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Report Spotlights Iraq Rebuilding Blunders
This shows it is easier to invade a country than to rebuild it.
Among the overarching conclusions of the history is that five years after embarking on its largest foreign reconstruction project since the Marshall Plan in Europe after World War II, the United States government has in place neither the policies and technical capacity nor the organizational structure that would be needed to undertake such a program on anything approaching this scale.
The bitterest message of all for the reconstruction program may be the way the history ends. The hard figures on basic services and industrial production compiled for the report reveal that for all the money spent and promises made, the rebuilding effort never did much more than restore what was destroyed during the invasion and the convulsive looting that followed.
By mid-2008, the history says, $117 billion had been spent on the reconstruction of Iraq, including some $50 billion in United States taxpayer money.



Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 05:16 on December 14th, 2008
This is a must-read tale of governmental malfeasanse. It is symbollic of why we as a country and a culture are in the situation we are in.