Published on Portside (https://portside.org/)
The
Pentagon’s Bottomless Money Pit
Matt Taibbi, March 17, 2019, Rolling Stone
A
retired Air Force auditor — we’ll call him Andy — tells a story about a thing
that happened at Ogden Air Force Base, Utah. Sometime in early 2001, something
went wrong with a base inventory order. Andy thinks it was a simple data-entry
error. “Someone ordered five of something,” he says, “and it came out as an
order for 999,000.” He laughs. “It was probably just something the machine
defaulted to. Type in an order for a part the wrong way, and it comes out all
frickin’ nines in every field.” Nobody actually delivered a monster load of
parts. But the faulty transaction — the paper trail for a phantom inventory
adjustment never made — started moving through the Air Force’s maze of internal
accounting systems anyway. A junior-level logistics officer caught it before it
went out of house. Andy remembers the incident because, as a souvenir, he kept
the June 28th, 2001, email that circulated about it in the Air Force accounting
world, in which the dollar value of the error was discussed.
Wanted
to keep you all informed of the massive inventory adjustment processed at
[Ogden] on Wednesday of this week. It isn’t as bad as we first thought ($8.5
trillion). The hit . . . $3.9 trillion instead of the $8.5 trillion as we first
thought.
The
Air Force, which had an $85 billion budget that year, nearly created in one
stroke an accounting error more than a third the size of the U.S. GDP, which
was just over $10 trillion in 2001. Nobody lost money. It was just a paper
error, one that was caught.
“Even
the Air Force notices a trillion-dollar error,” Andy says with a laugh. “Now,
if it had been a billion, it might have gone through.”
Years
later, Andy watched as another massive accounting issue made its way into the
military bureaucracy. The Air Force changed one of its financial reporting systems,
and after the change, the service showed a negative number for inventory —
everything from engine cores to landing gear — in transit.
This
suspicious number is still there. You can see a sudden spike in the Air Force’s
working-capital fund’s stagnant spare-parts numbers. It was $23.2 billion in
2015, $23.3 billion in 2016, $24.4 billion in 2017, and then suddenly $28.8
billion in September 2018.
That
doesn’t mean money was lost, or stolen. It does, however, mean the Air Force
probably has less inventory on hand than it thinks it does.
Now
retired, Andy sometimes visits his neighborhood library, which uses RFID smart
labels, or radio frequency identification, allowing it to know where all its
books are at all times.
Meanwhile,
the Air Force, which has a $156 billion annual budget, still doesn’t always use
serial numbers. It has no idea how much of almost anything it has at any given
time. Nuclear weapons are the exception, and it started electronically tagging
those only after two extraordinary mistakes, in 2006 and 2007. In the first,
the Air Force accidentally loaded six nuclear weapons in a B-52 and flew them
across the country, unbeknownst to the crew. In the other, the services sent
nuclear nose cones by mistake to Taiwan, which had asked for helicopter
batteries.
“What
kind of an organization,” Andy asks, “doesn’t keep track of $20 billion in
inventory?”
Despite
being the taxpayers’ greatest investment — more than $700 billion a year — the
Department of Defense has remained an organizational black box throughout its
history. It’s repelled generations of official inquiries, the latest being an
audit three decades in the making, mainly by scrambling its accounting into
such a mess that it may never be untangled.
Ahead
of misappropriation, fraud, theft, overruns, contracting corruption and other
abuses that are almost certainly still going on, the Pentagon’s first problem
is its books. It’s the world’s largest producer of wrong numbers, an ingenious
bureaucratic defense system that hides all the other rats’ nests underneath.
Meet the Gordian knot of legend, brought to life in modern America.
AT
THE TAIL end of last year, the Department of Defense finally completed an
audit. At a cost of $400 million, some 1,200 auditors charged into the jungle
of military finance, but returned in defeat. They were unable to pass the
Pentagon or flunk it. They could only offer no opinion, explaining the
military’s empire of hundreds of acronymic accounting silos was too illogical
to penetrate.
The
audit is the last piece in one of the great ass-covering projects ever
undertaken, also known as the effort to give the United States government a
clean bill of financial health. Twenty-nine years ago, in 1990, Congress
ordered all government agencies to begin producing audited financial
statements. Others complied. Defense refused from the jump.
It
took a Herculean legislative effort lasting 20 years to move the Pentagon off
its intransigent starting position. In 2011, it finally agreed to be ready by
2017, which turned into 2018, when the Department of Defense finally complied
with part of the law ordering “timely performance reports.”
Last
November 15th, when the whiffed audit was announced, Deputy Secretary of
Defense Patrick Shanahan said it was nothing to worry about, because “we never
expected to pass it.” Asked by a reporter why taxpayers should keep giving the
Pentagon roughly $700 billion a year if it can’t even “get their house in order
and count ships right or buildings right,” Shanahan quipped, “We count ships
right.”
