Macswain

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

The Exploding Costs of the Iraq War

The Raw Story has a sneak preview of tomorrow's Washington Post story about the incredible increasing costs of the war in Iraq.

Here's a key excerpt:

With the expected passage this spring of the largest emergency spending bill in history, annual war expenditures in Iraq will have nearly doubled since the U.S. invasion, as the military confronts the rapidly escalating cost of repairing, rebuilding and replacing equipment chewed up by three years of combat. The cost of the war in U.S. fatalities has declined this year, but the cost in treasure continues to rise, from $48 billion in 2003 to $59 billion in 2004 to $81 billion in 2005 to an anticipated $94 billion in 2006, according to the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments.

The U.S. government is now spending nearly $10 billion a month in Iraq and Afghanistan, up from $8.2 billion a year ago, a new Congressional Research Service report found. Annual war costs in Iraq are easily outpacing the $61 billion a year that the United States spent in Vietnam between 1964 and 1972, in today's dollars.


Is there any end in sight? Not as long as Bush is President.

And where was the fair assessment of these costs before the war? Where did they ever tell the American public that this was what to expect?

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