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Originally published Saturday, October 25, 2008 at 12:00 AM

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Iraq can't spend it's oil riches fast enough

Iraq's government has an unusual money problem as much of the world grapples with a credit crunch — it can't spend its oil riches fast enough.

The Associated Press

Other developments

Contractor chastised: The Defense Contract Management Agency, the Pentagon agency in charge of supervising contractors in Iraq, has found that KBR, its largest contractor in Iraq, was guilty of "serious contractual noncompliance" in Iraq after a series of inspections uncovered shoddy electrical work and other problems on U.S. military bases there, according to several Defense Department officials.

Security accord: Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki won't sign the just-completed draft agreement on the status of U.S. troops in Iraq, said Sheik Jalal al-Din al-Sagheer, the deputy head of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq. Instead of submitting to the Bush administration's bid for a legal basis for the extended presence of the 151,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, Maliki now favors an extension of the United Nations mandate for the presence of U.S. troops that expires on Dec. 31.

Seattle Times news services

BAGHDAD — Iraq's government has an unusual money problem as much of the world grapples with a credit crunch — it can't spend its oil riches fast enough.

The U.S. is trying to change that by training Iraqi bureaucrats struggling to emerge from a centralized system in which nearly all decisions — from where to build a water-treatment plant to which workers would do the job — came from the top.

"Our efforts are devoted to helping the Iraqis spend their own money," said Marc Wall, the U.S. Embassy's coordinator for economic transition in Iraq. "We've zeroed in on it in the last year or two."

The issue came to the fore over the summer when the U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO) predicted Iraq could finish the year with as much as a $79 billion cumulative surplus because of oil revenues and unspent funds from previous budgets.

The August report drew outrage in Congress, where lawmakers asked why the Iraqis haven't spent more of their own money on reconstruction efforts while U.S. taxpayers shell out some $12 billion a month for Iraq — most for military operations.

U.S. and Iraqi officials dispute the GAO figures, arguing they are inflated and do not reflect Iraqi accounting procedures.

They also say Iraqi spending on reconstruction is expected to increase by 50 percent from 2007 to 2008.

But most agree that major obstacles still include inexperienced bureaucrats, too few Iraqi contractors and a cumbersome approval procedure aimed at curbing corruption.

The U.S. Agency for International Development's Tatweer project is designed to train Iraqi civil servants in basic decision-making skills to help them allocate funds and effectively deliver government services such as electricity, water and security.

The $339 million program — paid for by American taxpayers — began in July 2006 and is scheduled to finish in January 2011.

One recent class of bureaucrats from various Iraqi ministries — six men and six women sitting around an oval table — listened attentively as the instructor told them how to diagram a decision tree.

The analysis and problem-solving tool is aimed at determining possible sequences of events and their consequences to choose the best investment.

But one student raised her hand to ask how, exactly, that would work in Iraq.

"We have instability and insecurity. You have to consider the black market," said Shetha Nasser, a 46-year-old engineer at the Water Resources Ministry.

The Finance Ministry has been preparing to present a $79 billion budget for 2009, with $19.2 billion of that for reconstruction.

That would be a record sum after this year's $70 billion budget, including $10.1 billion for reconstruction.

Those figures could be whittled down because of falling oil prices, which have plunged from a summertime high of $150 a barrel to less than $70 this week.

Next year's spending plan was based on oil prices remaining above $80.

Critics say it's time for the U.S. to force the Iraqi government to step up its own spending.

"If you look at the capacity of the Iraqi government, I think basically it's really the question of will, not capacity," said Lawrence Korb, a military analyst at the liberal Center for American Progress. Korb said the government has ignored a pool of experienced bureaucrats because they had belonged to Saddam's ousted Baath Party.

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company

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