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This alert originally provided by
Yahoo
December 20, 2007
Iraq, Afghanistan War Costs Top Vietnam
Aaron Glantz, OneWorld US
SAN FRANCISCO, California (OneWorld): Congress'
approval Wednesday of $70 billion more for the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan mean the twin conflicts are now more costly
to American taxpayers than the war in Vietnam.
According to a study by the Washington-based Center for Arms
Control and Non-Proliferation, Congress has now approved
nearly $700 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"Using inflation-adjusted dollars, the total cost of those
wars has now surpassed the total cost of the Vietnam war
(which ran to $670 billion)," the group's Travis Sharp told OneWorld. "It's also more than seven times larger than the
Persian Gulf War ($94 billion) and more than twice the cost
of the Korean war ($295 billion)."
As a result of Wednesday's vote, Sharp said, the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan will become the second costliest
conflict in American history, trailing only World War II.
"But that was a time when 12 million Americans served, as
compared with 1.42 million active duty soldiers and just
over one million National Guard and reservists today," Sharp
added.
Much of the money approved by Congress will go to buy
expensive new military equipment: $922 million is earmarked
for purchase or alteration of 41 new Blackhawk, Apache, and
Chinook Helicopters; $813 million will be spent on new
Bradley Fighting Vehicles; $455 million for new Humvees;
$427 million on new Heavy Tactical Vehicles; and $425
million for M1 Abrams Tanks.
"I think what you're seeing from Democrats is a resignation
to the fact that they're going to have to wait for the Bush
Administration to leave office before they see any serious
change in the country's war policy," Sharp said. "The
Democrats just want to play out the clock on this one."
But "playing out the clock" comes with a severe cost for
essential services at home.
Even before the new $70 billion dollars was approved
Wednesday, the Massachusetts-based National Priorities
Project had estimated that the average American household
has already spent $4,100 on the Iraq war.
This year alone, US taxpayers spent $137.6 billion on the
Iraq war. For the same amount of money, the government could
have provided more than 39 million people with health care,
built one million units of affordable housing, or outfitted
142 million homes with renewable electricity sources.
"We want to help people comprehend the magnitude of these
numbers," said the group's Pamela Schwartz. "Surely,
ultimately, we'd hope that our priorities would shift so
that significantly less money is going to war with more
money going to programs like heath care, Headstart, and
education."
"We want to help people understand that choices are being
made here," she added.
To that end, the National Priorities Project has set up a
web-site, www.costofwar.com, where taxpayers can learn what
the cost of the Iraq war has meant to their community.
Visitors to the website can search by state, city, or
congressional district and find out how much money the Iraq
war has taken out of their community and where the money
could have gone instead.
For example, taxpayers in Chicago have spent $4.8 billion on
the war in Iraq - money that could have been used to build
567 new elementary schools or build 35,000 units of
affordable housing.
In smaller places like George W. Bush's hometown of
Crawford, Texas, war spending has also had a strong impact.
Crawford's taxpayers have spent $1.3 million on the war in
Iraq - money that could have been used to provide 180 full
scholarships for university students, or hire 30 additional
police and sheriff's deputies.
"The Democrats were elected last year with a certain set of
priorities, but President Bush drew a line in the sand,"
Schwartz told OneWorld. "Rather than drawing their own line,
Democrats respected Bush's line. They met President Bush's
spending limits on domestic programs and gave him a blank
check for the Iraq war. That's the choice they made."
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