Pentagon Personnel Did Not Appropriately Track Weapons Transferred to Ukraine
by Kyle
Anzalone | Jun 13, 2023
A report from
the Department of Defense Inspector General found Pentagon employees in Poland
failed to follow procedures to account for military equipment being transferred
to Ukraine. In the
shipments of weapons monitored by the office, Pentagon employees failed to
properly track the weapons in three of five shipments.
“DoD
personnel did not have the required accountability of the thousands of defense
items that they received and transferred at Jasionka, [Poland],” it stated. “We
observed that DoD personnel did not fully implement their standard operating
procedures to account for defense items and could not confirm the quantities of
defense items received against the quantity of items shipped for three of five
shipments we observed.”
The Pentagon does not “have reasonable assurance that
their database of all defense items transferred to the [Ukraine] via air
transport in Jasionka was accurate or complete.” The report added, “14 The DoD may risk providing more
or less equipment than authorized by [President Joe Biden], and may not be able
to verify the quantity of all defense items before they are transferred to
[Ukraine].”
One example
in the inspector general report explains how weapons are shipped without a
manifest. “One shipment containing thousands of small arms, night vision optics
devices, and various types of cold weather gear did not include an air
manifest.” The report continues, “DoD personnel opened crates to identify the
types of defense items contained within the crates, but even then the personnel
could not verify whether the number of items they identified represented the
true number shipped.”
Since Russia
invaded Ukraine last year, Washington has shipped tens of billions in weapons
to Ukraine, including advanced platforms. The Pentagon inspector general report
examined arms shipped to Ukraine directly from American stockpiles.
Further
problems included Pentagon employees in Poland being unable to identify
unlabeled weapons being shipped to Ukraine and incomplete training. “DoD
personnel in Jasionka further stated that they developed their own [procedures]
based on the procedures followed by the unit performing the mission before
them,” the inspector general explained. The Pentagon employees “added
additional accountability measures based on their own judgment.”
The failure
to inappropriately monitor the shipments has created discrepancies. The
inspector general found a “discrepancy between the number of night vision
optics devices reported on paper documents and the number reported via electronic
means.”
The Biden
administration and leaders in Congress have insisted that establishing an
office to track the billions in weapons being sent to Ukraine is unnecessary.
However, the Special Inspector General for Afghan Reconstruction, John
Sopko, said without
more oversight, weapons will end up on the black market.
Without
sufficient oversight, aid “gets stolen or diverted to local oligarchs or local
politicians, or just the average Ukrainian will see the waste,” Sopko
explained. The result would mean the loss of “support of the Ukrainian
government by the average Ukrainian who’s fighting, dying and bleeding at the
front. And that’s what we saw in Afghanistan… And we, the donors, the US, were
identified as supporting the corrupt oligarchs.”
Finnish authorities
and leaders in Africa have complained that weapons intended for Kiev have been
used by criminals and insurgents. President Muhammadu Buhari said in
December that arms “being used for the war in Ukraine and Russia are equally
beginning to filter to the region.”
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario