George Bush sold the war as quick and cheap; it was long and costly. Even now, the US is paying billions to private contractors
When the US invaded Iraq in March 2003, the Bush administration estimated that it would cost $50-60bn
to overthrow Saddam Hussein and establish a functioning government.
This estimate was catastrophically wrong: the war in Iraq has cost $823.2bn between 2003 and 2011. Some estimates suggesting that it may eventually cost as much as $3.7tn when factoring in the long-term costs of caring for the wounded and the families of those killed.
The most striking fact about the cost of the war in Iraq has been the
extent to which it has been kept “off the books” of the government’s
ledgers and hidden from the American people. This was done by design. A
fundamental assumption of the Bush administration’s approach to the war
was that it was only politically sustainable if it was portrayed as
near-costless to the American public and to key constituencies in
Washington. The dirty little secret of the Iraq war – one that both Bush
and the war hawks in the Democratic party knew, but would never admit –
was that the American people would only support a war to get rid of
Saddam Hussein if they could be assured that they would pay almost
nothing for it.
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