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March 21, 2007

'Ghost Soldiers' Fill Iraqi Military and Police Forces

No one knows how many police officers trained on the US dime or Iraqi soldiers remain in the field, and logistics -- those things having to do with supplies, maintenance, and transport -- is a mess, according to Charles J. Hanley with the Associated Press.

The Pentagon said Iraq's defense and interior ministers also are aware of "ghost" soldiers and policemen who exist only on paper -- a fraudulent device by which units can receive additional per capita resources, and corrupt officials can collect nonexistent recruits' pay.

Key Strategy Falls Short: US reconstruction efforts touted the training of military and police forces as a top priority to quell insurgency and strengthen Iraq's fragile government following the 2003 toppling of Saddam Hussein's regime. Yet, the program has failed to live up to expectations.

On the police side, under the Iraqi Interior Ministry, the Americans don't know "what percentage of the 180,000 police thought to be on the payroll are coalition-trained and equipped," Joseph A. Christoff, international affairs chief for the General Accountability Office testified before Congress last week.

Useless Trucks: More than 1,000 U.S.-made trucks delivered to the police feature computerized systems beyond the skills of the Iraqi mechanics who repair them. There is also a shortage of spare parts for the army's "motley" motor pool made up of 21 types of utility vehicles ranging from Chevrolets and Nissans to Czech Honkers.

Posted by davidphinney at March 21, 2007 12:18 PM

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