Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Iraq reconstruction 'has failed'
Iraq reconstruction 'has failed'
Jan 24, 2026 9:50 PM

  The US-led force's $100bn effort to rebuild Iraq has failed amid bureaucratic quarrels, ignorance of Iraqi society and violence in the country, the New York Times says, quoting a US federal report.

  The newspaper said on its website on Saturday that it had obtained a draft copy of Hard Lessons: The Iraq Reconstruction Experience, which is circulating among senior officials.

  The report was compiled by the Office of the Special Inspector-General for Iraq Reconstruction, which is led by Stuart Bowen Jr, a Republican lawyer.

  In the report, Colin Powell, the former US secretary of state, alleges that after the 2003 invasion the US defense department kept inflating figures on the number of Iraqi security forces on the ground.

  The defense department "kept inventing numbers of Iraqi security forces - the number would jump 20,000 a week! We now have 80,000, we now have 100,000, we now have 120,000", he is quoted as saying in the draft report.

  The report says that Powell's view was supported by Lieutenant-General Ricardo Sanchez, the most senior ground troops officer in Iraq, and Paul Bremer, who was the civilian administrator before the Iraqi government takeover in June 2004.

  It concludes that the US government does not have the policies or the organizational structure required to put the largest reconstruction program since the Marshall Plan into place, the newspaper reported.

  Cronyism alleged

  The rebuilding effort did not go beyond restoring what was destroyed during the invasion and its immediate aftermath, the newspaper cited the draft report as saying.

  By mid-2008, the report says, $117bn had been spent on the reconstruction of Iraq, including about $50bn in US taxpayer money.

  But Ahmed Rushdi, an Iraqi journalist, said that the money had been squandered or taken by corrupt officials.

  "When you are talking about 117 billion dollars, you are talking about stolen money, misused money, and poor planning. But the Americans and the Iraqis said that these monies were being spent on security," he told Al Jazeera.

  "I think Americans and some Iraqis have got very rich [off the funds] and they decided to get rid of all their documents which would show that something was wrong, particularly in Paul Bremer's administration."

  "We must make a rule on how to charge these people with crimes."

  In one example, an official at the US Agency for International Development (USAID) was given four hours to work out how many miles of Iraqi roads needed to be repaired, the Times said.

  The official's estimate came from documents in USAID's library and was then submitted into a master plan.

  Furthermore, funding for a large amount of Iraqi reconstruction projects was divided up among local politicians and tribal leaders, according to the New York Times.

  "Our district council chairman has become the Tony Soprano of Rasheed, in terms of controlling resources," it quotes one US embassy official in Baghdad as saying.

  "You will use my contractor or the work will not get done.'"

  Political lobbying

  The report also pointed to political maneuvering in the US, highlighting an example where a Republican lobbyist working for the US occupation authority called on the Office of Management and Budget to fund $20bn in new reconstruction money in August 2003.

  "To delay getting our funds would be a political disaster for the president [George Bush]," Tom Korologos, the lobbyist, said, according the report.

  "[Bush's] election will hang for a large part on show of progress in Iraq and without the funding this year, progress will grind to a halt," the draft quoted Korologos as saying.

  The Bush administration supported Korologos' request and the US congress allocated the money later that year.

  The draft report is based on about 500 interviews and more than 600 audits, inspections and investigations undertaken in Iraq over several years.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Iraqis work at a new construction site in Baghdad in August 2008 [AFP].

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Bedouins fear Israeli resettlement plans
  At a steep rocky hillside by the road that winds down to the Dead Sea, children of this Palestinian Bedouin community run up and down the rugged slopes, as goats graze on thorny weeds and sheep bleat nearby.   The encampment falls on a bare ridge between Jerusalem and Jericho, almost...
Soaring number of deaths in Syria prisons
  A staggering 1,917 people have died of torture, starvation and lack of medical treatment in Syrian prisons this year, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights has said.   The Britain-based observatory said on Sunday it had documented nearly 2,000 deaths since the start of 2014.   The dead include 27 children under...
7 Palestinians killed, 350 detained in October: NGO
  Seven Palestinians were killed and 350 others, including three journalists and an ex-female prisoner, detained by Israel during October, a Palestinian NGO said Saturday.   Ahrar Center for Prisoners and Human Rights Studies said the seven dead victims included four teenagers less than 15 years of age.   The center added in...
Palestinians 'imprisoned' by Rafah closure
  Razan al-Halaqawi was too ill to spend weeks waiting for Egypt to open the Gaza Strip's main crossing in Rafah.   The crossing has been closed to residents looking to exit Gaza since October 25; in the intervening days, Egypt has opened the crossing just once in one direction for two...
15,000 new Jewish settlers in W. Bank in 2014
  More than 15,000 Israelis moved to Jewish-only settlements located in the Israeli-occupied West Bank over the course of 2014, an Israeli official said Friday.   "Interior Ministry figures, showing that Judea-Samaria [the Jewish name for the West Bank] currently has nearly 400,000 Israelis, demonstrates [that] settlement in Judea-Samaria is an irreversible...
East Jerusalem under 'collective punishment'
  After months of unrest, municipal officials in Jerusalem have begun a widespread crackdown on the Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem, enforcing the finest points of the law in what rights groups have dubbed an act of "collective punishment".   Small businesses have been shuttered for unpaid bills, or for lacking the...
Palestinian anger boils in the heart of East Jerusalem
  For months, the streets of mainly Arab East Jerusalem, in the shadow of the Old City but where tourists seldom venture, have been ablaze, with daily clashes between armed Israeli police and Palestinians throwing rocks and Molotov cocktails.   The roots of the unrest are many: from the killing in July...
Israel detains 100 Palestinian Palestinians in E. Jerusalem
  Israeli police have detained more than 100 Palestinians in East Jerusalem since July for allegedly "throwing stones" at trains.   In a Tuesday statement, police said that more than 100 Palestinians had been arrested since July – when a Palestinian teenager was murdered by suspected Jewish settlers – for pelting passing...
Iraqi Shia militias accused of murder spree
  Shia militias have abducted and murdered scores of Sunni civilians in Iraq in crimes committed in retribution against the actions of ISIL, according to a new report by Amnesty International.   The London-based rights group on Tuesday published what it said was evidence that Shia militias abducted civilians in Baghdad, Samarra...
Anti-Arab incitement grips Israel
  As racially motivated attacks and growing incitement gripped Israel over the weekend, 23-year-old Waad Ghantous, a Palestinian citizen of Israel, was not surprised at being verbally accosted in this mixed city, home to both Arabs and Jews on Israel's northern coast.   "The racism is always present, but it's much worse...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved