04) AFGHAN WAR WILL COST
TAXPAYERS $22 BILLION
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PV Vancouver Bureau
The Afghan
war will ultimately end up costing
Canadian taxpayers over $22 billion, or about $700 per person. The
figures are contained in an upcoming study by David Perry, a former
deputy director of Dalhousie University's Centre for Foreign Policy
Studies. The study will appear in the International Journal, published
by the Canadian International Council.
Canwest News Service reports that some of
Perry's findings were discussed at a Sept. 16 conference attended by
military leaders and analysts from Canada, the U.S. and several
Asia-Pacific nations.
In an interview with Canwest, Perry said he
was not surprised at the numbers, since "We're fighting a war on the
other side of the world and that takes a lot of resources."
The breakdown includes:
* $7 billion for the incremental cost of the war from late 2001 to
2012, everything from ammunition and fuel to the salaries of reservists
and contractors.
* $11 billion for long-term health care of Afghan war veterans and
related benefits, as well as dealing with post-traumatic stress
disorder among troops.
* $2 billion to purchase mission-specific equipment, such as Leopard
tanks, howitzers, counter-mine vehicles to aerial drones and six
Chinook helicopters. Defence officials argue that such equipment will
be used on future missions beyond Afghanistan. The figure didn't
include the latest $95 million lease for additional aerial drones.
* $2 billion for the replacement of the military's LAV-3 fleet. "This
fleet is going to be worn out pretty soon from the wear and tear of
Afghanistan and will have to be replaced," said Perry.
* $405 million for repair and overhaul costs.
Perry's study finds that the Liberal
government had provided extra funding to the Defence Department to
cover 85 per cent of the Afghan war costs. The Conservatives, however,
are funding only 29 per cent of the cost to the Defence Department for
the war, with the remaining money coming out of DND's existing budget.
Last January, the head of the army, Lt.-Gen.
Andrew Leslie, warned that the service was stretched almost to the
breaking point and replacement stocks of equipment for Afghanistan have
long been used up, either destroyed by the enemy or in the process of
being repaired. Leslie warned that much of the service's combat vehicle
fleet is in need of repair, the result of operating in the harsh Afghan
terrain or from excessive use in training in Canada for the war.