THE CONFLICT IN IRAQ: FOOTING THE BILL
War costs are hitting historic proportions
The price tag for the Iraq conflict and
overall effort against terrorism is expected to surpass Vietnam's next
year.
By Joel Havemann
Times Staff Writer
January 14, 2007
WASHINGTON — By the time the Vietnam war ended in 1975, it had become
America's longest war, shadowed the legacies of four presidents, killed
58,000 Americans along with many thousands more Vietnamese, and cost
the U.S. more than $660 billion in today's dollars.
By
the time the bill for World War II passed the $600-billion mark, in
mid-1943, the United States had driven German forces out of North
Africa, devastated the Japanese fleet in the Battle of Midway, and
launched the vast offensives that would liberate Europe and the South
Pacific.
The Iraq war is far smaller and narrower than those
conflicts, and it has not extended beyond the tenure of a single
president. But its price tag is beginning to reach historic
proportions, and the budgetary "burn rate" for Iraq may be greater than
in some periods in past wars.
If U.S. involvement continues on
the current scale, the funding for the Iraq war — combined with the
conflict in Afghanistan and other foreign fronts in the war on
terrorism — is projected to surpass this country's Vietnam spending
next year.
And the accumulating cost is adding to resistance to
President Bush's war policy in Congress as well as in public opinion,
even though concern about the cost in human lives, the war's impact on
America's place in the world and other such factors loom larger.
Last
week, when Bush unveiled his new war plan — which included sending an
additional 21,500 U.S. troops to Iraq and launching another effort to
provide jobs and public services in Baghdad — the cost issue was raised
by Republicans as well as Democrats.
But it had been simmering for more than a year.
Members
of Congress have talked relatively little about the war's accumulating
price tag because of the human costs, Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-San Jose)
said. "But certainly we're cognizant of it," she said. "When you say
for what we're spending in a month in Iraq, you could fully fund and
double the science budgets of the United States and come up with a
viable alternative to oil, it puts it in perspective."
Even so
loyal a Republican as Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire, who chaired the
budget committee until the Democrats took control of the Senate this
year, criticized the administration's approach to war costs, calling it
"without any discipline as to how much is going to be spent."
"They're gaming the system," Gregg said.
At
a media briefing before Bush's speech Wednesday night, a senior
administration official said the president's plan would entail $5.6
billion in military expenses and $1 billion in reconstruction and other
civilian costs.
In the broad landscape of federal spending,
those are not huge numbers, though $6.6 billion is more than enough to
cover the budgets for all the country's national parks, national
forests, historic monuments, protected wetlands and wildlife refuges
for a year.
What makes the cost issue increasingly sensitive is
not just questions about whether it will buy success but also the fact
that the new plan's cost will add to a mountain of bills for earlier
military and reconstruction efforts with what many see as little or no
positive return on the investment.
Some Republicans, especially
fiscal conservatives worried about the deficit, are particularly
unhappy because, they say, the president and the Defense Department
have refused to address the war's impact on the budget in a
straightforward way.
Instead of including war costs in the
regular budget, such as the one Bush will send to Congress next month,
the administration has been asking Congress for emergency-spending
bills that short-circuit many of the usual review procedures for
appropriating funds.
"Muting and undermining the legitimacy of
the congressional role in funding is, I think, undermining to some
degree the commitment to the war effort itself," Gregg said.
The
administration says its approach is necessary because it is unable to
determine what it will need for the war in the coming fiscal year,
which begins each October. Critics say that may have been true early in
the war but that by now most costs are predictable far in advance.
Last
year, Congress approved a provision in the annual defense authorization
bill calling on the administration to change course and put its request
for war funds in regular spending bills subject to full congressional
review.
Said Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), the provision's author:
"Neither the White House nor the Congress is making the tough decisions
about how we are going to pay for the ongoing wars. Adding hundreds of
billions of dollars that are more conveniently designated as emergency
expenditures — so they do not have to be budgeted for along with other
national priorities — is only making our fiscal problems that much
greater."
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) proposed that
Congress block Bush's new plan by withholding funds. To date, Congress
has not used its power of the purse to limit Bush's prosecution of the
war, partly because it doesn't want to seem to deny U.S. troops any
needed support.
"If you cut off funding, you're cutting off
support for the troops," said Rep. C.W. "Bill" Young of Florida, a top
Republican on the House Appropriations Committee. "Whether you support
the battle they're involved in or not, the vast majority of the
American public is still very supportive of our troops."
During
Vietnam, Congress did threaten to limit the use of the defense budget.
At one point, for example, it prohibited the use of funds in Cambodia.
But
Congress flexed its fiscal muscles only toward the end of the Vietnam
War. Bush's war on terrorism is in its seventh year, and at a
comparable stage of Vietnam, antiwar lawmakers could muster only a
handful of votes for limiting funds.
From the beginning of
President Lyndon B. Johnson's troop buildup in 1965 to the fall of
Saigon in 1975, the United States spent the equivalent of $662 billion
in 2007 dollars, according to the Congressional Research Service. The
war in Iraq is harder to measure because its costs tend to be mixed up
with those of the war in Afghanistan and Bush's broader global war on
terrorism, says Steven Kosiak, director of budget studies at the Center
for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments in Washington.
Starting
with the anti-terrorism appropriation enacted a week after the attacks
of Sept. 11, 2001, Kosiak figures the United States had spent $400
billion fighting terrorism through fiscal 2006, which ended Sept. 30.
For fiscal 2007, Congress has so far approved $70 billion. The
president is expected to ask Congress for $100 billion more.
Even if the fighting stopped soon, which few expect, the bills would
continue to accumulate as the Pentagon pushed to restore what the war
had cost in troops and material.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times