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Showing posts with label USAID. Show all posts
Showing posts with label USAID. Show all posts

Saturday, January 17, 2015

Afghan war waste: $500k, adobe-style police base melted in rain

Editor's note: We're seeing reports of an explosion in Kandahar, Afghanistan, at the Aino Mina housing project. Early reports suggest a suicide bomber may have targeted a member of the provincial council in Kandahar. No word on injuries. We'll continue to look for confirmation. - Jimmy
Mir Waise Alokozay : Afghan builders shall be hang to death. We Afghans always say that US is not working here but when it comes on us, then we dont even feel ashamed of such kind of nonsense. It all our own fault. Millions of dollars are spent on road constructions, after few months of completion you vant even find if there was a road there. The only road (Kabul - Kandahar Highway) which was built by Turkish builders is still shining like a mirror, hates of to turkish builders for their honesty. Kabul Kandahar road is destroyed by IEDs but rest its all super fine.
Afghan war waste: $500k, adobe-style police base melted in rain - report (PHOTOS) Published time: January 16, 2015 20:44 Get short URL AFP Photo / Shah Marai Afghanistan, Corruption, Military, Police, Scandal, USA, War A $500,000 Afghan police training center contracted by the US fell apart four months after completion based on faulty construction, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) said in a report on money wasted amid the war effort. The adobe-style brick buildings were built to emulate an Afghan village in order for police to train for search operations. Yet, four months after its completion, the roof and walls began “melting" in the rain, according to the report by John Sopko, the US government’s special inspector general for Afghanistan reconstruction (SIGAR). “Therefore, although this project may have been well intentioned, the fact that the Afghans had to demolish and rebuild the DFR (dry fire range) is not only an embarrassment, but, more significantly, a waste of US taxpayers’ money,” the inspector general’s office said, according to AFP. The report alleged that the US did not adequately supervise or hold to account the selected Afghan contractor -- Qesmatullah Nasrat Construction Company -- which failed to follow contract and building requirements. The watchdog’s report is the latest in a string of accounts of American taxpayer dollars wasted on Afghanistan war projects, including expenditures like a $34 million unused base and patrol boats for use in the landlocked nation. Sopko said previously that “billions of dollars” of the more than $100 billion spent to rebuild the nation have been wasted or stolen. The amount the US has spent to reconstruct Afghanistan has, adjusted for inflation, cost more than the Marshall Plan that rebuilt western Europe after World War II. “Time and again, I am running into people from USAID, State and the Pentagon who think they are in Kansas [not Afghanistan],” he said. “My auditors tell me things [about spending plans] and I say, ‘you have to be making this up, this is Alice in Wonderland’.” Sopko’s office reported in October that 16 planes that were bought for the Afghan Air Force, costing almost $500 million, were turned into scrap metal valued at just $32,000. ‘Disintegrating’ walls The police training center in eastern Wardak province was awarded for nearly $500,000 in May 2012, and the construction company was paid in full when the buildings were finished in October of that year. The police center “was not constructed according to contract requirements, and our analysis showed that, as a result, water penetration caused its walls to begin disintegrating within 4 months of when the US government accepted the project...” the SIGAR report said. The report offered photos of the complete buildings just after construction, and then of the dilapidated structures a few months later, ravaged by leaks and disintegrating walls. The roofs, the report stated, were installed without gravel and asphalt, and without a slope that would allow water to drain properly. The also company used smaller, weaker bricks than the contract demanded, “made mostly of sand with little clay content and that the lack of adequate clay material caused the bricks to fail when water penetration occurred.” The US eventually deemed the structures unfit for use. The Afghan government has since demolished the buildings with plans to rebuild the training center. The inspector general called on US Central Command to try to retain the funds if possible, to determine how the construction was so badly botched, and to take disciplinary measures against contracting officials. Central Command said it would take actions to correct the mistakes.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Can Rajiv Shah Save USAID?

Rajiv Shah: the Man Obama Wants to Revitalize USAID
By HOWARD LAFRANCHIi
WASHINGTON, Nov. 14, 2009


President Obama is turning to Rajiv Shah, a medical doctor who served on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation before joining the Department of Agriculture, to head up the US Agency for International Development.
Rajiv Shah: The man Obama wants to revitalize USAID
Rajiv Shah, Under Secretary USDA, participates in a news conference with Agriculture Secretary Tom... Expand

Rajiv Shah, Under Secretary USDA, participates in a news conference with Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, at the National Press Club on October 8, 2009 in Washington, DC. President Obama is turning to Rajiv Shah, a medical doctor who served on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation before joining the Department of Agriculture, to head up the US Agency for International Development.
(Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
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Mr. Shah's appointment Tuesday, which is subject to Senate confirmation, comes after a 10-month vacancy at the helm of the agency. That vacancy belied comments by Mr. Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who have spoken of the growing importance of development in US foreign policy and national security. Both have said they wish to expand the role of the agency, which administers $20 billion in annual assistance.

That figure is set to more than double during the next half-decade as development efforts grow in areas of strategic importance to the US.
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But many development experts, while relieved that USAID is finally getting a new chief, caution that Shah must first put the US foreign aid and development house in order. Only then could the agency think of "elevating" its role in US foreign policy.

"USAID is a damaged agency that must take on institutional strengthening as a first order of business," says Thomas Carothers, director of the Democracy and Rule of Law Program at the Carnegie Institute for International Peace in Washington.

He notes that USAID lost its policy division when the agency was integrated into the State Department in 2006. "So we have a development agency responsible for billions of dollars a year in foreign aid with no policy division," Mr. Carothers says.

As a result, USAID "needs strong leadership to reassert its role and define its purpose."

USAID's purpose had become increasingly "diffuse" as "the Pentagon and more than 20 other federal agencies increasingly engaged in development activities," said Raymond Offenheiser, president of the international organization Oxfam, in a statement.


Given the growing nexus between foreign aid and national security in the post-9/11 era, some development experts have called for the USAID chief to be elevated to cabinet status or to a seat on the National Security Council.

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Will USAID's Role Be Upgraded?

Secretary Clinton said in a statement that Shah will "bring an impressive record of accomplishment and a deep understanding of what works in development" to USAID – attributes she said would "advance the president's agenda and ... elevate and integrate development in our foreign policy."
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But his appointment does not suggest that either Obama or Secretary Clinton intend to "upgrade" the status of the USAID chief, Mr. Carothers says. Shah is in his 30s, and his first federal appointment was to the post of undersecretary for research, education, and economics at the Department of Agriculture. This suggests Shah might bring "interesting ideas" to his new post, Carothers says, "but does not have the gravitas to suggest the president intends to upgrade USAID to a cabinet-level agency."

The growing correlation between development and national-security interests places a burden on Shah to resist having USAID deployed solely for political or strategic purposes, says Carothers. "We're a big enough nation to promote poverty reduction and things like global health and prosperity as desirable in their own right."