Where are all those fiscal conservatives in the US who
scream about excessive government spending?

Cheers, Ken Hanly

A Look at the Mounting Cost of the Iraq War
By BOB DEANS
Cox News Service
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
WASHINGTON — By Friday, the Senate is expected to
authorize a record-breaking $648 billion in defense
spending for the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1.

Even adjusted for inflation, the Pentagon budget for
the coming year would be the largest tab for national
defense since the end of World War II.

Driving the increase is the continuing war in Iraq,
where more than 3,610 U.S. troops have been killed and
26,700 wounded, according to Pentagon figures.

Adding the cost of continuing the fight and long-term
costs, such as taking care of wounded and disabled
veterans and the toll exacted on the U.S. economy, the
total cost of the war could reach well beyond $2
trillion, according to a study last year by two
scholars at Harvard and Columbia universities.

By the numbers:

$567 billion – Cost of the war through 2008, according
to a June analysis by the Congressional Research
Service, which exists to provide nonpartisan advice to
lawmakers and congressional committees.

$350 billion-$700 billion — Estimated lifetime care
for wounded and disabled veterans of Iraq and
Afghanistan, according to a study by Linda Blimes of
Harvard University. The numbers vary depending on the
duration of the war and the troop levels.

$100 billion — The potential additional costs through
2014 even if most combat troops come home next year.
Retaining 30,000 troops per year — about a fifth of
the current force level in Iraq — would cost about $21
billion a year, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget
Office estimates. So, if troop levels were reduced to
30,000 by 2010 — the first full year after the next
president takes office — it would cost about $100
billion to keep them there until 2014.

$22 billion — Economic value of lost lives.

Economists and government agencies value the earning
and production potential of the average American male
in his prime at roughly $6 million. Using that figure,
the economic value of the 3,613 lives lost as of July
16 is $21.7 billion.

$390,000 — Estimated cost to deploy an American
soldier to Iraq for a year, according to the
Congressional Research Service.



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