• Live
    • Audio Only
  • google plus
  • facebook
  • twitter
News > World

US Loses Hundreds of Thousands of Guns in Iraq and Afghanistan

  • A rack of AR-15 rifles

    A rack of AR-15 rifles | Photo: Reuters

Published 27 August 2016
Opinion

"This failure shows the lack of accountability, transparency," said the organization that uncovered the error. 

The Pentagon has somehow misplaced hundreds of thousands out of 1.45 million guns that were shipped to Iraq and Afghanistan since the start of the “war on terror,” according to a report released Wednesday.

RELATED: 
Pentagon Sometimes Flies Spy Drones over US

An investigation was launched by organization, Action on Armed Violence, AOAV, investigated data from the Department of Defense, DOD, which showed the discrepancy in gun numbers and the Pentagon keeping poor records.

Looking at the publicly available data, AOAV, estimated that the DOD sent over 1.4 million small arms - including pistols, rifles and machine guns to Iraq and Afghanistan, but government records can only account for around 700,000 of them, only 48 percent of what was sent.

The DoD reported 484,680 small arms sent to Afghanistan, but the AOAV found over 503,328.  In Iraq, the DoD reported 206, 446 small arms while the AOAV found over 740,000.

Including small arms and grenade launchers, 210,153 weapons were sent to Iraq and 509,321 to Afghanistan. The AOAV recorded 190,000 Ak-47 assault rifles in 2007, none of which were accounted for by the DoD.

“This failure shows the lack of accountability, transparency and joined up data that exists at the very heart of the US government’s weapon procurement and distribution systems,” said the AOAV on its website.

The Government Accountability Office, GAO, stated in a 2007 report that the DoD could not ensure that all arms sent to Iraq actually went to Security forces as they were intended.

Between 9/11 and Sep. 2015, the DoD issued arms contracts worth over $US 40 billion in total, AOAV said in an August report.

RELATED: 
Israeli Cyber Arms Dealer Developed Most Advanced Spying Yet

In February the Pentagon set out its US$582.7 billion defense budget, with $145.8 million earmarked in support for Israel, a US$2.4 billion increase from last year's base budget.

A June audit from the DoD’s Inspector General revealed that trillions of dollars of the US army were moved around and “materially misstated,” to make it appear that the army's accounts balanced out. In 2015 alone US$6.5 trillion was moved around in wrongful accounting entries.
Comment
0
Comments
Post with no comments.