Mon, May 28, 2012, 11:40 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

For Sale, Cheap: The Things You Need to Invade a Nation

As the U.S. leaves Iraq, the military rushes to pack up and ship out eight years' worth of war gear

Seven nights a week at precisely 19:30 hours, U.S. Army Major General Thomas Richardson gets on the phone with U.S. commanders across Iraq and grills them about the military’s final mission there: getting out. How many bulletproof vests, helmets, and firearms are still left in the country? How many packaged spaghetti dinners are stockpiled on the remaining Army bases? Who will take possession of the stacks of worn-out keyboards, radios, fire extinguishers, batteries, computer cables, desk chairs, and toiletries in need of new homes?

As the Army’s logistics chief for the Iraq drawdown, it’s Richardson’s job to tally all the equipment and supplies the Pentagon has shipped to Iraq over eight years of war, and to make sure none is inadvertently left behind on Dec. 31, the day the U.S. officially clears out. When he took the assignment in September 2010, the Army had identified just over 2 million items at 92 bases that had to be sent back to the U.S., moved to Afghanistan, sold, given away, or destroyed. He estimated it would take about 20,000 truckloads to get all of it. “In the Army we count everything,” says Richardson, who is based at Camp Buehring in Kuwait, where the U.S. military is staging the withdrawal.

Leaving Iraq has required a mobilization of troops and equipment rivaling a military invasion, only in reverse. Throughout the fall, tens of thousands of trucks traveled from Iraq to Jordan and Kuwait. As of mid-December, all but 50,000 items on Richardson’s massive spreadsheet had been hauled away, and only two bases remained operational. Alan F. Estevez, Assistant Defense Secretary for Logistics and Materiel Readiness, likens the occupation of Iraq to renting a house and spending eight years filling every room, closet, and crawl space with your stuff. “And now you’re leaving that house,” he says. “Massive, massive logistical function.” (Civilian translation: Moving is such a drag.)

[See also: Equality for Arab Women a ‘Must Have’]

The Pentagon will reclaim a lot of the equipment, including Black Hawk helicopters, M1 Abrams tanks, Bradley Fighting Vehicles, body armor, and radios, which will be shipped back to Army units in the U.S. Generators will be sent to U.S. Marines stationed in Bahrain. Armored vehicles known as MRAPs—Mine Resistant Ambush Protected—that once shielded soldiers from roadside bombs will be put to new use protecting troops in Afghanistan. After years of heavy use, some gear such as outdated Internet routers will be incinerated or wind up in Kuwaiti junkyards.

Richardson’s bigger challenge is finding takers for all the things the military no longer wants. An Alabama school district happily took eight used trombones and clarinets. U.S. towns and counties can petition the Pentagon for some of the leftovers and pay only shipping costs. Cleveland County, Okla., paid $42,000 for a used Caterpillar (CAT) bulldozer that is now clearing roads and public parks. A volunteer fire department in South Dakota bought advanced firefighting equipment it otherwise could not have afforded. A Louisiana sheriff’s department is using a surplus John Deere (DE) all-terrain vehicle to reach back-country meth labs. In Alabama, which has received more surplus property than any state, rural Marshall County now has a former Army generator powering a sewage plant.

Even after the remaining 5,500 troops leave Iraq this month, the U.S. will retain a significant footprint there. The U.S. diplomatic mission in Iraq is the largest in the world; the State Dept. will employ 15,000 people, including 5,000 private security guards to protect buildings and personnel. The embassy will house a Pentagon program to promote the sale of U.S.-made weapons and military gear to the Iraqis. Iraq is buying $10 billion worth of American military equipment and training, and plans to spend $6.5 billion on F-16 jets made by Lockheed Martin (LMT).

The U.S. will also leave behind all those empty bases, which the military is quietly turning over to Iraqi security forces. Most are still equipped with professional kitchens, trailers for housing, and industrial-grade generators—“excess property” the Pentagon deemed too costly and cumbersome to remove. Other former military sites are becoming civilian outposts. Iraq’s Youth and Sport Ministry has taken over Forward Operating Base Warhorse in Diyala province, which once housed the 4th Infantry Div. Trailers on the base will become classrooms for the Education Ministry. Richardson says donated Humvees, once covered in desert camouflage, have been repainted in the red, white, and black of the Iraqi flag.

[See also: Afghanistan 2.0: Rebuilding or Bust?]

The U.S. is giving Iraq $580 million worth of equipment, the Pentagon estimates. That bothers Scott Pepperman, executive director of the National Association of State Agencies for Surplus Property, which helps states purchase excess government equipment. “One fire truck can save a community from raising taxes, cutting off police forces,” says Pepperman. “Who owns the property? It’s the U.S. taxpayers. The best [thing] is to bring it back to the people who paid for it in the first place.”

