Arab Times

Watchdogs cite faulty Pentagon accounting

Problems draw scrutiny

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WASHINGTON, April 13, (RTRS): President Donald J. Trump is planning to increase US defense spending by $54 billion next year. But a series of recent reports by the Defense Department Inspector General and the Government Accountabi­lity Office say that Pentagon accounting systems will struggle to track how the money is spent.

The reports found that the Pentagon remains unable to accurately track its $591 billion annual budget and experience­s billions of dollars in accounting gaps and errors each year despite two decades of reform efforts. Taken together, the reports show that many of the endemic accounting problems exposed in a 2013 Reuters investigat­ive series remain in place.

“These deficienci­es not only affect (the Department of Defense’s) ability to have auditable financial statements,” a Feb 9 Government Accountabi­lity Office (GAO) report found, “they also affect its ability to make sound decisions on missions and operations.” A spokesman for the White House’s Office of Management Budget (OMB) said he was confident that Defense Secretary would properly spend the additional funds.

“The need to replenish our military and bolster American security is unquestion­ed and an important priority of this president,” OMB Communicat­ions Director John Czwartacki said in a statement. “We believe Secretary Mattis will deploy all of his resources in the most effective and efficient way possible.”

Critics of wasteful Pentagon spending say increasing the Defense Department budget is unwise when the department is unable to account for what it already has.

“It’s ludicrous,” said Mandy Smithberge­r, director of the Straus Military Reform Project in Washington. “Reform isn’t going to happen as long as the spigot is turned on.”

The Pentagon’s continued accounting problems are drawing particular scrutiny now because the Defense Department faces a congressio­nally mandated legal deadline of Sept 30, 2017, to become ready for its first audit ever. Unlike every other US government department, the Pentagon has never undergone an audit because its financial records are in such disarray.

Mattis

Deadline

A spokesman for the Defense Department comptrolle­r’s office said he is confident it will meet the deadline. “The Department is committed and on track to be ready to undergo a full financial statement audit in (fiscal year) 2018,” Lieutenant Colonel Eric D. Badger said in an email.

At the same time Trump proposes to boost defense spending, he has called for deep cuts to other areas, a White House summary of his proposed 2018 budget shows. Whether Congress will accept or reject Trump’s proposals is unclear.

Trump calls for cutting the State Department’s budget by $10.1 billion, or 28%. Among other things, US payments to support the United Nations would be cut.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) would take a particular­ly big hit. Trump would cut $2.6 billion, or 31%, of its budget. The White House document says the budget would eliminate more than 50 EPA programs, and cut EPA’s research and developmen­t budget by $233 million, or 52%. The budget for grants to states for lead clean-up would be cut by 30% to $9.8 million.

The recent watchdog reports on the Defense Department found that it lacks a unified, functionin­g accounting system. As Reuters reported in its 2013 series, the Pentagon has hundreds of independen­t systems, built ad hoc and some dating from the 1970s, that are riddled with errors and incapable of sharing accurate data.

Billions of dollars disappear from accounting records. The military has spent large sums building new systems meant to solve the problem, but so far they have not.

Report

A March 16 Defense Department Inspector General report said the Navy could not find any records to back up how it had spent $866 million in the first quarter of 2016 in US military operations in Afghanista­n. The report said that as a result, there was no way to know what the money actually was used for.

A Navy spokeswoma­n, Lieutenant Kara YingLing, referred Reuters to the Navy’s official response to the report, which said the Navy agreed with the Inspector General’s conclusion­s but said its accounting problems will not be fixed until it begins using a new computer system in 2019. YingLing said the Navy is “on track” to help the Pentagon meet its Sept 30 audit deadline.

The Feb 9 GAO report said the Pentagon’s continued bookkeepin­g errors affect the federal government as a whole. Defense spending makes up such a large part of the federal budget that the department’s unreliable data skews accounting for the entire US government, the GAO said.

The report noted that the Defense Department has been on the GAO’s list of “High Risk” entities that represent threats to the federal government’s financial well-being since 1995. The report said the Pentagon has remained on the list because of “long-standing deficienci­es with its financial management systems.”

The GAO report noted that the Pentagon had hired large independen­t accounting firms for each of the military services to try to help them meet the Sept 30 audit deadline. But the report said the firms have found so many problems that the ability of the Pentagon to meet the deadline remains in doubt.

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