This
was an inside joke. The joke was, the Pentagon isn’t so hot at counting
buildings. Just a few years ago, in fact, it admitted to losing track of “478
structures,” in addition to 39 Black Hawk helicopters (whose fully loaded
versions list for about $21 million a pop).
That
didn’t mean 478 buildings disappeared. But they did vanish from the
government’s ledgers at some point. The Pentagon bureaucracy is designed to
spend money quickly and deploy troops and material to the field quickly, but it
has no reliable method of recording transactions. It designs stealth drones and
silent-running submarines, but still hasn’t progressed to bar codes when it
comes to tracking inventory. Some of its accounting programs are using the
ancient computing language COBOL, which was cutting-edge in 1959.
“These
systems,” as one Senate staffer puts it, “were not designed to be audited.”
If
and when the defense review is ever completed, we’re likely to find a pile of
Enrons, with the military’s losses and liabilities hidden in Enron-like
special-purpose vehicles, assets systematically overvalued, monies Congress
approved for X feloniously diverted to Program Y, contractors paid twice, parts
bought twice, repairs done unnecessarily and at great expense, and so on.
Enron
at its core was an accounting maze that systematically hid losses and
overstated gains in order to keep investor money flowing in. The Pentagon is an
exponentially larger financial bureaucracy whose mark is the taxpayer. Of
course, less overtly a criminal scheme, the military still churns out
Enron-size losses regularly, and this is only possible because its accounting
is a long-tolerated fraud.
We’ve
seen glimpses already. The infamous F-35 Joint Strike fighter program is now
projected to cost the taxpayers $1.5 trillion, roughly what we spent on the
entire Iraq War. Overruns and fraud from that program alone are currently
expected to cost taxpayers about 100 times what was spent on Obama’s
much-ballyhooed Solyndra solar-energy deal.
Meanwhile,
the Defense Department a few years ago found about $125 billion in
administrative waste, a wart that by itself was just under twice the size of
that $74 billion Enron bankruptcy. Inspectors found “at least” $6 billion to $8
billion in waste in the Iraq campaign, and said $15 billion of waste found in
the Afghan theater was probably “only a portion” of the total lost.
Even
the military’s top-line budget number is an Enron-esque accounting trick.
Congress in 2011 passed the Budget Control Act, which caps the defense budget
at roughly 54 percent of discretionary spending. Almost immediately, it began
using so-called Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO), a giant second checking
account that can be raised without limit.
Therefore,
for this year, the Pentagon has secured $617 billion in “base” budget money,
which puts it in technical compliance with the Budget Control law. But it also
receives $69 billion in OCO money, sometimes described as “war funding,” a
euphemistic term for an open slush fund. (Non-defense spending also exceeds
caps, but typically for real emergencies like hurricane relief.) Add in the VA
($83 billion), Homeland Security ($46 billion), the National Nuclear Security
Administration ($21.9 billion) and roughly $19 billion more in OCO funds for
anti-ISIS operations that go to State and DHS, and the actual defense outlay is
north of $855 billion, and that’s just what we know about (other programs, like
the CIA’s drones, are part of the secret “black budget”).
In
a supreme irony, the auditors’ search for boondoggles has itself become a
boondoggle. In the early Nineties and 2000s, the Defense Department spent
billions hiring private firms in preparation for last year. In many cases,
those new outside accountants simply repeated recommendations that had already
been raised and ignored by past government auditors like the Defense inspector
general.
After
last year’s debacle, the services are now spending even more on outside advice
to prepare for the next expected flop. The Air Force alone just awarded
Deloitte up to $800 million to help the service with future “audit
preparation.” The Navy countered with a $980 million audit-readiness contract
spread across four companies (Deloitte, Booz Allen Hamilton, Accenture and
KPMG).
Taxpayers,
in other words, are paying gargantuan sums to private accounting firms to write
reports about how previous recommendations were ignored.
It’s
all a Catch-22 story about a country trapped in an endless cycle of avoidable
financial disaster. Each time we try to fix leaks, we end up back where we
started, staring at even bigger numerical representations of failure.
For
instance, part of what inspired original investigations into defense finances
were infamous stories in the 1980s and early Nineties about the military
charging $640 for toilet seats, $436 for hammers, etc. A chief crusader was a
young Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, who was so determined to hear such tales from
famed military whistle-blower Franklin C. “Chuck” Spinney — one of the first
military analysts to go public with accusations of waste and procurement fraud
— that early in 1983 Grassley drove to the Pentagon in an orange Chevette to
see him.
The
DoD refused to let Grassley see Spinney. Grassley got him to testify on the
Hill six weeks later.
