U.S.
Air Force probed for scrapping costly planes bought for Afghans
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[October 10, 2014]
By Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. government watchdog
agency is asking the Air Force to explain why it destroyed 16 aircraft
initially bought for the Afghan air force and turn them into $32,000 of
scrap metal instead of finding other ways to salvage nearly $500 million
in U.S. funds spent on the program.
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John Sopko, special inspector general for Afghanistan
reconstruction, asked Air Force Secretary Deborah James to document
all decisions made about the destruction of the 16 C-27J aircraft
that were stored at Kabul International Airport for years, and what
the service planned to do with four additional planes now in
Germany.
"I am concerned that the officials responsible for planning and
executing the scrapping of the planes may not have considered other
possible alternatives in order to salvage taxpayer dollars." Sopko
said in a letter to James that was dated Oct. 3 and released
Thursday by his office.
Sopko also asked if any other parts of the planes had been sold
before they were destroyed by the Defense Logistics Agency.
Sopko's office has been investigating the matter since December 2013
after numerous non-profit groups and military officials raised
questions about funds wasted on the planes.
The U.S. government spent $486 million to buy and refurbish 20 older
C-27A airplanes from Alenia, a unit of Italy's Finmeccanica SpA ,
but later canceled the program because a lack of spare parts was
severely limiting their availability for military use.
Instead, the Pentagon decided to buy four larger C-130 planes built
by Lockheed Martin Corp to do the work.
Pentagon spokesman Major Brad Avots said the U.S. military decided
to destroy the planes "to minimize impact on drawdown of U.S. forces
in Afghanistan," but would provide more information after a review.
Avots said the Pentagon and Air Force would consider various options
for the remaining four planes, including possible sale to other
parties.
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"Working in a wartime environment such as Afghanistan brings with it
many challenges, and we continually seek to improve our processes,"
he said.
He said the U.S. military was also working to help Afghanistan
"improve accountability and help instill sound financial management
practices in daily operations while reducing the risk of fraud,
waste and abuse."
In an interview last year with NBC News, Sopko said it was unclear
if the incident was criminal fraud or mismanagement, but the waste
was not an isolated incident in Afghanistan.
The Pentagon's inspector general has also investigated the issue,
which the non-profit Project on Government Oversight calls "a
shining example of the billions wasted in Afghanistan."
In January 2013, the Pentagon's inspector general office said the
aircraft flew only 234 of the 4,500 required hours from January
through September 2012. The office also said about $200 million were
needed to buy spare parts for the planes.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by David Gregorio & Kim
Coghill)
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