In Iraq, No Room at The Inn for Auditors

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How strained are resources in Iraq? So strained that the State Department can’t afford for three auditors to make a three month visit.

The State Department recently turned down a request for three congressional auditors to make a three-month stay in Baghdad, saying that having them around for that long would be “a serious challenge to mission resources.”

In response, 22 Senate Democrats, led by Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA), have called on Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice to make room. “American taxpayers are currently being asked to spend approximately $3,420 every second and $280 million per day in Iraq,” reads a letter to Rice sent today. “It is imperative that GAO be given the access it needs to serve as the eyes and ears of the United States Congress….”

But the burden of having those three auditors around would seem almost insurmountable… or at least that’s the impression a State Department official gave in a letter to Harkin last week:

“each of [the auditors] would require lodging, extensive support services, security, computers, and other administrative support, as well as the attention of our staff in Baghdad in responding to their requests and inquiries.”

You can read the entire letter here. The State Department turned down the GAO’s request for a three-month stay, agreeing only to a two-week visit — although the official pointed out that even that “will place considerable burden on Embassy staff and resources.”

In the letter sent to Sec. Rice today, the Democrats didn’t buy that argument, asking instead that the State Department make room for a six-month stay for the auditors.

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