“The
following Monday, his photo was on the cover of Time magazine,” Grassley
recalls. The March 1983 cover asked, are billions being wasted?
With
the deadline looming to pass a spending bill to fund the government by week's
end, Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, and other
senators gather for weekly strategy meetings on Capitol Hill in
WashingtonCongress Budget Battle, Washington, USA - 05 Dec 2017
“A long time after I leave the Senate, [Pentagon spending] will be the same problem,” says Senator Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa. Photo credit: J Scott Applewhite/AP/REX/Shutterstock
“A long time after I leave the Senate, [Pentagon spending] will be the same problem,” says Senator Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa. Photo credit: J Scott Applewhite/AP/REX/Shutterstock
It
seemed like a breakthrough. Spinney’s tales of waste became symbols that
aroused the imagination of both the left and the right, who each saw in them
their own vision of government run amok.
But
35 years later, Chuck Grassley, now 85, is still sending letters to the
Pentagon about overpriced parts, only this time with more zeros added. The
Iowan last year asked why we were spending more than $10,000 apiece for 3D
printed airborne toilet-seat covers, or $56,000 on 25 reheatable drinking cups
at a brisk $1,280 each (apparently an upgrade to earlier iterations of $693
coffee cups, whose handles broke too easily). The DoD has since claimed to have
fixed these problems.
Asked
if he was frustrated that it’s the same stories decades later, Grassley says, “Absolutely.”
He pauses. “And a long time after I leave the Senate, it’ll likely still be the
same problem.”
Three
decades into the effort to pry open the Pentagon’s books, it’s not clear if
we’ve been going somewhere, or we’ve just been spending billions to get
nowhere, in one of the most expensive jokes any nation has played on itself.
“When everything’s always a mystery,” says Grassley, “nothing ever has to be
solved.”
THIS
STARTED with an accident.
“The
only reason the audit is happening,” says Sheila Weinberg, CEO of the watchdog
group Truth in Accounting, “is because an accountant got sent to Congress.”
In
1985, a brusque Italian-Albanian named Joe DioGuardi ran as a Republican for a
House seat in New York’s 20th District.
DioGuardi
was the son of an immigrant grocer. Before he went on to a Jesuit education at
Fordham, his schooling came in the aisles of his father’s store. “I was trained
in stock,” DioGuardi says today. “You learn value if you end up chasing someone
down the streets of the Bronx if they steal a box.”
In
his teen years he went on to be a waiter at Westchester country clubs. He’d
watch chefs steal steaks out of the kitchen at the end of every year, knowing
that “these rich people . . . if there was a deficit, they would just kick it
in at the end of the year.”
From
waiting tables he went on to spend 22 years as an accountant at Arthur
Andersen, among other things diving into New York City’s financial collapse in
the Seventies. He recalls the city still listed buildings that had burned down
as current assets. “I learned a lot about the difference between public and
private accounting,” he remembers.
In
the mid-Eighties, he ran as a Republican for Congress in a Westchester
district. It was considered a safe blue seat, with Democrats outnumbering
Republicans. He calls himself “the accidental congressman,” because “if my
party knew I would win, they wouldn’t have put me up. I was a sacrificial
lamb.”
But
in a preview of cross-party populist currents, he did win, in part by
highlighting his working-class ethnic background, trumpeting his accounting
credentials, and sounding bipartisan themes about cleaning up corruption. He
promised to “illuminate the dark fiscal corners” of the federal bureaucracy.
In
Washington, DioGuardi was horrified by the federal government’s “smoke and
mirrors” budgeting. He told fellow Republicans the techniques Congress used
would get private-sector officers “sent to jail.”
“Joey
the Waiter,” who is 78 today, still has the same tough-talking New York
personality he had as a candidate. It’s easy to laugh imagining how his
insistent Bronx demeanor was received by some of his more upper-crust and
genteel colleagues back then. It would explain why he was first ignored when he
began writing legislation to force the government to undergo the kind of
auditing that’s mandatory in the private sector.
But
when the savings-and-loan crisis plunged America into a financial scare in the
late Eighties, “fiscal responsibility” became a political catchword. Instantly,
“Joey the Waiter” was in demand. “Suddenly, everyone was like, ‘Where’s that
bill DioGuardi wrote?’ ” he recalls.
He
found diverse allies in a pair of Democrats, Sen. John Glenn and Rep. John
Conyers. Together they authored what would ultimately be called the “Chief
Financial Officers Act of 1990.”
The
legislation forced government agencies to name a CFO, conduct audits and create
“modern federal financial management structure.” Twenty-three agencies, from
Defense to Labor to State, were ordered to begin submitting “department-wide
annual audited financial statements” by 1994.
Although
there were regulations over the years requiring various forms of financial
reporting, nothing like a full-scale federal audit had ever been attempted.
