OOPS: U.S. sends $360 million to insurgents
According to AP reports, Taliban forces, insurgents, and other criminal elements in Afghanistan benefited from $360 million dollars paid by the U.S. military to contractors in Afghanistan who had ties to criminals or insurgents.
Task Force 2010, acting at the behest of Gen. David Petraeus - now the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency - investigated the various contracts assigned by the U.S. military to Afghanistan contractors. The Associated Press obtained an overview of the findings:
In a murky process known as "reverse money laundering," payments from the U.S. pass through companies hired by the military for transportation, construction, power projects, fuel and other services to businesses and individuals with ties to the insurgency or criminal networks, according to interviews and task force documents obtained by the AP.
"Funds begin as clean monies," according to one document, then "either through direct payments or through the flow of funds in the subcontractor network, the monies become tainted."
The conclusions by Task Force 2010 represent the most definitive assessment of how U.S. military spending and aid to Afghanistan has been diverted to the enemy or stolen. Only a small percentage of the $360 million has been garnered by the Taliban and insurgent groups, said a senior U.S. military official in Kabul. The bulk of the money was lost to profiteering, bribery and extortion by criminals and power brokers, said the official, who declined to provide a specific breakdown . . .
Overall, the $360 million represents a fraction of the $31 billion in active U.S. contracts that the task force reviewed. But insurgents rely on crude weaponry and require little money to operate. And the illicit gains buttress what the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based think tank, referred to in a June report as a "nexus between criminal enterprises, insurgent networks and corrupt political elites" in Afghanistan.