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- <text id=90TT3426>
- <title>
- Dec. 24, 1990: Is Uncle Sam Being Suckered?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 24, 1990 What Is Kuwait?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 38
- Is Uncle Sam Being Suckered?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>With the costs of Desert Shield likely to double, Congress fumes
- at those allies who seem to be weaseling out of their pledges
- to help
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Dean Fischer/Riyadh and Bruce
- van Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> On any listing of subjects likely to arouse passion,
- accounting ordinarily might come in dead last. But nothing
- about the Persian Gulf crisis is ordinary, and some angry
- national and international arguments are breaking out about
- what, at least in part, are questions of accounting: How much
- more will the Pentagon really have to spend on Operation Desert
- Shield? Are certain allies, notably Saudi Arabia, getting rich
- from the crisis or actually losing money? Are others,
- pre-eminently Germany and Japan, falling behind even on their
- relatively piddling pledges?
- </p>
- <p> The Pentagon brought these questions to the fore last week
- by disclosing that it would shortly be asking Congress for a
- pile of new funds--perhaps $20 billion--to maintain the
- American forces confronting Iraq. Word promptly leaked that the
- total tab might be as high as $30 billion in fiscal 1991, which
- began on Oct. 1. That would be double the estimate of $15
- billion made only two months ago.
- </p>
- <p> The increased cost, of course, largely represents President
- Bush's decision to roughly double the size of the U.S. force
- in the gulf area. Nonetheless, the nonpartisan Congressional
- Budget Office has raised its estimate of the extra costs of
- Operation Desert Shield from an initial $7 billion to only $12
- billion. Some legislators suspect the Pentagon of playing a
- numbers game in arriving at its own, far higher figure. Because
- Congress decided to finance the gulf operation outside the
- regular budget, they believe, the Defense Department is
- exaggerating Desert Shield's price tag by including many
- extraneous costs.
- </p>
- <p> But suspicion of the Pentagon is minor compared with the
- growing anger at allies that are thought to be playing Uncle
- Sam for a sucker; many are far more dependent than the U.S. on
- oil from the gulf, yet they are contributing much less than
- they could to the anti-Iraqi cause. "My constituents are
- hopping mad," reports Illinois Democratic Senator Paul Simon.
- At town meetings back home, he says, "the most often asked
- question was why we are doing this alone." House Armed Services
- Committee chairman Les Aspin warns that "if President Bush were
- to ask for a declaration of war, it might be rejected on that
- basis alone."
- </p>
- <p> Is this resentment justified? As always when accounting is
- involved, the answers can get murky. Senator Paul Sarbanes, a
- Maryland Democrat, angrily charges Saudi Arabia with "reaping
- a windfall gain of something on the order of $40 billion" from
- the crisis by stepping up oil production and selling crude at
- higher prices. Other estimates run up to $50 billion a year.
- Western diplomats in Riyadh assert, however, that such
- calculations assume a price of $30 per bbl. maintained for a
- full year and that current prices are well below that. They
- estimate the Saudi windfall at $8 billion to $10 billion during
- the first five months of the crisis, which would project to $19
- billion to $24 billion a year.
- </p>
- <p> Estimating how much of this windfall the Saudis have
- contributed to the anti-Saddam effort is tricky too. One
- problem, which also crops up with other allies, is how to
- figure contributions in kind. Riyadh has given the U.S. an
- open-ended commitment to supply all the fuel, water and
- electric needs of the U.S. forces operating there, but how
- should oil supplied to American troops be valued--at the
- price it might fetch if sold on the world market or at Saudi
- production costs, which may be as low as 50 cents per bbl. of
- crude? By some estimates, Saudi crisis-related expenses in the
- first five months have totaled $22 billion, far more than the
- oil windfall. But these calculations include such items as
- forgiveness of $4.5 billion in Saudi loans to Egypt, a highly
- indirect crisis cost.
- </p>
- <p> What is clear is that some of the most critical Americans
- seem satisfied with Saudi Arabia's contributions. Three other
- states have largely escaped criticism. Britain has committed
- 35,000 of its best troops, or about 11% of its total military
- personnel, to the multinational force facing Iraq. Turkey has
- risked Saddam Hussein's vengeance by turning over air bases to
- American planes that might bomb Iraq and by shutting off one
- of Iraq's most important oil pipelines, at great economic cost
- to itself. Egypt--which is sending two mechanized divisions
- totaling 30,000 personnel to Saudi Arabia and which, in facing
- up to Saddam, has absorbed economic losses that President Hosni
- Mubarak estimates at $9 billion--gets a grade of A+ from
- Congressman Aspin.