Incredibly, from an accounting perspective, the U.S. government had remained
essentially virgin territory for centuries.
As
far back as 1787, the Constitution mandated “a regular Statement and Account of
the Receipts and Expenditures of all public Money shall be published from time
to time.” But no independent examiner had ever fully checked the government’s
books. By the late Eighties and early Nineties, hundreds of billions of tax
dollars were being spent annually, and no one really knew where. To DioGuardi,
the situation was outrageous.
“It’s
a constant principle in history, from the Medicis to today,” says DioGuardi.
“If no one’s watching the money, there will be bankruptcies.”
THE
CFO Act at least introduced the idea that someone was supposed to be watching.
By 1997, Cabinet-level departments like Labor, Agriculture and Commerce were
submitting financial reports. In the first year, only six were able to pass.
Within a few years, however, most were in compliance. By 2013, Defense was the
only federal agency that had not submitted a financial statement.
One
of the main reasons the military wasn’t submitting numbers was it didn’t have
them. The Pentagon every year employs an accounting shortcut that should make
more sense to civilians at this time of year, because it’s similar to what the
roughly six percent of Americans who cheat on taxes do annually.
Taxpayers
who think they’re owed deductions, but don’t have the receipts to back up their
expenses, will sometimes take a rough guess, maybe based on what their
prior-year deductions were. Then they file returns infected with guesses,
“plugged” in to look like deductions counted up honestly.
The
Pentagon does basically the same thing, only on a galactic scale. At the end of
every year, it submits a “Budget execution request” that includes complete
month-by-month statements of that year’s spending.
The
White House will then take these numbers and use them to project a defense
budget for the following year. The president submits that budget to Congress,
which in turn will actually appropriate the money. Almost without exception,
the Pentagon ends up getting a raise. For 2019, Donald Trump submitted a budget
that asked for $716 billion, or $82 billion more than the Department of Defense
received the previous fiscal year.
The
system makes sense, except for one problem: The financial reports the Pentagon
submits are faked.
The
Defense Department, for the most part, does not know how much it spends. It has
a handle on some things, like military pay, but in other places it’s clueless.
None of its services — Navy, Air Force, Army, Marine Corps — use the same
system to record transactions or monitor inventory. Each service has its own
operations and management budget, its own payroll system, its own R&D
budget and so on. It’s an empire of disconnected budgets, or “fiefdoms,” as one
Senate staffer calls them.
Instead
of using a single integrated financial accounting system that would maintain a
global picture of its finances at all times, the Pentagon built another
bureaucracy to pile atop the others, called the Defense Finance and Accounting
Service, or DFAS. Created by then-Defense Secretary Dick Cheney in 1991, DFAS
is in charge of collecting financial reports from all the different fiefdoms at
the end of each month. DFAS is like a tribune traveling on horseback at month’s
end, collecting a pile of scrolls from each castle.
In
2013, Reuters published a brutal exposé showing how DFAS accountants conducted
a mad scramble at the end of each month to try to piece together records of
transactions to justify spending. But in thousands of cases a month, no records
existed. “We didn’t have the detail,” one accountant explained.
Complicating
matters is the fact that money is allocated to the military on different
schedules. If Congress gives the Navy $53 billion for operations and maintenance,
as it did this year, the service is expected to spend all that money that year.
Such expenses — payroll is another — are called “one-year money.” Meanwhile,
research and development might be “two-year money,” and contracting might be
“five-year money.”
Aerial
View of the Pentagon from a commercial airliner taking-off from Reagan National
Airport outside Washington, DC. Aerial Views of the Pentagon, Washington DC,
USA - 17 Feb 2017
There have been multiple cases involving officials taking advantage of flaws in the Pentagon’s system over the years. A civilian secretary bilked the Air Force out of $1.4 million for more than a decade before anyone noticed. Photo credit: REX/Shutterstock
There have been multiple cases involving officials taking advantage of flaws in the Pentagon’s system over the years. A civilian secretary bilked the Air Force out of $1.4 million for more than a decade before anyone noticed. Photo credit: REX/Shutterstock
If
the Pentagon doesn’t spend all the money in exactly the amounts Congress says
it can spend, in the time ordained by Congress — if it doesn’t spend all its
one-year money in one year, all its five-year money in five years and so on —
the military is supposed to give its unspent money back to Congress.
But
the military is never really on time, and constantly commingles its various
pots of money. Grassley in the late Nineties found out the military was using a
computer program called MOCAS, or Mechanization of Contract Administration
Services, to help speed this commingling. Whenever the Pentagon had bills to
pay, instead of just drawing the money from the right account, MOCAS would
sometimes try to spend “old money” first, i.e., from whatever funds were about
to expire.
