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Posted On: 08/17/2022 11:02:16 AM
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More than $7B in US military equipment seized by Taliban: Pentagon watchdog
August 16, 2022
The bulk of the outlay, the watchdog said, was for tactical ground vehicles like Humvees and mine-resistant MRAPs — about $4.12 billion of which was in the Afghan military’s inventory when the Taliban swept into Kabul on Aug. 15, 2021.
The report also noted that the lost materiel included $923.3 million worth of military aircraft, “some of which were demilitarized and rendered inoperable during the evacuation,” and $294.6 million in aircraft munitions.
The Taliban were left with $7 billion in US military equipment after the withdrawal last year, according to a report from the Defense Department’s inspector general.
The IG’s office added that the Pentagon’s Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, which provided the figures, had claimed that “the Afghan forces were heavily reliant on U.S. contractor support to maintain both their aircraft and ground vehicle fleets, and without this continued support, the long-term operability of these assets would be limited.”
The report also said that 316,260 small arms — including rifles, sniper rifles, pistols, machine guns, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and howitzers — worth $511.8 million were under the care of the Afghan military at the time of its collapse, but the condition of those weapons was unknown.
Communications, explosive detection, night-vision and other surveillance equipment was also in the Kabul government’s inventory when the Taliban took over.
A group of Taliban members posing with US weapons and equipment after the takeover.
The Afghan military had 316,260 small arms worth $511.8 million at the time of the takeover that are unaccounted for.
The report also stated that the US military had “removed nearly all major equipment” during the pullout, except for some tactical vehicles that transferred to the Afghan ministry of defense at the beginning of last year, as well as other obsolete vehicles that were destroyed.
Between 2005 and 2021, the Defense Department spent around $84 billion in security assistance to Afghan forces, with $18.6 billion going to buying weapons for the Afghan National Army, Afghan Air Force, Afghan National Police, and Afghan Special Security Forces.
Over those 16 years, the watchdog found, the US spent $612 million on 427,300 weapons “including 258,300 rifles, 6,300 sniper rifles, 64,300 pistols, 56,155 machine guns, 31,000 rocket propelled grenade launchers, and 224 howitzers.”
The inspector general’s report comes amid Republican criticism of President Biden’s handling of the military pullout on its anniversary.
GOP lawmakers have accused the administration of “misleading” the American people and have vowed to get answers from the White House if they regain control of Congress in November’s midterm elections.
The Republicans are also preparing their own report on the chaotic withdrawal this week that faults the administration for “catastrophic flaws” in devising the pullout plan that allowed the Taliban to return to power and give al Qaeda another foothold in the war-torn country.
https://nypost.com/2022/08/16/more-than-7b-in...-watchdog/
August 16, 2022
The bulk of the outlay, the watchdog said, was for tactical ground vehicles like Humvees and mine-resistant MRAPs — about $4.12 billion of which was in the Afghan military’s inventory when the Taliban swept into Kabul on Aug. 15, 2021.
The report also noted that the lost materiel included $923.3 million worth of military aircraft, “some of which were demilitarized and rendered inoperable during the evacuation,” and $294.6 million in aircraft munitions.
The Taliban were left with $7 billion in US military equipment after the withdrawal last year, according to a report from the Defense Department’s inspector general.
The IG’s office added that the Pentagon’s Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, which provided the figures, had claimed that “the Afghan forces were heavily reliant on U.S. contractor support to maintain both their aircraft and ground vehicle fleets, and without this continued support, the long-term operability of these assets would be limited.”
The report also said that 316,260 small arms — including rifles, sniper rifles, pistols, machine guns, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and howitzers — worth $511.8 million were under the care of the Afghan military at the time of its collapse, but the condition of those weapons was unknown.
Communications, explosive detection, night-vision and other surveillance equipment was also in the Kabul government’s inventory when the Taliban took over.
A group of Taliban members posing with US weapons and equipment after the takeover.
The Afghan military had 316,260 small arms worth $511.8 million at the time of the takeover that are unaccounted for.
The report also stated that the US military had “removed nearly all major equipment” during the pullout, except for some tactical vehicles that transferred to the Afghan ministry of defense at the beginning of last year, as well as other obsolete vehicles that were destroyed.
Between 2005 and 2021, the Defense Department spent around $84 billion in security assistance to Afghan forces, with $18.6 billion going to buying weapons for the Afghan National Army, Afghan Air Force, Afghan National Police, and Afghan Special Security Forces.
Over those 16 years, the watchdog found, the US spent $612 million on 427,300 weapons “including 258,300 rifles, 6,300 sniper rifles, 64,300 pistols, 56,155 machine guns, 31,000 rocket propelled grenade launchers, and 224 howitzers.”
The inspector general’s report comes amid Republican criticism of President Biden’s handling of the military pullout on its anniversary.
GOP lawmakers have accused the administration of “misleading” the American people and have vowed to get answers from the White House if they regain control of Congress in November’s midterm elections.
The Republicans are also preparing their own report on the chaotic withdrawal this week that faults the administration for “catastrophic flaws” in devising the pullout plan that allowed the Taliban to return to power and give al Qaeda another foothold in the war-torn country.
https://nypost.com/2022/08/16/more-than-7b-in...-watchdog/
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