An Iraqi lawmaker close to Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki defended the government’s record on spending for reconstruction, saying yesterday that US critics were overlooking Baghdad’s progress over the past three years.
A report on Tuesday by the US General Accounting Office (GAO) said Iraq could finish the year with as much as a US$79 billion cumulative budget surplus due to the influx of oil revenues.
That raised a firestorm in the US from critics who said American taxpayers were shouldering an unfair share of the reconstruction load at a time when Americans are suffering from high gasoline prices and Iraq is getting rich from oil.
Hassan al-Sineid, a Shiite lawmaker from al-Maliki’s Dawa party, said the GAO report was “unrealistic” because it was based on incomplete information.
“In 2004, there was no investment budget. In 2005, the investment budget was US$3 billion. In 2006 it was US$11 billion and in last year was US$12 billion,” he said. “In the years before 2008, less than half the investment budget was spent because of the security issue.”
He said parliamentary committees were now reviewing government spending programs to make sure that funds were used properly.
His comments echoed some US officials in Baghdad, who acknowledged that the Iraqis had not spent funds fast enough in the past, but that the situation was improving. They cited problems of inexperienced bureaucrats, shortage of Iraqi contractors and a cumbersome approval progress — aimed at curbing corruption — for the delays.
The Iraqi government is drafting plans for Iraqi-funded projects to include 1,000 new primary health care centers over the next 10 years, new airports and a major renovation project for downtown Baghdad, the US officials said.
Nonetheless, public pressure is strong from the Iraqi people, who want to see progress in boosting the nation’s economy after five years of war.
Many Iraqis — who lack adequate electricity, clean water and jobs — find it unfathomable their country is awash in oil dollars. Last year, the government spent less than a third of the US$12 billion budgeted for major projects such as electricity, housing and water.
The report also angered many in Congress. Senators renewed calls for Baghdad to pay more for its own reconstruction, which has been heavily supported by hard-pressed US taxpayers.
“I think it’s absurd that we’re paying for the reconstruction in a country when right at the beginning of the war the Bush administration assured the American people that Iraq’s reconstruction would be paid for by Iraq and through its oil revenues,” Democratic Senator Carl Levin said on Wednesday on MSNBC.
Levin, who requested the GAO report along with Republican Senator John Warner, said in a statement on Tuesday that it was “inexcusable for US taxpayers to continue to foot the bill for projects the Iraqis are fully capable of funding themselves.”
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