Audit Reveals the Pentagon Doesn’t
Know Where $6.5 Trillion Dollars Has Gone, 8/7/16
Washington, D.C. – A new Department
of Defense Inspector
General’s report, released last week, has left
Americans stunned at the jaw-dropping lack of accountability and oversight. The
glaring report revealed the Pentagon couldn’t account for $6.5 trillion
dollars-worth of Army general fund transactions and data, according to a report
by the Fiscal Times.
The Pentagon, which has been
notoriously lax in its accounting practices, has never completed an audit,
would reveal how the agency has specifically spent the trillions of dollars
allocated for wars, equipment, personnel, housing, healthcare and procurements
allotted to them by Congress.
Beginning in 1996 all federal
agencies were mandated by law to conduct regular financial audits. However, the
Pentagon has NEVER complied with that federal law. In 20 years, it has never
accounted for the trillions of dollars in taxpayer funds it has spent, in part
because “fudging” the numbers has become standard operating procedure at the
Department of Defense, as revealed in a 2013 Reuters investigation by Scot
Paltrow.
According to the report by the Fiscal
Times: “An increasingly impatient Congress has demanded that the Army achieve
“audit readiness” for the first time by Sept. 30, 2017, so that lawmakers can
get a better handle on military spending. But Pentagon watchdogs think that may
be mission impossible, and for good reason…
The Defense Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS),
the behemoth Indianapolis-based agency that provides finance and accounting
services for the Pentagon’s civilian and military members, could not provide
adequate documentation for $6.5 trillion worth of year-end adjustments to Army
general fund transactions and data.
The DFAS has the sole responsibility for paying all
DOD military and personnel, retirees and annuitants, along with Pentagon
contractors and vendors. The agency is also in charge of electronic government
initiatives, including within the Executive Office of the President, the
Department of Energy and the Departing of Veterans Affairs.”
While there is nothing in the IG’s
report specifying that the money has been stolen, the mere fact that the
Pentagon can’t account for how it spent the money reveals a potentially far
greater problem than simple theft alone.
For every transaction, a so-called
“journal voucher” that provides serial numbers, transaction dates and the
amount of the expenditure is supposed to be produced. The report specifies that
the agency has done such a poor job in providing documentation of their
transactions, that there is no way to actually know how $6.5 trillion dollars
has been spent. Essentially, the government has no way of knowing how the
Pentagon has spent the trillions of taxpayer dollars allocated by Congress for
national defense.
In turn, employees of the DFAS were
routinely told by superiors to take “unsubstantiated change actions” commonly
referred to as “plugging” the numbers. These “plugs” – which amounted to
falsifying financial records – were then used to create the appearance that the
military’s financial data matched that of the U.S. Treasury Department’s
numbers when discrepancies in the financial data couldn’t be accounted for,
according to the Reuters investigation.
According to that Reuters
investigation: “For two decades, the U.S.
military has been unable to submit to an audit, flouting federal law and
concealing waste and fraud totaling billions of dollars. Linda Woodford spent the last 15 years of
her career inserting phony numbers in the U.S. Department of Defense’s
accounts.
Every month until she retired in 2011, she says,
the day came when the Navy would start dumping numbers on the Cleveland, Ohio
DFAS…. Using the data they received, Woodford and her fellow accountants there
set about preparing monthly reports to square the Navy’s books with the U.S.
Treasury’s…. And every month, they encountered the same problem. Numbers were
missing. Numbers were clearly wrong. Numbers came with no explanation of how
the money had been spent or which congressional appropriation it came from.”
While many of the problems occurred
due to bookkeeping errors rather than actual financial losses, the DFAS has
failed to provide the necessary tracking information essential to performing an
accurate audit of Pentagon spending and obligations, according to the IG’s
report.
“Army and
Defense Finance and Accounting Service Indianapolis personnel did not
adequately support $2.8 trillion in third quarter adjustments and $6.5 trillion
in year-end adjustments made to Army General Fund data during FY 2015 financial
statement compilation,” wrote Lorin T. Venable, the
assistant inspector general for financial management and reporting. “We conducted this audit in accordance with
generally accepted government auditing standards.”
The Pentagon has a chronic failure
to keep track of its money – how much it has, how much it pays out and how much
is wasted or stolen. Adding to the appearance of impropriety is the fact that
thousands of documents that should be on file have been removed and disappeared
without any reasonable explanation.
DFAS “did not document or support why the Defense Departmental Reporting
System . . . removed at least 16,513 of 1.3 million records during Q3 FY 2015.
As a result, the data used to prepare the FY 2015 AGF third quarter and
year-end financial statements were unreliable and lacked an adequate audit
trail,” according to the IG’s report stated.
The accounting errors and manipulated
numbers, though obviously problems in their own right, highlight a far greater
problem for the Defense Department than only bad recording keeping and wasteful
spending habits. In reality, they are a representation of the poor
decision-making, and lack of oversight and accountability that plague our
nation’s government as a whole.
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/audit-reveals-pentagon-6-5-trillion/
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