Rethink Afghanistan
Cost of War in Afghanistan: Over $172 Billion and Counting
Posted by ZP Heller on May 6th, 2009
Here’s something everyone in Congress needs to see as they consider President Obama’s $83.4 billion supplemental war funding bill. National Priorities Project (NPP) just released The Cost of War in Afghanistan, a report examining the exorbitant human and economic costs of this rapidly expanding war, which estimates the war has currently cost taxpayers over $172 billion. When you factor in the projected costs of long-term military occupation, interest, and veterans’ benefits, we’re talking about a war that will cost close to $1 trillion. “All told,” the report concludes, “this is more than the size of the recent bailout of Wall Street and rivals the historic economic stimulus bill just passed by Congress.”
NPP is tracking the costs of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq using an individual cost of war counter, calculating the state-level numbers and trade-offs of supplemental war spending. In my home state of Pennsylvania, for instance, taxpayers will have to pay $2.9 billion of the proposed $83.4 billion tab. Want to know what $2.9 billion could do instead of fund more war? NPP claims it could provide:
* 725,689 People with Health Care for One Year OR
* 3,533,713 Homes with Renewable Electricity for One Year OR
* 29,863 Affordable Housing Units OR
* 460,546 Head Start Places for Children for One Year OR
* 46,575 Elementary School Teachers for One Year OR
The list goes on and on. The fact is not nearly enough members of Congress are seriously considering the cost and impact of more troops, both in the U.S. and Afghanistan. According to NPP Executive Director Jo Comerford, “The purpose of this resource is to help people across the United States reflect on the current Afghanistan war and its proposed expansion.”
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