The Pentagon believes helping the Iraqis is money well spent, especially if the bases and donations help the fledgling government fight off insurgent attacks and preserve goodwill between Iraq and the U.S. in a region of the world hostile to American interests. “The fair market value is the benefit for the United States’ national security,” Estevez says.

As the deadline nears, handing over U.S. bases to the Iraqis has become an Army ritual. After Richardson signs off, the outgoing base commander escorts local leaders on a walk-through of their property. “We owe it to them,” Richardson says. “It’s the right thing to do.”

The bottom line: The U.S. military will leave the Iraqi government with bases and equipment worth $580 million when it officially withdraws at year end.

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2,669 comments

  • A Yahoo! User  •  5 months ago
    Don't leave a G-- D-- thing. In two years the'll be useing it aginst us. Our government hasn't learned a dame thing!!!!!!
    • 98523 5 months ago
      oh thomas! you are so right!
    • Kevin Shields 5 months ago
      I completely agree with you on this one. Osama Bin Laden learned and was trained from our government and we all know how that turned out. Give an inch they'll take a yard!
    • Jack 5 months ago
      Thomas truer words have never been written! Let us try this one more time - to our leaders:
      YOU CANNOT BUY FRIENDSHIP OR TRUST IT MUST BE EARNED!
  • wolfmant  •  5 months ago
    As a boy scout I learned take out what you hiked in. " leave no trace"
    • SpyHunter 5 months ago
      I also learned that - I learned to "hike lightly" - i.e.: leave no trace that you were there, behind. Unfortunately, in this case, we cannot do that.
    • A Yahoo! User 5 months ago
      and as a soldier, you learned to turn off your brain and do what daddy in the Pentagon tells you to do, no matter how illegal, treasonous or dangerous to America. Modern day soldiers are unfortunately just robot cogs in a Corp. America machine....brainwashed into thinking they are actually helping average American citizens. They are not.
    • Steve 5 months ago
      I trust the boy scouts! But I don't trust the politicians!
  • Santee  •  5 months ago
    Add to that $580 million the value of the stuff we dumped overboard, or left behind when we fled from Vietnam, the stuff abandoned behind the demarcation line in Korea, the stuff ditched, abandoned and moldering on isolated Islands in the Pacific from WW2 . Tally the heaps of clothing, medical equipment, trucks, planes, surplus ships in our mothball fleets, some brand new, or only partially completed. That's "write-off" materials, while each war begins with the new, best and most "cutting-edge". In less than five years, as in Europe, as well as other places, the mantra will be, "Yankee, get the Hell out of here!" Our global thinking ignores the fact that we have people here, at home, that are hurting bad. There should be no poverty here.
    • Dr. Zook 5 months ago
      Yes but Americans can feel good while they collect their unemployment checks in their run-down apartments that they live in after they lost their house in foreclosure that they are so much safer from the terrorists (who weren't Iraqis anyway).
    • Ryan 5 months ago
      google:

