First Full Accounting of US Counterterrorism Finds US has Spent $2.8 Trillion
First Full Accounting of US Counterterrorism Finds US has Spent $2.8 Trillion
For Immediate Release
May 16, 2018
Contact: Audel Shokohzadeh, ashoko@stimson.org, 202.478.3419
Washington, DC: From 2002 to 2017, the United States
spent $2.8 trillion on counterterrorism, including $175 billion in 2017
—an eleven-fold increase over 2001 levels- and a peak of $260 billion
in 2008, according to a groundbreaking new report from a study group
convened by the nonpartisan Stimson Center. In addition to being the
first accounting of cross-government spending on counterterrorism, the
report, Protecting America While Promoting Efficiencies and Accountability,
tracks funding changes across nearly two decades of shifting
counterterrorism strategies, identifies concerns about the lack of
transparent and accurate basis from which to assess US counterterrorism
policy, and makes recommendations for redress. This report, as well as a
fact-sheet
released by the Security Assistance Monitor on counterterrorism aid to
Africa and beyond, provide some of the first sets of data on
counterterrorism spending by the U.S. government.
"For over 17 years, policymakers and the public have been unable to
determine how much we spend on counterterrorism,” says Stimson Fellow
and study group director, Laicie Heeley. “Now for the first time, we can
point to a figure and say ‘we think we have spent this much on
counterterrorism since 9/11.’ With the important first steps taken by
this study group, and as the Pentagon shifts its strategic objectives,
we can begin to have an honest conversation about how to protect America
while upholding our values and being mindful of taxpayer dollars."
The six-member study group was directed by Laicie Heeley and includes
Amy Belasco, Mackenzie Eaglen, Luke Hartig, Tina Jonas, Mike McCord,
and John Mueller. This group of senior-level participants with
backgrounds in U.S. government, academia, and private industry, and that
cuts across party lines, also finds that there is no governmentwide
definition of counterterrorism spending. This lack of a consistent
definition limits the ability of policymakers and the public to gain
accurate spending data and make rational policy assessments.
"Without clear definitions or reporting standards for
counterterrorism spending, key agencies such as Homeland Security and
the State and Defense Departments are not on the same page when
accounting for their counterterrorism programs," says study group member
and former Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) Mike McCord. "This
can’t help in coordinating our programs across agencies. Neither our
leaders nor our citizens can properly assess the cost of our
counterterrorism efforts if we don’t measure and present those costs
clearly. Doing so is a necessary first step toward judging the
efficiency or effectiveness of these efforts."
The report identifies five ways that the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) and Congress can work to make counterterrorism spending
more transparent:
- Create a clear and transparent counterterrorism funding report;
- Adopt a detailed agency-wide definition for counterterrorism spending;
- Build on current accounting structures to anticipate future budget pressures;
- Tie the definition of war spending to specific activities;
- Require Congress to separately approve emergency or wartime spending.
“Accountability and transparency are critical elements of our democracy.
They are fundamental to maintaining trust between the government and
the public,” says Tina Jonas, a study group member and former Under
Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) under President George W. Bush. "OMB
and Congress can work together to create an accepted standard to collect
data on counterterrorism spending. With this standard we can increase
accountability, transparency, and demonstrate effective use of funds for
the common security of our nation."
The Stimson Center is a nonpartisan policy research center
working to solve the world’s greatest threats to security and
prosperity. |
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