bloomberg: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-05-12/bin-laden-s-death-won-t-end-toll-on-taxpayers.html
"Even in Death, Bin Laden Exacts Multitrillion-Dollar Toll on U.S. Taxpayer
By David J. Lynch - May 11, 2011 9:01 PM PT
inShare7
More
Print
Email
Osama Bin Laden, al-Qaeda Terrorist Who Oversaw 9/11 Attac
An undated photograph of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, in Afghanistan. Source: AP
Chart: Security Costs Tied to Bin Laden
Even in death, Osama bin Laden will be taking revenge on American taxpayers for years to come.
The U.S. government spent $2 trillion combating bin Laden over the past decade, more than 20 percent of the nationâs $9.68 trillion public debt. That money paid for wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as additional military, intelligence and homeland security spending above pre-Sept. 11 trends, according to a Bloomberg analysis.
This year alone, taxpayers are spending more than $45 billion in interest on the money borrowed to battle al-Qaeda, the analysis shows.
The financial bleeding wonât stop with bin Ladenâs demise. One of every four dollars in red ink the U.S. expects to incur in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 will result from $285 billion in annual spending triggered by the terrorist scion of a wealthy Saudi family.
Without bin Laden, âwe would have accumulated less debt, be spending less on interest and we would be on a lower spending path going forward,â said Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a research organization in Washington.
Along with the dollars-and-cents toll, bin Laden has left behind a less quantifiable imprint on American life. Thousands of families have suffered grievous loss from the Sept. 11 attacks and the two wars. U.S. government buildings in Washington and around the world have grown to resemble fortified bunkers. And the line between government power and individual liberty was redrawn as agencies gained new powers to combat a novel threat.
Costs âAd Infinitumâ
The complete figure may be higher than the Bloomberg analysis. Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moodyâs Analytics Inc., said bin Laden cost the U.S. government and businesses $2.5 trillion, or $250 billion each year. âI think a prudent planner would anticipate these costs continuing ad infinitum into the future,â he said in an e-mail.
Indeed, the meter didnât stop running May 2 when bin Ladenâs corpse slipped into the Arabian Sea. Next year alone, the U.S. plans to spend an additional $118 billion on military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. Additional fiscal 2012 spending that can be attributed to bin Laden includes an extra $14 billion for homeland security, about $125 billion for the Pentagon excluding the two wars, expanded intelligence spending and increased aid to Pakistan, according to the Bloomberg analysis.
âThere are a lot of legacy costs,â said Jon Meacham, editor of âBeyond Bin Laden,â an instant book from Random House.
Pentagon Budget
As the U.S. celebrates the demise of the number-one figure on the FBIâs âMost Wanted Terroristsâ list, the future spending that can be attributed to bin Laden far exceeds direct war costs. Gordon Adams, who oversaw national security budgeting at the Office of Management and Budget during the Clinton administration, said roughly $125 billion of the Pentagonâs $553 billion fiscal 2012 budget request represents unnecessary spending justified by claims of war-time need.
âThatâs a tax which would not have happened without Osama bin Laden,â Adams, a professor at American Universityâs School of International Service, said in a telephone interview.
The bin Laden tax has been levied every year for the past decade. Pentagon spending -- excluding the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan -- between fiscal 2002 and today was $742 billion higher than the Congressional Budget Officeâs January 2001 baseline forecast.
Amid a wartime atmosphere, military spending requests faced less scrutiny both within the Pentagon and in Congress, Adams said. Programs launched with modest initial funding often live on, their costs ballooning with the years.
Nigeria Surveillance
A Pentagon counterterrorism training and equipment initiative known as the Section 1206 program, which has funneled aid to 53 countries, swelled from $100 million in fiscal 2006 to $500 million in the Obama administrationâs request for fiscal year 2012, which starts Oct. 1.
Under the program, Nigeria got maritime surveillance gear to monitor traffic in the Gulf of Guinea and Lebanon obtained parts for UH-1H helicopters, which it used to quash an uprising in the Nahr al-Barid refugee camp. âItâs used for every purpose you can imagine,â Adams said.
The U.S. added 92,000 soldiers to its ground forces in the decade following the Sept. 11 attacks. Each 10,000 people added to the militaryâs ranks means an extra $1 billion in annual spending, according to Adams. So the ground force expansion inspired by bin Laden will impose an additional $9 billion annually, he said.
Intelligence Tripled
The military wasnât alone in securing expanded financial resources because of bin Laden. The budget for U.S. intelligence agencies tripled over the past 12 years, representing an average annual increase of 9.6 percent.
While it is difficult to determine how much of the incremental increase in can be directly linked to bin Laden, the amount is undoubtedly sizable. In October 2010, the director of national intelligence, James Clapper, said the intelligence budget for fiscal 2009 was $80.1 billion, including $27 billion for military intelligence. Michael OâHanlon, a Brookings Institution defense expert, estimated that $25 billion to $30 billion of annual intelligence spending can be laid at bin Ladenâs feet.
âA large portion of that cost growth is from 9/11,â said OâHanlon, a former national security analyst with the Congressional Budget Office. " more...
