Funds from a $4 billion program intended to improve relations between the two countries were siphoned off by the enemy, a new audit finds. Eli Lake reports on why CERP was still called a success.
During the war in Iraq, battalion commanders were allocated packets of $100 bills and authorized to use them for anything from repairing a schoolhouse to paying off ex-rebels and paying blood money to the families of innocents killed by U.S. forces. But a new audit finds that in some cases that cash made its way to the pockets of the very insurgents the United States was trying to fight.
The money was part of the Commander’s Emergency Response Program (CERP),
and from 2004 to 2011 the U.S. government poured $4 billion into it in
Iraq. And because the Pentagon gauged CERP a success, a similar
initiative is under way in Afghanistan. “We think CERP is an absolutely
critical and flexible counterinsurgency tool,” Michele Flournoy, who was
then undersecretary of defense for policy, told the Senate Armed
Services Committee in 2010.
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