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U.S.
Contractor in Iraq Charges
Pentagon $900 for $7 Control Switch, Report Finds
Published July 30, 2011
A
U.S. government contractor in Iraq
charged the Pentagon a whopping amount of money for inexpensive items,
including
$900 for a $7 control switch, according to a new report from a U.S.
watchdog.
U.S.
Special Inspector General for
Iraq Reconstruction Stuart W. Bowen Jr. said review found that Anham,
LLC,
which is based in suburban Washington, allowed its subcontractors in
Iraq to
also charge $3,000 for a $100 circuit breaker, and $80 for a piece of
plumbing
equipment worth $1.41.
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.
A
spokesman for the U.S. military
didn’t comment on the overcharges but issued a statement regarding the
rest of
the report, which found that frequent bombings, assassinations and a
resurgence
in violence by Shiite militias have made Iraq more dangerous now than
it was
just a year ago.
“We
anticipated, and stated many
times, that there would be militant and terrorist groups trying to take
advantage of this period as U.S. forces prepare to fulfill our
commitments
under the Security Agreement. These groups attack both Iraqi and U.S.
forces,”
U.S. military spokesman Jeffrey Buchanan said.
“From
our standpoint, Iraq’s security
continues to be an important and complex issue and one that is
difficult to
summarize in short-term trends and figures.”
The
findings come during what Bowen
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.
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.
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.
The
Associated Press contributed to
this report.
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