"Even in Death, Bin Laden Exacts Multitrillion-Dollar Toll on U.S. Taxpayer
By David J. Lynch - May 11, 2011 9:01 PM PT
inShare7
More
Osama Bin Laden, al-Qaeda Terrorist Who Oversaw 9/11 Attac
An undated photograph of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden, in Afghanistan. Source: AP
Chart: Security Costs Tied to Bin Laden
Even in death, Osama bin Laden will be taking revenge on American taxpayers for years to come.
The U.S. government spent $2 trillion combating bin Laden over the past decade, more than 20 percent of the nationâs $9.68 trillion public debt. That money paid for wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as additional military, intelligence and homeland security spending above pre-Sept. 11 trends, according to a Bloomberg analysis.
This year alone, taxpayers are spending more than $45 billion in interest on the money borrowed to battle al-Qaeda, the analysis shows.
The financial bleeding wonât stop with bin Ladenâs demise. One of every four dollars in red ink the U.S. expects to incur in the fiscal year beginning Oct. 1 will result from $285 billion in annual spending triggered by the terrorist scion of a wealthy Saudi family.
Without bin Laden, âwe would have accumulated less debt, be spending less on interest and we would be on a lower spending path going forward,â said Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a research organization in Washington.
Along with the dollars-and-cents toll, bin Laden has left behind a less quantifiable imprint on American life. Thousands of families have suffered grievous loss from the Sept. 11 attacks and the two wars. U.S. government buildings in Washington and around the world have grown to resemble fortified bunkers. And the line between government power and individual liberty was redrawn as agencies gained new powers to combat a novel threat.
Costs âAd Infinitumâ
The complete figure may be higher than the Bloomberg analysis. Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moodyâs Analytics Inc., said bin Laden cost the U.S. government and businesses $2.5 trillion, or $250 billion each year. âI think a prudent planner would anticipate these costs continuing ad infinitum into the future,â he said in an e-mail.
Indeed, the meter didnât stop running May 2 when bin Ladenâs corpse slipped into the Arabian Sea. Next year alone, the U.S. plans to spend an additional $118 billion on military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. Additional fiscal 2012 spending that can be attributed to bin Laden includes an extra $14 billion for homeland security, about $125 billion for the Pentagon excluding the two wars, expanded intelligence spending and increased aid to Pakistan, according to the Bloomberg analysis.
âThere are a lot of legacy costs,â said Jon Meacham, editor of âBeyond Bin Laden,â an instant book from Random House.
Pentagon Budget
As the U.S. celebrates the demise of the number-one figure on the FBIâs âMost Wanted Terroristsâ list, the future spending that can be attributed to bin Laden far exceeds direct war costs. Gordon Adams, who oversaw national security budgeting at the Office of Management and Budget during the Clinton administration, said roughly $125 billion of the Pentagonâs $553 billion fiscal 2012 budget request represents unnecessary spending justified by claims of war-time need.
âThatâs a tax which would not have happened without Osama bin Laden,â Adams, a professor at American Universityâs School of International Service, said in a telephone interview.
The bin Laden tax has been levied every year for the past decade. Pentagon spending -- excluding the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan -- between fiscal 2002 and today was $742 billion higher than the Congressional Budget Officeâs January 2001 baseline forecast.
Amid a wartime atmosphere, military spending requests faced less scrutiny both within the Pentagon and in Congress, Adams said. Programs launched with modest initial funding often live on, their costs ballooning with the years.
Nigeria Surveillance
A Pentagon counterterrorism training and equipment initiative known as the Section 1206 program, which has funneled aid to 53 countries, swelled from $100 million in fiscal 2006 to $500 million in the Obama administrationâs request for fiscal year 2012, which starts Oct. 1.
Under the program, Nigeria got maritime surveillance gear to monitor traffic in the Gulf of Guinea and Lebanon obtained parts for UH-1H helicopters, which it used to quash an uprising in the Nahr al-Barid refugee camp. âItâs used for every purpose you can imagine,â Adams said.
The U.S. added 92,000 soldiers to its ground forces in the decade following the Sept. 11 attacks. Each 10,000 people added to the militaryâs ranks means an extra $1 billion in annual spending, according to Adams. So the ground force expansion inspired by bin Laden will impose an additional $9 billion annually, he said.
Intelligence Tripled
The military wasnât alone in securing expanded financial resources because of bin Laden. The budget for U.S. intelligence agencies tripled over the past 12 years, representing an average annual increase of 9.6 percent.
While it is difficult to determine how much of the incremental increase in can be directly linked to bin Laden, the amount is undoubtedly sizable. In October 2010, the director of national intelligence, James Clapper, said the intelligence budget for fiscal 2009 was $80.1 billion, including $27 billion for military intelligence. Michael OâHanlon, a Brookings Institution defense expert, estimated that $25 billion to $30 billion of annual intelligence spending can be laid at bin Ladenâs feet.
âA large portion of that cost growth is from 9/11,â said OâHanlon, a former national security analyst with the Congressional Budget Office. " more...
