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Related: About this forumScrapping equipment ($7 billion worth) key to Afghan drawdown
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/scrapping-equipment-key-to-afghan-drawdown/2013/06/19/9d435258-d83f-11e2-b418-9dfa095e125d_story.htmlJune 17, Kandahar Airfield, Afghanistan -- U.S. military contract workers tear apart an armored vehicle that is among the hundreds of such personnel carriers the Pentagon no longer has use for.
Scrapping equipment key to Afghan drawdown
By Ernesto Londoño, Published: June 19
KANDAHAR AIRFIELD, Afghanistan Facing a tight withdrawal deadline and tough terrain, the U.S. military has destroyed more than 170 million pounds worth of vehicles and other military equipment as it rushes to wind down its role in the Afghanistan war by the end of 2014.
The massive disposal effort, which U.S. military officials call unprecedented, has unfolded largely out of sight amid an ongoing debate inside the Pentagon about what to do with the heaps of equipment that wont be returning home. Military planners have determined that they will not ship back more than $7 billion worth of equipment about 20 percent of what the U.S. military has in Afghanistan because it is no longer needed or would be too costly to ship back home.
That has left the Pentagon in a quandary about what to do with the items. Bequeathing a large share to the Afghan government would be challenging because of complicated rules governing equipment donations to other countries, and there is concern that Afghanistans fledgling forces would be unable to maintain it. Some gear may be sold or donated to allied nations, but few are likely to be able to retrieve it from the war zone.
Therefore, much of it will continue to be shredded, cut and crushed to be sold for pennies per pound on the Afghan scrap market a process that reflects a presumptive end to an era of protracted ground wars. The destruction of tons of equipment is all but certain to raise sharp questions in Afghanistan and the United States about whether the Pentagons approach is fiscally responsible and whether it should find ways to leave a greater share to the Afghans.
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Scrapping equipment ($7 billion worth) key to Afghan drawdown (Original Post)
unhappycamper
Jun 2013
OP
CincyDem
(6,921 posts)1. No different than Iraq exit
Friend of ours spent his reserve time managing part of the Iraq exit. He doesn't go into details other than to say "you can't comprehend the shit we busted up and buried in the sand".
What an amazing waste. Not that we don't ship it back to use again but that we ever shipped it over there to be used in the first place.
Vinnie From Indy
(10,820 posts)2. They will just buy a bunch of new stuff
Gotta feed the MIC!