It’s
illegal for any government agency to spend money appropriated for one purpose
on a different program. But the military — either hilariously or horribly,
depending on your perspective — created a program that algorithmically produced
such violations
of the law. They weren’t minor violations: Grassley has fought for years against such automatic payments, saying bureaucrats use them to “avoid violations of the Antideficiency Act — a felony.” Last year’s audit found the Antideficiency Act was one of five laws the agency violated.
of the law. They weren’t minor violations: Grassley has fought for years against such automatic payments, saying bureaucrats use them to “avoid violations of the Antideficiency Act — a felony.” Last year’s audit found the Antideficiency Act was one of five laws the agency violated.
MOCAS
still exists, but it’s unclear how or if it’s been updated. In any case,
Defense still lacks records showing that it’s paying for the right programs
from the right accounts. Out of terror that it might have to return money as a
result, the DoD orders its accountants to make numbers fit.
Those
DFAS accountants in the Reuters exposé were told by superiors that if they
couldn’t find invoices or contracts to prove the various services spent their
one-year money and two-year money and five-year money on time, they should
execute “unsubstantiated change actions,” i.e., lie.
The
accountants systematically “plugged” in fake numbers to match the payment
schedules handed down by the Treasury. These fixes are called “journal voucher
adjustments” or “plugs.”
As
a result, those year-end financial statements will look like they match
congressional intentions. In truth, the statements packed with thousands of
plugs are fictions, a form of systematic accounting fraud Congress has quietly
tolerated for decades.
The
fake-number system is such long-accepted practice that it’s acquired numerous
dull-sounding names. You’ll see the invented numbers called “forced-balance
entries” by the General Accounting Office (which is run by Congress),
“adjustments not adequately supported” by the Defense inspector general, and
“journal vouchers” or “JVs” or “workarounds” by the Pentagon’s own comptroller
general. On the Hill, everyone refers to “plugs.”
There
are innocent explanations for plugs, although even the best excuse is still
incompetence. For example, if the Navy buys a helicopter from the Army (which
is the “item manager” in charge of monitoring all rotary-wing aircraft), it
will show up as an expense on the books of both services. Although the money
has been spent only once, both the Army and the Navy will report the expense.
Instead
of canceling out such intramural accounting discrepancies, which is what would
happen at any chain of doughnut shops, the Department of Defense never bothered
to fix its accounting rules. With hundreds of different acronymic systems, a
single error might generate bogus numbers exceeding the transactions’ original
value.
This
is a generous explanation for news of the sort released by the inspector
general in 2016 showing the Army — with an annual budget of $122 billion —
generated accounting plugs 54 times that amount, a full $6.5 trillion worth, in
2015 alone.
When
civilian analysts see these numbers, they always first assume they’re typos,
because no company could survive such gargantuan accounting snafus.
“When
I saw that 6.5 trillion number for the first time, I thought it had to be a
mistake,” says Michigan State University professor Mark Skidmore, who in 2017
led a study that discovered $21 trillion in plugs over a 17-year period. “I
thought it was maybe 6 billion. But it’s really 6 trillion.”
As
these stories leaked out to the public, the huge numbers became (mostly
misunderstood) talking points on social media. New Rep. Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez, for instance, cited Skidmore’s study and tweeted that two-thirds
of a $32 trillion proposed price tag for Medicare for All “could have been
funded already” by the Pentagon.
Ocasio-Cortez
didn’t have it quite right. Skidmore’s $21 trillion figure doesn’t mean that
much money was wasted, or is sitting in a Swiss account somewhere. The Pentagon
didn’t even receive that much money during the time period in question.
Moreover,
some of the plugs are adjustments upward and some downward. If they were ever
netted out — no one has ever tried — the size of the accounting hole might be
smaller.
However,
according to Andy and others, the $21 trillion figure may undercount the
accounting errors in the system, as some plugs are both automated and
unidentified. What’s clear is that the ubiquitous plugging and quantity of bad
numbers in the Pentagon’s books are so massive that it will take a labor of the
ages to untangle.
All
of this is difficult to follow, but the key is that when a suspicious number
pops up anywhere in the military’s multiple accounting silos, it typically
isn’t investigated, but simply fixed on paper and sent on its way. In a private
company, if inventory numbers suddenly jumped by a few billion dollars in one
month, auditors would swarm warehouses in search of the problem.
The
military can’t say the same. This was one of the things auditors found last
year, that the Pentagon lacked “policies and procedures to confirm the
existence of government property in possession of contractors.” This is a fancy
way of saying the Pentagon doesn’t send inspectors to make sure Lockheed-Martin
or Boeing or whoever still have parts they say they’re repairing or
maintaining.
This,
ultimately, is the conclusion of the audit. We don’t have anything like a full
picture of what waste and abuse might be hidden under those plugs, though we
have an idea (see sidebar).
