After wildly lowballing the cost of the Iraq conflict at a mere $50 to $60 billion, the Bush administration has been concealing the full economic toll. The spending on military operations is merely the tip of a vast fiscal iceberg. In an excerpt from their new book, the authors calculate the grim bottom line. In March 19, 2008, the U.S. will have been in Iraq for five years. The Bush administration was wrong about the need for the Iraq war and about the benefits the war would bring to Iraq, to the region, and to America. It has also been wrong about the full cost of the war, and it continues to take steps to conceal that cost. In the run-up to the war there were few public discussions of the likely price tag. When Lawrence Lindsey, President Bush’s economic adviser, suggested that it might reach $200 billion all told, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld dismissed the estimate as ‘baloney.’ Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz went as far as to suggest that Iraq’s postwar reconstruction would pay for itself through increased oil revenues. Rumsfeld and Office of Management and Budget Director Mitch Daniels estimated the total cost of the […]
Friday, February 29th, 2008
The $3 Trillion War
Author: JOSEPH E. STIGLITZ and LINDA J. BILMES
Source: Vanity Fair
Publication Date: 27-Feb-08
Link: The $3 Trillion War
Source: Vanity Fair
Publication Date: 27-Feb-08
Link: The $3 Trillion War
Stephan: Just close your eyes a minute and imagine what else could have been done with three trillion dollars.
Excerpted from The Three Trillion Dollar War, by Joseph E. Stiglitz and Linda J. Bilmes, to be published this month by W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.; © 2008 by the authors. Available in the U.K. through Penguin.