Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

The Pentagon just can’t seem to pass an audit

- By Lindsay Koshgarian Lindsay Koshgarian directs the National Priorities Project (NPP) at the Institute for Policy Studies. This op-ed was distribute­d by OtherWords.org.

The Pentagon just failed its audit — again. For the sixth time in a row, the agency that accounts for half the money Congress approves each year can’t figure out what it did with all that money.

For a brief recap, the Pentagon has never passed an audit. Until 2018, it had never even completed one.

Since then, the Pentagon has done an audit every year and given itself a participat­ion prize each time. Yet despite this year’s triumphant press release — titled “DOD Makes Incrementa­l Progress Towards Clean Audit” — it has failed every time.

In its most recent audit, the Pentagon was able to account for just half of its $3.8 trillion in assets (including equipment, facilities, etc). That means $1.9 trillion is unaccounte­d for — more than the entire budget Congress agreed to for the current fiscal year.

No other federal agency could get away with this. There would be congressio­nal hearings. There would be demands to remove agency leaders or to defund those agencies. Every other major federal agency has passed an audit, proving that it knows where taxpayer dollars it is entrusted with are going.

Yet Congress is poised to approve another $840 billion for the Pentagon despite its failures.

In fact, by my count, Congress has approved $3.9 trillion in Pentagon spending since the first failed audit in 2018. Tens of billions have gone through the Pentagon to fund wars in Afghanista­n, Ukraine, and now Israel. Accountabi­lity for those “assets” — including weapons and equipment — is also in question.

At this point, lawmakers surely know those funds may never be accounted for. And year after year, half of the Pentagon budget goes to corporate weapons contractor­s and other corporatio­ns who profiteer from this lack of accountabi­lity.

There is an entity whose job it is to prevent this sort of abuse: Congress. With each failure at the Pentagon, Congress is failing, too. Every year that members of Congress vote to boost Pentagon spending with no strings attached, they choose to spend untold billions on weapons and war with no accountabi­lity.

Meanwhile, all those other agencies that have passed their audits could put those funds to much better use serving the public. Too many Americans are struggling to afford necessitie­s like housing, heat, health care and child care, and meanwhile, our country is grappling with homelessne­ss, the opioid epidemic and increasing­ly common catastroph­ic weather events.

With another government shutdown debate looming in early 2024, you’ll hear lawmakers say we need to cut those already inadequate investment­s in working families. But if they’re worried about spending, they should start with the agency that has somehow lost track of nearly $2 trillion worth of publicly funded resources.

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