June 22nd, 2010
09:37 AM ET

Security Brief: Afghan insurgents getting taxpayer money?

The U.S. military is investigating whether American taxpayer dollars from a more than two billion dollar contract are being used to pay off Afghan insurgents in return for not attacking contractors.

The issue at hand is whether contractors working for the U.S. government in Afghanistan are paying protection money to local security companies which in turn give the money to Afghan insurgents so they will not attack the contractors.

The money allegedly ending up in Taliban or warlord hands is from a number of Pentagon contracts, according to a U.S. military official not authorized to speak publically about the investigation.

In order for trucks to pass safely through certain areas in Afghanistan carrying everything from ammunition to food for the U.S. military,  the contracted trucking companies pay the local security companies responsible for their safe passage.  The security companies allegedly have ties to the Taliban or warlords who control the roads in a specific region of the country, according to the official.

The official said there is a tight lock on releasing details of the case because investigators are still following the actions of some of the security firms.

The official would not say how much money has been paid or what part of the country this is occurring.

The Army Criminal Investigation Division (CID) spokesman, Christopher Grey, said the CID does have an investigation on "host-nation trucking" underway but he would not discuss details.

The Afghan Host Nation Trucking contract is split among eight companies to provide ground transportation in Afghanistan for over 90% of Department of Defense (DoD) goods and material, including food, water, fuel, equipment, and ammunition, according to the subcommittee.

Since mid-2009, contractors have completed over 40,000 missions, subcommittee statistics show.

Most goods and material, including U.S. military vehicles are shipped through Pakistan to Bagram Airfield and then distributed to several hundred U.S. camps, airfields, forward operating bases, and firebases.

A separate Congressional investigation to be released Tuesday raises similar questions about a $2.16 billion trucking contract to provide transportation for a majority of U.S. goods and material in Afghanistan.

"It would mean that the United States is unintentionally engaged in a vast protection racket and, as such, may be indirectly funding the very insurgents we are trying to fight," said U.S. Rep. John F. Tierney (D-MA) of the Committee and Government Reform back in December when the committee announced the investigation.

Tierney who is the subcommittee chairman on National Security and Foreign Affairs lead the six-month congressional investigation into the allegations.  The subcommittee is holding a hearing on the issue on Tuesday in Washington.

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  1. Smith in Oregon

    It appears that American Taxpayers have been forced to pay for both the Taliban as well as the US Military troops in the Afghanistan War. The cost is enormus and it should have been apparent that Pakistan wasn't footing the entire bill for all of the weapons, explosives and training for the Taliban. Hamid Karzai's own brother stated Hamid Karzai in the 1980's was the Taliban's main banker. With Billions of untraceable dollars coming from the Karzai Clans Opium-Heroin fields and exports, that seems entirely likely, truthful and accurate THEN and NOW. The Taliban fighters are not lacking in weapons, explosives nor in cash to bribe officials, now American's are realizing that money is largely coming from the American taxpayers.

    Time to begin pulling US troops entirely out of Iraq now, and in July 2011 pull US troops entirely out of Afghanistan, mission accomplished for Bush jr., China got the huge Iraqi Oil contracts for mere pennys on the dollar.

    June 22, 2010 at 7:15 pm | Report abuse |