GAO: Unguarded munitions supplying insurgency
WASHINGTON – Explosives looted from Iraq munitions sites will likely continue to support terrorist attacks throughout the region, a congressional report said Thursday, finding that some sites were still not secured more than three and a half years after the war started.
Failure to guard the sites “has been costly,” the Government Accountability Office report said, noting looted munitions are being used to make roadside bombs, the No. 1 killer of U.S. soldiers in Iraq.
Quoting from previous Defense Department reports, the GAO study says widespread looting occurred after the fall of Baghdad in early 2003 because war planners didn't put enough troops into the country to secure weapons depots and because officials incorrectly assumed, among other things, that Iraqi soldiers would surrender and help with security.
Read the rest at the San Diego Tribune
Related Link:
Perspective: Saddam ammunition caches deadly source for insurgents
Related Link:
Perspective: Iran war weapons fuel Iraq insurgency
Failure to guard the sites “has been costly,” the Government Accountability Office report said, noting looted munitions are being used to make roadside bombs, the No. 1 killer of U.S. soldiers in Iraq.
Quoting from previous Defense Department reports, the GAO study says widespread looting occurred after the fall of Baghdad in early 2003 because war planners didn't put enough troops into the country to secure weapons depots and because officials incorrectly assumed, among other things, that Iraqi soldiers would surrender and help with security.
Read the rest at the San Diego Tribune
Related Link:
Perspective: Saddam ammunition caches deadly source for insurgents
Related Link:
Perspective: Iran war weapons fuel Iraq insurgency
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