We
do, however, know the Pentagon’s books are so choked with bad data that
discovering abuses in real time is virtually impossible. Compound that with
decades of cuts to the Pentagon’s staff of criminal investigators and you have
an open invitation to crime. Invoices could be systematically inflated for
decades and no one would know. As Andy the Air Force accountant puts it, the
system is “desensitized to fraud.”
IF
YOU ASK congressional staffers why the plugging system is permitted, they just
shrug. Congress really has only two ways to respond when the DoD breaks the
law. Elected officials can shout and criticize the Pentagon, or withhold funds.
The former is not terribly effective, and the latter has so far proved
politically impossible.
“No
other federal agency could get away with this,” is how one Senate staffer puts
it.
The
military has been told repeatedly to stop plugging and develop more rational
accounting systems. In case after case, reforms compounded problems.
One
of the first fixes was aimed at the infamous toilet seats and hammers. The
General Accounting Office in 1992 issued a report blasting the military for
“poor cost estimating” and suggested changes. The result was the invention of a
creature called the “prime vendor,” basically a middleman with the power to set
prices and choose subcontractors.
This
system only inflated prices. By 2004, Defense was spending $7.4 billion
annually on prime-vendor purchases, after spending $2.3 billion in 2002.
Knight-Ridder
newspapers got wind of this and in 2005 reported the military was now buying 85-cent
ice trays from prime vendors for $20 apiece. Within a month, a refrigerator for
a C-5 airplane was being dragged on the floor of a House hearing and a Navy
admiral named Keith Lippert was being asked by California’s Duncan Hunter — not
exactly a pillar of rectitude himself — to explain why he’d bought nine fridges
from a prime vendor for $32,642.
Over
the years, this pattern repeated itself. An attempt to standardize the
military’s payroll and personnel records system, called DIMHRS, took 12 years and
cost more than $1 billion before being scrapped. In 2005, the Air Force set out
to buy a standardized computer system from Oracle called the Expeditionary
Combat Support System. It took seven years and more than $1 billion for that
plan to be scrapped. John McCain joked about ECSS, “At least they got the
toilet seat. Out of this, they got nothing.”
This
same motif held with regard to the military’s promises about “audit readiness.”
The Pentagon initially said it would be ready to be audited by 1997. After that
date passed with a yawn, Pentagon officials made a series of bold promises.
In
2003, Defense comptroller Dov Zakheim told the House Budget Committee, “We
anticipate having a clean audit by 2007.” Soon after disavowing that promise,
he said, “The further we dug . . . the more difficulties turned up.”
In
2005, the Pentagon began supplementing its verbal promises with reports called
the Financial Improvement and Audit Readiness (FIAR) plan. This report
basically told you every year that we were getting closer to sorting all this
stuff out. Some excerpts:
December
2005: “Progress has been achieved.” September 2006: “Progress has been made.”
September 2007: “Progress has been made in several areas.” March 2008:
“Substantial progress has been made.” March 2009: “Significant progress has
been made, but much needs to be done.”
President
Donald Trump speaks at a hanger rally at Al Asad Air Base, Iraq, . President
Donald Trump, who is visiting Iraq, says he has 'no plans at all' to remove US
troops from the country. Iraq - 26 Dec 2018
Photo credit: Andrew Harnik/AP/REX/Shutterstock
Photo credit: Andrew Harnik/AP/REX/Shutterstock
The
Pentagon had been attempting to conduct department-wide audits dating back to
1996. By the mid-2000s, perhaps 100 auditors from the DoD inspector general,
plus a hundred or more from the various services, were annually trying to
create a single financial statement, despite an almost complete lack of
audit-trail information. They made some helpful recommendations, but would
never get very far before concluding an audit was not possible.
“We
were trying to make chicken soup out of chicken ****,” says an auditor, with a
sad laugh.
After
nearly 15 years of such exercises, Grassley grew so furious that he introduced
an amendment ordering the Pentagon to stop trying to audit itself until it was
capable of doing something useful. The amendment passed and lived on as Section
1003 of the 2010 National Defense Authorization Act.
The
2010 NDAA amendment also ordered the Pentagon to actually be ready by 2017. “It
was, ‘Start over and get it done,’ ” says Grassley now.
The
Grassley amendment stopped the annual mobilization of hundreds of auditors, but
didn’t stop the audits completely. The two competing laws — the CFO Act and the
2010 NDAA — created a literal Catch-22, with the services both ordered and not
ordered by law to complete audits of themselves.
The
services tried to spend their way out of the problem. Incredibly, they began
competing to see how much they could blow on audit-readiness programs. In 1997,
the Army splurged at least $4 billion on the Global Combat Support System,
which the Center for Public Integrity said was designed to centralize a dozen
different outmoded accounting systems. The smaller Marine Corps developed its
own system with the same name, and dropped $1 billion.
