Audit: $9 Billion Unaccounted for in Iraq
Associated Press 
01.30.2005
http://www.forbes.com/business/manufacturing/feeds/ap/2005/01/30/ap1791607.html


The U.S. occupation authority in Iraq was unable to
keep track of nearly $9 billion it transferred to
government ministries, which lacked financial
controls, security, communications and adequate staff,
an inspector general has found. 

The U.S. officials relied on Iraqi audit agencies to
account for the funds but those offices were not even
functioning when the funds were transferred between
October 2003 and June 2004, according to an audit by a
special U.S. inspector general. 

The findings were released Sunday by Stuart Bowen Jr.,
special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction.
Bowen issued several reports on the Coalition
Provisional Authority (CPA), the U.S. occupation
government that ruled Iraq from June 2003 to June
2004. 

The official who led the CPA, L. Paul Bremer III,
submitted a blistering, written reply to the findings,
saying the report had "many misconceptions and
inaccuracies," and lacked professional judgment. 

Bremer complained the report "assumes that
Western-style budgeting and accounting procedures
could be immediately and fully implemented in the
midst of a war." 

The inspector general said the occupying agency
disbursed $8.8 billion to Iraqi ministries "without
assurance the moneys were properly accounted for." 

U.S. officials, the report said, "did not establish or
implement sufficient managerial, financial and
contractural controls." There was no way to verify
that the money was used for its intended purposes of
financing humanitarian needs, economic reconstruction,
repair of facilities, disarmament and civil
administration. 

Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said Sunday the
authority was hamstrung by "extraordinary conditions"
under which it worked throughout its mission. 

"We simply disagree with the audit's conclusion that
the CPA provided less than adequate controls," Whitman
said. 

Turning over the money "was in keeping with the CPA's
responsibility to transfer these funds and
administrative responsibilities to the Iraqi
ministries as an essential part of restoring Iraqi
governance." 

The inspector general cited an International Monetary
Fund assessment in October, 2003 on the poor state of
Iraqi government offices. The assessment found
ministries suffered from staff shortages, poor
security, disruptions in communications, damage and
looting of government buildings, and lack of financial
policies. 

Some of the transferred funds may have paid "ghost"
employees, the inspector general found. 

CPA staff learned that 8,206 guards were on the
payroll at one ministry, but only 602 could be
accounted for, the report said. At another ministry,
U.S. officials found 1,417 guards on the payroll but
could only confirm 642. 

When staff members of the U.S. occupation government
recommended that payrolls be verified before salary
payments, CPA financial officials "stated the CPA
would rather overpay salaries than risk not paying
employees and inciting violence," the inspector
general said. 

Bremer attacked many of the specific findings. Among
his rebuttal points: 

_With more than a million Iraqi families depending on
government salaries, there would have been an
increased security threat if civil servants had not
been paid until modern pay records were developed. 

_U.S. policy was to build up the Iraqi force guarding
government facilities, and it was better to accept an
imperfect payroll system than "to stop paying armed
young men" providing security. 

_The report was suggesting the CPA "should have placed
hundreds of CPA auditors" in Iraqi ministries,
contrary to United States and United Nations policy of
giving Iraqi ministers responsibility for their
budgets. 

_The CPA established a program review board, an
independent judiciary and inspector generals in each
agency to fight corruption. 

The inspector general's report rejected Bremer's
criticism. It concluded that despite the war, "We
believe the CPA management of Iraq's national budget
process and oversight of Iraqi funds was burdened by
severe inefficiencies and poor management."

On the Net: 

Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction: 

http://www.iraqreconstructionig.org/

- 

http://www.forbes.com/business/manufacturing/feeds/ap/2005/01/30/ap1791607.html


                
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