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By Al PessinA report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office says tens of thousands of rifles, pistols and other items sent to Iraq are unaccounted for. As VOA's Al Pessin reports from the Pentagon, officials are promising1 to keep closer track of weapons sent to Iraq.
Defense2 shows US soldiers lining3 up mortar4 shells, anti-tank, anti-personnel, and anti-aircraft rounds found in a weapons cache in western Iraq (File Photo - 27 Feb 2006)" hspace="2" src="http://www.tingroom.com/upimg/allimg/070811/0905360.jpg" width="210" vspace="2" border="0" /> |
A picture released by Department of Defense shows US soldiers lining up mortar shells, anti-tank, anti-personnel, and anti-aircraft rounds found in a weapons cache in western Iraq (File Photo - 27 Feb 2006) |
Pentagon Spokesman Bryan Whitman spoke7 about the report on Monday.
"One should not assume that just because you cannot provide a strict audit8 paper trail that those weapons are necessarily not being used for their intended purposes which is for the Iraqi security forces," he said.
Whitman says he is not aware of any of the U.S. weapons or other equipment being found in the possession of insurgents or in any of the thousands of insurgent5 weapons caches coalition9 and Iraqi forces have found around the country. But Whitman acknowledges, as the department does in a letter at the end of the GAO report, that it needs to improve its inventory10 system in Iraq.
"We acknowledge the fact that the systems that we have ought to be continuously improved upon and refined so that we can ensure that the Iraqi security forces have accountability systems that are effective and that provide for safeguarding equipment that is provided to their military and police forces," added Whitman.
The congressional investigators11' report indicates that the U.S. military command's records do not account for 110,000 AK-47 rifles, 80,000 pistols, 135,000 pieces of body armor and 115,000 helmets. In all, it says that is about 30 percent of such equipment provided to Iraq.
Gen. David Petraeus (file photo) |
The report says has it not been clear what inventory system commanders in the field should use, and they have not had enough staff to monitor the large amount of equipment flowing in from the United States and out to Iraqi forces.
The Pentagon says it will take steps to address both problems.
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