The war in Iraq will cost US taxpayers at least three trillion
dollars, a respected, Nobel Prize-winning economist wrote
in a new book which was excerpted in the US press this week.
Joseph Stiglitz's book "The Three Trillion Dollar War:
The True Cost of the Iraq Conflict," concluded that US
military operations in Iraq already have exceeded the cost
of the 12-year war in Vietnam and is more than double the
cost of the Korean War.
"The only war in our history which cost more was the
Second World War, when 16.3 million US troops fought in a
campaign lasting four years, at a total cost (in 2007, inflation-adjusted
dollars) of about five trillion dollars," he wrote in
the work co-authored with Harvard professor Linda Bilmes.
"With virtually the entire armed forces committed to
fighting the Germans and Japanese, the cost per troop (in
today's dollars) was less than 100,000 dollars in 2007 dollars.
By contrast, the Iraq war is costing upward of 400,000 dollars
per troop."
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The Pentagon took exception to the figures -- and to the
premise that there have been undisclosed costs involved in
financing the war.
"It seems like an exaggerated number to us," said
Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell.
"The Pentagon has been extraordinarily transparent about
what we know of the cost of the war
Stiglitz, was winner of the 2001 Nobel Prize in economics
and former chief economist at the World Bank.
His co-author Bilmes is a professor of public finance at
Harvard University.
The book is published as the fifth year of the US-led conflict
comes to a close.
Full
article here.