Page added on November 2, 2015
John Sopko’s team of investigators has uncovered all kinds of wasteful spending in Afghanistan through its work as a U.S. government watchdog. Now the group has uncovered a $43 million gas station, which Sopko calls “gratuitous and extreme”—and possibly criminal.
In a scathing report, Sopko, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, wrote that a similar compressed natural gas station in Pakistan cost $500,000, or about $306,000 at current exchange rates, meaning the Afghanistan station cost 140 times as much.
He wrote that the Pentagon’s program had “several troubling aspects,” including $30 million in overhead costs, and the lack of a feasibility study before the project began.
Sopko said that that the Pentagon essentially shut down when pressed about the program, saying: “One of the most troubling aspects of this project is that the Department of Defense claims that it is unable to provide and explanation for the high cost of the project or to answer any other questions concerning its planning, implementation or outcome.”
The department that was in charge of it, the Task Force for Stability and Business Operations, has closed and so the Pentagon said it couldn’t comment on its activities, Sopko’s letter said.
He wrote that he found it “both shocking and incredible that DOD asserts that it no longer has any knowledge about TFBSO, an $800 million program that reported directly to the Office of the Secretary of Defense and only shut down a little over six months ago.”
A Pentagon spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Despite the lack of cooperation, Sopko said he intended to continue to investigate the program to see “whether any conduct by TFBSO staff or contractors was criminal in nature.”
The gas station was intended to help Afghanistan curb its dependence on foreign petroleum products and take advantage of domestic energy. But investigators found that Afghanistan does not have the natural gas transmission infrastructure to support a “viable market” for cars that used compressed natural gas.
And the cost of converting gasoline-powered cars to run on natural gas “may be prohibitive for the average Afghan.” The cost to do so is estimated at about $700 per car, while the average annual income in Afghanistan is $690.
“In sum, Sopko wrote, “it is not clear why [TFBSO] believed the CNG filling station should be undertaken.”
The project also angered Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.), a member of the Armed Services Committee, who wrote a letter to Defense Secretary Ashton Carter demanding answers about the station.
“There are few things in this job that literally make my jaw drop,” she said in a statement. “But of all the examples of wasteful projects in Iraq and Afghanistan that the Pentagon began prior to our wartime contracting reforms, this genuinely shocked me.”
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) took aim at the Pentagon saying, “The lack of accountability and transparency is disgraceful. The Defense Department needs to come clean, drop the obfuscation, and hold people responsible for a colossal waste of tax dollars.”
7 Comments on "How the Pentagon spent $43 million on a single gas station"
ghung on Mon, 2nd Nov 2015 2:42 pm
“…a colossal waste of tax dollars.”
$43 million is chump change relative to what has been pissed away in Afghanistan.
Plantagenet on Mon, 2nd Nov 2015 2:49 pm
The O administration wanted to convert Afghanistan to CNG to reduce the Taliban’s CO2 emissions.
keith on Mon, 2nd Nov 2015 3:22 pm
Hasn’t anyone got it yet. The cost of the gas station was 500,000 dollars, just like the one in Pakistan, the other 42.5 million went into black budgets. Black budgets are the reason why the Pentagon purchases 500 dollar hammers and 1000 dollar light bulbs.
HARM on Mon, 2nd Nov 2015 3:27 pm
$43 million unaccounted for? AMATUERS! The Obama grifters hold NOTHING on the Bush/Cheney grifters:
“Government auditors say some $61 billion was spent on reconstruction projects in Iraq from 2003 to 2012. At least 10 percent of the money cannot be accounted for. Some 15 percent of the money spent, or roughly $8 billion, was wasted.”
http://www.cnbc.com/2014/06/19/how-the-us-lost-billions-over-nine-years-in-iraq.html
bug on Mon, 2nd Nov 2015 3:36 pm
Wow, tell me something new. Ever read about all the “grifting” that went on during our civil war? How about the Hog Islander ships in WW1,or the billions lost in other wars that Senator Truman investigated?
During the australopithicus afaranis wars, grifting was most likely going on.
Grifting is what humans excel at. This administration and all the others before it. Robert Morris did it in our Revolutionary war, at least he went to jail.
GregT on Mon, 2nd Nov 2015 4:09 pm
I wonder what ever happened to the 2.3 trillion dollars that Rumsfeld announced were unaccounted for in the Pentagon the day before 9/11?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u_ZOGzs9xSs
makati1 on Mon, 2nd Nov 2015 6:52 pm
War is very profitable for a few. Especially if you can arm both sides and make a double profit like today in Syria/Iraq.