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One of the factors President Obama must weigh as he decides whether to send more troops to Afghanistan is the cost — not just in lives, but in dollars. With the economy still struggling, questions exist about how much the U.S. can afford to spend in Afghanistan — and for how long.
Earlier this week, Sen. John Kerry (D-MA), chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said the war in Afghanistan had already cost a “staggering” $243 billion.
In fact, it is a challenge to calculate exactly how much the U.S. has spent on the war so far.
The Congressional Research Service estimates that since the invasion of Afghanistan eight years ago, the U.S. has spent closer to $227 billion. The Pentagon puts the number at $156 billion.
The variables include which expenses are actually included and whether the total relies on how much Congress has approved for the war compared with what the Pentagon has actually spent.
Michael O’Hanlon, a defense analyst at the Brookings Institution, says one useful way to break down these huge numbers is to look at how much it costs to send just one soldier to war.
“We are at a point where it’s unbelievably costing us close to a million dollars, in additional costs — above and beyond salaries and the equipment that’s already in the inventory — per soldier or Marine per year,” he says.
Fighting in Afghanistan means fighting in one of the most remote regions on Earth, and that plays a large role in the seemingly astronomical figure.
Dov Zakheim, a former chief financial officer for the Defense Department, says the $1 million price tag includes getting the soldier to Afghanistan, getting his equipment to Afghanistan, and moving the soldier around once in the country.
“So, it’s the cost of some allocation of the cost of the plane, some allocation of the cost of the fuel, some allocation of the cost of the pilots, the maintenance folks,” Zakheim explains. “If you focus just on the soldier, it seems outrageous. But if you focus on the support for the soldier — that’s not all that outrageous at all.”

Barack Obama_Afghanistan
The White House has used the $1 million per soldier statistic in private briefings to Congress, and that has obvious implications. If it costs $1 million to send one soldier to war for a year, then sending 40,000 more troops — as the top commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal has urged — could cost an extra $40 billion per year, on top of what the U.S. is already spending.
Meanwhile, the Defense Department disputes the $1 million figure and says it probably costs closer to $500,000 to send a soldier to war for a year. A Pentagon spokesman adds that any figure provided by the Defense Department or other sources is “speculative at best.”
What is beyond dispute is that a major troop buildup would get very expensive, very fast.
But O’Hanlon of Brookings says that other options — such as a scaled-back, counterterrorism mission — might not be much cheaper. It would require fewer troops, he says, but it’s not clear when they could ever go home. As a result, he says, the government may spend less per year — but need to do so over a longer period of time.
Ultimately, says Zakheim, the former Pentagon official, wars simply cost an “awful lot of money.”
But he says there is a steep cost to failure in Afghanistan, too. “We shouldn’t be going to war or not going to war because it’s going to cost us more or less. We should be choosing to make those decisions on the basis of the national interest of the United States,” he says.
In other words, Zakheim argues, the president should focus on getting the war strategy right, and then figure out how to pay for it.

by Mary Louise Kelly.

bush_obama

COSTOFWAR.COM – The Cost of War

Iz last paint_photo by Brian Dwels

The Master Blaster :
On June 12, the graffiti artist Iz the Wiz had a rare show of his work in the Bronx, in which he spray-painted a mock-up subway facade with his bubble-letter “Iz” repeatedly. “You would have these pieces running like this 10 cars straight,” said Michael. “When that hit the train station, bam! Impact. No doubt about it.”

The original premise of the subway facade was that it would be painted over and over again by different artists, similar to the brick walls in Tuff City’s backyard, which have attracted graffiti artists from around the world.

Then plans changed. “It was weird,” said Joel Brick, the owner of Tuff City, who goes by the name of MED. “He had the show, then he went back to Florida and five days later he died.”

“This is it !”
So that subway facade is now considered the last work that was done by Iz the Wiz, arguably the most prolific graffiti artist, and was the site of a candlelight memorial service several days after his death.

Tuff City employees are deciding how to preserve the panels — whether to donate them to a museum, make them part of a traveling exhibit or disassemble them for galleries. Inquiries about the panel have come in from around the world.

“We’re not sure what is going to happen with it yet,” Mr. Brick said. “We just know it is not going to be painted over.”

Smokey Ferrer, a Tuff City employee who goes by the name N.B., said: “It was a part of graffiti history. I was standing right there. At the time I already knew he was pretty sick, he didn’t have that much time here.”

Mr. Martin had kidney disease, which he believed was caused by exposure to all the aerosol. There were questions about whether he would even do the show. “He wasn’t looking good,” said Teddy Ferrer, who uses the nickname PACK.

Once he died, on June 17 from a heart attack at age 50, Mr. Martin’s business partner asked the studio to stop selling any of the works.

Tuff City employees are proud to have hosted his last show, which attracted visitors from around the world.

“I’m happy that he went out with a good turnout, that he had respect and admiration from a lot of people,” said Mr. Brick, who was among those that grew up under the influence of Mr. Martin’s work. “He was a legendary figure in his era. The amount that he did was crazy. You’d have to go out every day. You have to live your life doing this to get the amount that he did at one time.”

http://www.izthewiz.com/

falcon50
SAM-16
6 avril 1994, Kigali.

Un missile « SAM-16 Gimlet » provenant d’une saisie française pendant la guerre du Golfe désintègre le « Falcon 50 » (avion français) ainsi que ses passagers Juvénal Habyarimana (président du Rwanda) & Cyprien Ntaryamira (président du Burundi) entre autres…
Les tireurs (français ?) viennent de déclencher « le génocide à la machette ».
1 million de morts plus tard, soit 3 mois plus tard…
l’opération « Turquoise » se déploie et fait mine de découvrir l’horreur.
François Mitterrand, humoriste, déclare : « De quel génocide voulez-vous parler ? De celui des Tutsis ou celui des Hutus ? » (Biarritz, 08/11/94, F.Mitterand).
Mais encore : « Dans ces pays-là, un génocide, c’est pas trop important. » (Confidence de Mitterrand faite à l’un de ses proches, rapporté par Le Figaro du 12/01/1998.Le Quotidien, cité par Courrier international, édition du 8 avril 2004, n° 701).

Genocide
Boutros-Boutros Ghali, secrétaire général des Nations Unis nous explique: « Nous avions des consignes pour ne pas utiliser le mot « génocide » car, en vertu de la convention du 9 décembre 1948, nous aurions été obligés d’intervenir… Malheureusement, un conflit qui se déroule dans un coin reculé d’Afrique, où de surcroît, il n’y a pas de pétrole, n’intéresse personne… »
Personne ? Sauf les français du « DAMI » qui s’emploient à entraîner les milices au combat, leurs fournir armes et techniques de torture avant de s’en prendre aux enfants et aux femmes (violées, déchiquetées, éventrées, égorgées etc.)
Pourquoi ? Car : « Je le dis solennellement : la France doit maintenir sa route et refuser de réduire ses ambitions africaines. La France ne serait plus tout à fait elle-même si elle renonçait à être présente en Afrique. » (Discours d’ouverture de la conférence de Biarritz, 08/11/94, F.Mitterand).

Rwanda
Images : AFP

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