.
If Congress approves President Bush's pending request for another $147
billion for the budget year starting Oct. 1, the total bill for the war on
terror since Sept. 11 would reach more than three-fourths of a trillion dollars,
with appropriations for Iraq reaching $567 billion.
Also, if the increase in war tempo continues beyond September, the Pentagon's
request "would presumably be inadequate," CRS said.
The latest estimates come as support for the war in Iraq among Bush's GOP
allies in Congress is beginning to erode. Senior Republicans such as Pete
Domenici of New Mexico and Richard Lugar of Indiana have called for a shift in
strategy in Iraq and a battle over funding the war will resume in September,
when Democrats in Congress begin work on a funding bill for the war.
Congress approved $99 billion in war funding in May after a protracted battle
and a Bush veto of an earlier measure over Democrats' attempt to set a timeline
for withdrawing US combat troops from Iraq.
The report faults the Pentagon for using the Iraq war as a pretext for
boosting the Pentagon's non-war budget by costs such as procurement, increasing
the size of the military and procurement of replacement aircraft as war-related
items.
The new estimate comes as the White House and Democrats are fighting over
spending bills for next year. That battle is over about $22 billion - almost the
cost of two months' fighting in Iraq.
"Think about what $10 billion a month would mean to protecting Americans from
terrorism, improving security at our ports and airports, and increasing border
security," said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.