The
GAO in 2009 then issued a report complaining $6 billion had already been spent
in audit preparation. According to the GAO, it took that much money to get the
Pentagon to a place where it could accurately track incoming appropriations.
In
2011, then-Defense comptroller Robert Hale confessed to Congress, “We don’t
really fully understand in the Department of Defense what you have to do to
pass an audit for military service, because we have never done it.”
Translation:
Despite having 60,000 financial-management employees who’d had 21 years to wrap
their heads around the task of producing financial statements, Hale admitted
none had taken the plunge: “You can’t learn to swim on the beach.”
Speaking
of beaches, Hale said he hoped to use the Marine Corps as an accounting
“beachhead,” because it was ahead of the other services in terms of
auditability. But a 2011 “trial audit” of the Marines ended in catastrophe. The
inspector general found it couldn’t account for $2 billion in expenditures. It
sounds worse when you consider they were only auditing a $4 billion portion of
the Marines’ budget.
The
Marines doubled down. In 2014, the Pentagon announced the Corps passed an audit
for 2012. The event was so momentous, they marked the occasion in the
Pentagon’s Hall of Heroes. Then-Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel was presented
with a framed certification of the “clean” opinion. Hagel, a consistent ally of
defense, beamed as he said, “We don’t spend a lot of time using big megaphones
to tout our great accomplishments. . . . We get the job done.”
But
word began to spread that the Marine audit was again a con job. “It was an
intellectual exercise in cheating and deception,” says Grassley, whose office
was in the middle of the effort to get the inspector general’s office to
re-examine the results. Within a year, the inspector general withdrew its approval.
“Our opinion on the FY 2012 United States Marine Corps,” it said, “is not to be
relied upon.”
Even
worse, it then came out that the inspector general’s office was sending emails
down the chain, pressuring auditors to agree with an outside auditing firm,
which already had a record of flawed audits of the Marine Corps. This should
have been a red flag, according to retired military auditor Jack Armstrong.
“Why
wouldn’t you want to train a very close eye when you’ve already had suspicions
about the quality of their work?” says Armstrong.
Then-Defense
Department comptroller Mike McCord was philosophical about the Marine fiasco.
“It’s a learning experience,” he said.
AFTER
ALL OF these false starts, it soon became clear that the only way to get the
Pentagon to actually fix itself would be if Congress stopped sending money.
Starting in 2012, a succession of legislators in both the House and Senate,
including Tom Coburn, R-Okla.; Barbara Lee, D-Calif.; Ron Wyden, D-Wash.; Rand
Paul, R-Ky.; Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.; and John McCain, R-Ariz., tried to
introduce amendments yanking funding if the Pentagon didn’t correct itself.
“None
have made it into law,” says Mandy Smithberger of the Project on Government
Oversight.
A
major problem is campaign finance reform. Ask Hill staffers why it’s hard to
pass any bill that even contemplates withholding funding for the Pentagon, and
they say you’ll run smack into a bipartisan batch of refuseniks who’ve been
gorging on defense-sector campaign contributions, thanks to their status on
committees like Armed Services or Appropriations.
“You
can’t get the Pentagon to take an audit seriously unless you threaten to stop
funding, and you can’t stop funding without campaign finance reform,” says one
Hill staffer.
Unfortunately,
the annual audit has now created a secondary cash flow for the accounting
firms, which have formally entered the family of permanent high-end military
contractors like Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics, Boeing and Raytheon.
The
money now flows out in two directions. One estimate puts the annual cost for
accounting at about a billion: $400 million a year for the audits by firms like
Ernst & Young, and about $600 million for firms like Deloitte to fix
problems identified by said audits.
The
Pentagon can keep accountants busy forever simply doing the taxonomic job of
describing its inauditability. The Defense Department employs 3 million people,
has 280 ships, nearly 16,000 planes and 585,000 “facilities” in at least 80
countries. You’ve heard of “too big to fail” — the DoD’s universe is too big to
count. “Impossible. . . . We can’t do it. . . . It’s too big,” one exasperated
DoD official complained.
“They’re
telling us it’s going to get worse before it gets better,” is how one Hill
staffer puts it.
If
auditors ultimately make sense of all their work, it’s worth it. But they could
easily just keep inching toward compliance forever. “For a billion dollars a
year,” says Grassley, “you ought to see progress.”
In
April 2016, U.S. Comptroller General Gene Dodaro testified before the Senate
that the Pentagon had spent up to $10 billion to modernize its accounting
systems. Those attempts, he said, had “not yielded positive results.”
