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Τρίτη 29 Δεκεμβρίου 2015

The U.S. military’s fight against the Islamic State is costing an average of $11 million a day


The Defense Department spent more than $5 billion on operations related to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, an average of $11 million a day, between September 2014 and the end of last month, the Pentagon reported Monday.
Slightly more than half of the $5.36 billion total went to daily air operations, with $1.26 billion spent on “munitions.” Most of the rest went to “mission support,” including logistics and military pay.

As you can see below, the Air Force is spending more than any other service on the fight.

% of total costs related to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria

Army
13
Navy
11
Air Force
69
Special Operations Command
7

As of last Wednesday, the anti-Islamic State coalition, called Operation Inherent Resolve, had flown conducted a total of 8,912 airstrikes, about two thirds of them in Iraq and the rest in Syria. The vast majority in both countries were flown by U.S. aircraft. Each strike can include sorties by multiple aircraft; the total number of sorties by Dec. 12, the Pentagon said, was 60,735.
By comparison, one study estimated the total costs of U.S. wars through 2014 in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan at $4.4 trillion “and counting.” The study was published by the Watson Institute of International and Public Affairs at Brown University.
Karen DeYoung is associate editor and senior national security correspondent for the Washington Post.

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