      "United States Foreign Aid". We pay people to hate us even when they would do it for free.
    • William 5 months ago
      at least it is tax deductable.....
  • JWS  •  5 months ago
    I am a Vietnam Vet, U. S. Marines (1967-1968) during TET Offensive. The United States left everything behind when they were evacuated in 1974(?). Millions if not Billions of $$ military equipment, military bases, vehicles, planes, tanks, most importantly MIAS, POWS, etc. to the Communists. The high military saw the invasion coming! They should have ordered destroyed any thing that had the USA stamp on it. Leave the Commies with nothing than isn't booby trapped!
    I think the Iraqi government should show thankfulness and good faith by giving the USA and Allies all the processed oil that we need for the next ten years, also with the promise to fight and protect their people of Iraq from all insurgents and terrorists trying to destroy their new constitution and government that equals democracy. Don't Give In or Up!
    • mike 5 months ago
      I agree. Thank you for your service
    • catman 5 months ago
      Before they leave,why cant they use some left over bombs to get our drone back from Iran.
    • Joe 5 months ago
      They left everything behind...???? The american troops were very happy
      to save themselves, never mind the equipment...They didn't leave, They
      "RUN" like hell, to be lifted in the airplanes back home..This wasn't a
      evacuation, that was a retreat in mass...
  • Carly Marie  •  5 months ago
    I as a Veteran of the Vietnam War. I believe we should not leave anything in Iraq. We have left enough there. Many of our men and women blood, souls, feelings and futures. It is wrong to leave anything in Iraq. Just leave what was there before 1990. A desert country who needs to govern themselves and build with their own monies and people. THEY DO NOT DESERVE ANYTHING MORE FROM THE UNITED STATES TAXPAYER OR OUR MILITARY. THEY DO NOT APPRECIATE THE SACRIFICES OUR MILITARY DID FOR THEM.
    • Andrew 5 months ago
      The problem is that it cost more to ship it back then to keep it there. =/
    • Charles Martel 5 months ago
      Carly, we had absolutely no business invading Iraq in the first place. And I'm as politically conservative as they come.
    • secfan 5 months ago
      It will create jobs, doesn't matter if we can afford it or not. Sound familiar??
  • jimi  •  5 months ago
    The I.R.S. will spend 10 thousand dollars to collect 1 thousand from the taxpayers,but the military rather give the traqs 580 million dollars worth of stuff than move it and return it to taxpayers.This article didnt mention all the 4x4 suvs they are giving the iraqs,i know a lot of people here who cant afford to buy a car,but need one to get to their 7 dollar an hour job which is all they can find,
  • Chance  •  5 months ago
    there seems something to say"IT AINT OVER TIL IT'S OVER" It aint over..its just quiet
  • Larry  •  5 months ago
    "We owe it to them", we liberated them and we paid for it, QUESTION: IF , if this war and the one in 1991 was about OIL, where is it, we got none????
  • philscoach  •  5 months ago
    as much as a deficit as we are in at home, everything they can bring back should be brought back.. haven't we invested enough lives and money over there already?
  • Mike  •  5 months ago
    Mt grandchildren will be making payments on that stuff for years.Bring it HOME
  • Rambodog  •  5 months ago
    Our Government has never given us anything anyway,except raise our taxes. So go ahead and leave 500 million dallars worth of stuff that the american people could use. thats our government for you. when war starts again,they will be better equiped.
  • Bandit  •  5 months ago
    Hi to everyone, what you should do is go to your elected officials site and write to them, to many people post that do nothing. Tell them that the Iraqis should pay for all the equipment, and free oil for the life of this country. You should also tell them close all bases around the world, or make the countries pay for our service in protecting them. Please write or call your representative they do want to hear from you, but the few that call or write will get their attention. Merry Christmas to all and a Happy New Year 2012.
  • J.J.  •  5 months ago
    if it was sold at about half price, every adult US citizen could become a millionair...!
  • HILLTOPPER  •  5 months ago
    We leave millions in gear and equipment and get paid nothing. These liberal politicians are killing us with their overspending and waste.
  • John  •  5 months ago
    I say the hell with them, bring EVERYTHING HOME We payed for it, it belongs to US, bring it home, and allow the People that payed for to use it...
  • Rat Man  •  5 months ago
    We should get out of all foreign countries and stop all foreign aid. We have no business running other countries and telling them how to run their country. There are enough problems here and we have to start to take care of America and leave every other country to take care of theirs
  • Frank  •  5 months ago
    I'd like to buy a HumV cheap...I wonder how much the shipping cost would be?
  • Santee  •  5 months ago
    Thank you for the reminder, I was one of those volunteers also. I continued my volunteering until I retired, after 30 years of service.
  • Santee  •  5 months ago
    I think it's time for a resounding "HELL NO WE WONT GO! " "NO MO"!! The USA is not East or West Podunk, we have cities larger than many of the countries our troops have died in. Our Constitution gives each citizen the right to bear arms, we can defend anything we have, right here, at our front doorstep. Ideologies, philosophies, oppression, dictatorships, we don't succumb to that, our system works good, FOR US! It is not unpatriotic to look back at LBJ's vision of a Great Society, FDR laid the groundwork for that. It is neither selfish nor isolationist to demand AMERICA FIRST, it is now a practical matter. Taking an overview of the condition under which far to many of our own people attempt survival on a daily basis, it is a banal hypocrisy to stand before a world body and decry the deficiencies of human rights in the countries of others. We ignore our shortcoming, or push them aside until the next election. Every dime of that $580 million plus could be used here, at home. We can defend what we have, right here at home. United with our present armed forces, we could do it together and we should. Ditch the #$%$ of our differences, the silly jackass calls of our racists and we could demonstrate a united front, one bold, proud people, living in peace and prosperity, the United States of America, "Of The People, By The People, For The People".Shout it out, speak the truth to power because, after all is said and done, WE ARE THE PEOPLE!
  • Conservative Liberal, Lib ...  •  5 months ago
    The American tax payer is getting scammed, AGAIN. We were scammed into war spending, and we are now scammed into war spending for the country we invaded in the first place!
 
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