- </p>
- <p> Many others, however, deserve a D- or an F. The State
- Department lists 54 countries that have made some kind of
- military or monetary contribution to the anti-Iraq coalition.
- But many of the donations are minuscule. Examples: one ship
- from Portugal, 20 soldiers from Czechoslovakia, $66 million
- from Canada.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. has drummed up financial aid in two forms. One is
- assistance from economic powers to nations that have incurred
- heavy losses by joining the embargo against Iraq--primarily
- Egypt, Turkey and Jordan but also Syria, Morocco, Algeria and
- Poland. As of Nov. 30, according to Washington, allies had
- pledged $13.4 billion to this cause and so far actually paid
- $6 billion. America has also sought cash and in-kind
- contributions to defray U.S. military expenses by allied
- payments into a special Defense Cooperation account. In a manner
- befitting a computer age, no cash or even paper changes hands;
- countries merely make electronic transfers to that account of
- funds they hold in various U.S. banks. On Nov. 30, the account
- held $3.9 billion.
- </p>
- <p> Pentagon spokesman Pete Williams stirred yet another
- accounting storm last week by declaring that as of Nov. 29,
- five allies that had agreed to kick in $6.7 billion in cash and
- kind by Dec. 31 had so far ponied up only $3.6 billion.
- Two-thirds of that came from Kuwait, which had promised $2.5
- billion and paid exactly that much. (Critics nonetheless point
- out that the Kuwaiti financial empire is worth an estimated
- $100 billion.) By Williams' figures, Japan had pledged $2
- billion but had paid only $476 million; Germany had paid a mere
- $337 million of a promised $1.07 billion. Germany protested
- that it had forked over at least $660 million, and Japan put
- its payments at $940 million. Williams later said he might have
- understated their contributions, partly by not counting
- material aid that was on the way but had not yet been received.
- </p>
- <p> This controversy, however, masks a far more vital point.
- Even if the U.S. by New Year's Eve collects every last cent
- pledged by allies, that amount is grossly insufficient,
- particularly from two such economic powerhouses as Germany and
- Japan. Moreover, few allies have pledged any money beyond Jan.
- 1 (to be fair, most have not yet been asked). So U.S. officials
- will soon have to rerun the September begging trip that was
- dubbed Operation Tin Cup. But Bonn is complaining about the
- high costs of German unification, and the Japanese Finance
- Ministry is grumbling about the nation's heavy debt. The U.S.
- Administration has some fancy arm twisting to do--and if it
- fails, some even fancier explaining to Congress and the public
- as to why the U.S. should bear so disproportionate a share of
- the cost, in money and maybe in lives, of defeating Iraq's
- aggression.
- </p>
- <p>
- COSTLY OPERATION
- </p>
- <p>Projected costs for Desert Shield through the end of 1990
- <table>
- <row><cell type=a>Total<cell type=a>$8.2 billion
- <row><cell>Army<cell>$3.9 billion
- <row><cell>Navy<cell>$1.6 billion
- <row><cell>Air Force<cell>$1.9 billion
- <row><cell>Other<cell>$0.8 billion
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>Pentagon estimates Desert Shield will cost an additional $30
- billion in fiscal year 1991.
- </p>
- <p>[TIME estimates from Dept. of Defense data.]
- </p>
- <p>Defense cooperation account for U.S. Desert Shield (in
- millions of dollars)
- <table>
- <tblhdr><cell><cell>Pledged for 1990<cell>Cash received*<cell>Material assistance*
- <row><cell type=a>Saudi Arabia<cell type=a>Host nation support<cell type=i>$760<cell type=i>$227
- <row><cell>Kuwait<cell>$2,500<cell>$2,500<cell>$0
- <row><cell>Japan<cell>$2,000<cell>$426<cell>$50
- <row><cell>Germany<cell>$1,072<cell>$272<cell>$65
- <row><cell>U.A.E.<cell>$1,000<cell>$250<cell>$30
- <row><cell>Korea<cell>$95<cell>$0<cell>$4
- </table>
- </p>
- <p>* As of Nov. 29, 1990. Source:Dept. of Defense.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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