Two
years later, Sens. Grassley and Sanders, along with Wyden and others, were
asking Dodaro in a letter why no progress had been made toward getting those
systems in place. “Are you going to finish it in my lifetime?” a Hill staffer
is said to have demanded in a meeting with Dodaro. He got no answer.
Sanders
last year introduced an amendment to ding the Pentagon for 0.5 percent of its
funding until it passes (not takes, but passes) an audit. He failed, but is
going to keep trying. For his office, the Pentagon audit issue is as much about
misplaced social priorities as it is about waste and mismanagement.
“Over
and over again, we’ve been told we cannot afford to guarantee health care as a
right, make public colleges tuition-free, or seriously address any of the needs
of the working class,” Sanders says. “When it comes to the massive waste, fraud
and abuse at the Pentagon, there’s a deafening silence.”
Both
Sanders and Grassley have been tilting at the Pentagon windmill for decades
now, from opposite ends of the political spectrum. For Grassley, there is a
sense of exhaustion.
Asked
how much progress has been made toward creating a workable accounting system at
the Pentagon, he says, “At my level, I would have to say zero.” He pauses.
“Based on the track record, it seems like they don’t want to fix it.”
All
this history sums up the conundrum. A Republican waste-hawk like Grassley
laments the inability/unwillingness of the Pentagon to implement a modern,
corporate-style, unified accounting system, and is convinced there will never
be a clean audit until one is developed.
Meanwhile,
a progressive like Sanders, who is anxious to dial back Pentagon spending as
part of a general rethink of our national priorities, laments the
inability/unwillingness of Congress to take the real steps needed to enforce
compliance. The system of campaign contributions that keeps key committees
captive probably locks this problem in place, until there’s reform on that end.
Both
senators, unfortunately, have legitimate concerns. The twin obstacles to a true
audit — one logistical, one political — are reasons few on the Hill feel
confident a clean opinion is coming anytime soon. As one Hill staffer puts it,
“DoD loves to find inefficiencies. It just means more they can spend.” He adds,
“Every year, you know they’re going to get that $700 billion. That’s not going
to change.”
Until
someone passes a law with real teeth, that really threatens cuts of military
appropriations, the most likely eventuality is the Department of Defense
continuing to take and flunk audits at great expense in perpetuity. At best,
each year we may end up getting a conclusion like this one about the 2018
audit, from the Pentagon’s inspector general. “The most important
outcome . . . was not the overall opinion,” the IG wrote, “but that . . . the
DoD makes progress.”
It’s
impossible to overstate the enormity of the problem the DoD’s stalled audit
poses. The fact that it can’t pass audit means the entire government is in the
same boat. Until the Pentagon gets a passing grade, the whole United States
will annually receive what’s called a “disclaimer of opinion” on its finances,
which is accounting-ese for “Incomplete.”
DioGuardi,
who set all this in motion 30 years ago, says no publicly traded company could
issue a bond without passing an audit first. But the U.S. issues hundreds of
billions in bonds, despite the gaping hole in its books caused by the endless
unresolved problem at the Department of Defense. “From an accounting point of
view,” he says, “it’s a horror story.”
“Ernst
& Young will eat them alive,” says Andy. “It’s so much worse than people
think.”
Just
over 50 years ago, Dwight Eisenhower gave his famous farewell address warning
of the power of the “military-industrial complex.” The former war commander
bemoaned the creation of a “permanent armaments industry of vast proportions,”
and said the “potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and
will persist.”
Eisenhower’s
warning is celebrated by the left as a caution against the overweening
political power of warmakers, but as we’re now seeing, it was predictive also
as a fiscal conservative’s nightmare vision of the future. The military has
become an unstoppable mechanism for hoovering up taxpayer dollars and deploying
them in the most inefficient manner possible. Schools crumble, hospitals and
obstetric centers close all over the country, but the armed services are
filling warehouses for some programs with “1,000 years’ worth of inventory,” as
one Navy logistics officer recently put it.
It’s
the ultimate example of the immutability of the American political system. Even
when there’s broad bipartisan consensus, and laws passed, and both money
allocated for changes and agencies created to enact them — if the problem is
big enough, time bends toward corruption, and chaos always outlasts reform.
Eisenhower couldn’t have predicted how right he was.
Matt
Taibbi is a contributing editor for Rolling Stone and winner of the 2008
National Magazine Award for columns and commentary. His most recent book is ‘I
Can’t Breathe: A Killing on Bay Street,’ about the infamous killing of Eric
Garner by the New York City police. He’s also the author of the New York Times
bestsellers 'Insane Clown President,' 'The Divide,' 'Griftopia,' and 'The Great
Derangement.'
Donations
can be sent to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 325 E. 25th St., Baltimore, MD
21218. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski2001 [at] comcast.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The
master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought
the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while
the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially
their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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