From Military.com:
“Cost for Afghan Refugees at
Bases Reaches $688 Million, Pentagon Says”
(Afghan evacuees embrace before
they board a bus and depart for the airport, January 10, 2022. The evacuees are
leaving Fort Pickett on their way to resettle in various cities across the
United States.)
The military's total cost for
housing tens of thousands of Afghan refugees at U.S. bases has already topped
$688 million, according to the Defense Department. The most recent figure
accounts for refugee villages set up at eight bases from August through mid-December,
the department told Military.com on Wednesday. The cost is certain to rise as
about 19,500 Afghans remain on installations awaiting permanent resettlement. More
than 76,000 refugees arrived in the U.S. as part of Operation Allies Welcome
when Kabul fell to the Taliban and the military ended its 20-year campaign in
war-torn Afghanistan. Many of the refugees worked with U.S. forces, and the
U.S. military undertook one of the largest airlifts in history to bring them to
safety. The cost is a drop in the bucket compared to this year's $741 billion
budget for defense. Congress has already passed $13.3 billion in funding for
the resettlement effort, which supports the Pentagon as well as the Department
of Homeland Security, State Department, and Department of Health and Human
Services. But the military services are also dealing with an oncoming budget
crisis. Congress has yet to agree on spending legislation for the current
fiscal year, which began in September, and may punt on funding the entire rest
of the year after a series of stopgap measures divided Democrats and
Republicans. The budget stalemate must be worked out by next month, when the
current short-term funding expires. The cost has also riled some Republicans in
Congress. Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., opposed the approved funding, saying it
was more than the entire budget of his home state, which has over 4 million
residents.
Afghans remain at five U.S.
bases. The number reported by DHS at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst, New
Jersey, is 9,700; Fort McCoy, Wisconsin, 4,400; Fort Pickett, Virginia, 2,700;
Camp Atterbury, Indiana, 1,100; and Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico, 1,600.
Meanwhile, three bases have wrapped up missions housing the Afghan men, women
and children. Marine Corps Base Quantico in Virginia housed and helped resettle
3,755 Afghans. The Marine base created housing at an old officer candidate
school and built tent facilities, provided three daily meals, internet services
and educational classes. The effort was managed by 924 DoD personnel, according
to an inspector general report. The total cost for Quantico was $188 million,
the IG found. The DoD watchdog is conducting a series of audits on the
resettlement program.
^ Most media no longer report
about Afghans inside Afghanistan or Afghans in the US and on American Bases
around the world. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.