Police  said gunmen in a speeding car attacked a traffic police checkpoint in  the center of the Iraqi capital early Monday, killing two policemen and  two civilians.
A half-hour later, a roadside bomb targeting a traffic police  patrol wounded three policemen and four passers-by in western Baghdad.  As people rushed to the scene to help, a suicide bomber detonated his  explosives belt, killing a civilian.
Two health officials in two hospitals confirmed the casualties.All officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release information.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
BAGHDAD  (AP) — A U.S. State Department program to train Iraqi police lacks  focus, could become a "bottomless pit" of American money and may not  even be wanted by the Iraqi department it's supposed to help, reports  released Monday by a U.S. government watchdog show.The findings by the U.S. Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction paint what is supposed to be the State Department's flagship program in Iraq in a harsh light.
The  report comes at a crucial time for the State Department as it assumes  sole responsibility for securing U.S.-Iraqi ties as American forces  leave by the end of this year.
On Oct. 1, the State Department took over the job of training Iraqi police from the Defense Department. According to the inspector general's report, the training program faces many problems.
Only  a small portion — about 12 percent — of the millions of dollars  budgeted will actually go to helping the Iraqi police, the report said.  The "vast preponderance of money" will pay for security and other items  like living quarters for the people doing the training, the review  found.
The audit also said  although the State Department has known since 2009 it would be taking  over the training program, it failed to develop a comprehensive and  detailed plan for the training.
"Without specific goals,  objectives and performance measures, the PDP (Police Development  Program) could become a 'bottomless pit' for U.S. dollars intended for  mentoring, advising and training the Iraqi police forces," the report  stated.The oversight agency also found that budget concerns led to the program being significantly downsized.
In  2009, the State Department agency in charge of the training, the Bureau  of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, estimated it  would cost about $721 million to pay for a program with 350 police  advisers. That averaged out to about $2.1 million per adviser, said SIGIR.
But  in December 2010, the program was downsized to 190 advisers while costs  had increased, the report stated. According to SIGIR calculations, the  average cost per adviser jumped to $6.2 million per year.By  July of this year, the number of advisers had dropped to 115 for what  the State Department described as Phase 1 of the program. If its budget  request is approved for fiscal year 2012, the program could be beefed up  again to 190 advisers, state department officials told the oversight  agency.
Despite the considerable outlay in U.S. taxpayer money,  the Iraqi government has yet to sign off on the program and doesn't seem  to want it. The official in the Iraqi Ministry of Interior (MOI)  responsible for the ministry's day-to-day operations, Adnan al-Asadi,  suggested to SIGIR that the U.S. should spend the money on something for  the American people instead."What tangible benefit will Iraqis see from this police training program? With most of the money spent on lodging, security, support, all the MOI gets is a little expertise, and that is if the program materializes. It has yet to start," al-Asadi said.
The inspector general said the State Department did not fully cooperate with their audit.
"There  were delays in gaining access to key officials and in obtaining  documents. Moreover, the documents provided were incomplete," the audit  read. One meeting in May was canceled an hour before it was to start  because State Department officials needed to additional "Department  guidance," SIGIR wrote.
The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad did not respond to a request for comment.
In a letter to SIGIR, the State Department said it "generally agrees" with the(...)More.

 
 
 
 
 
 10/24/2011 12:52:00 AM
10/24/2011 12:52:00 AM
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