Iraq

Department of Defense

CONTRACTOR SUPPORT OF U.S. OPERATIONS IN THE USCENTCOM AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY TO INCLUDE IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN

 

BACKGROUND:  This update reports DoD contractor personnel numbers in theater and outlines DoD efforts to improve management of contractors accompanying U.S. forces.  It covers DoD contractor personnel deployed in Afghanistan (Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF), Iraq, and the U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM) area of responsibility (AOR).

KEY POINTS: In 4th quarter FY 2012, USCENTCOM reported approximately 137,000 contractor personnel working for the DoD in the USCENTCOM AOR.  This total reflects no change from the previous quarter.  The number of contractors outside of Afghanistan and Iraq make up about 13.7% of the total contractor population in the USCENTCOM AOR.  A breakdown of DoD contractor personnel is provided below:

DoD Contractor Personnel in the USCENTCOM AOR

Total Contractors

U.S. Citizens

Third Country Nationals

Local/Host Country Nationals

Afghanistan Only

109,564

31,814

39,480

38,270

Iraq Only*

9,000

2,314

4,621

2,065

Other USCENTCOM Locations

18,843

8,764

9,297

782

USCENTCOM AOR

137,407

42,892

53,398

41,117

*Includes DoD contractors supporting U.S. Mission Iraq and/or Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq

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U.S. DoD Spending Trends FY 2012-2013

U.S. DoD Spending Trends FY 2012-2013

FY 2012

In FY2012, (fiscal year starting October 1, 2011) the DoD was projected to spend a total of $645.7 billion dollars (discretionary). Of this amount, $530.6 billion is Base Request and $115.1 billion is for Overseas Contingency Operations (used to be called Global War on Terror).

In the former FY2012 budget proposed a year ago,  the DoD would have received $676.0 billion - thus the budget has been cut by $30.3 billion or 4.5%. Of the $676 billion, $558.2 billion was Base and $117.8 billion for Overseas Contingency Operations.

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The Pentagon doesn't deny it made major, costly mistakes when it came to service contracting in the first years of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. But Defense leaders say they also learned valuable lessons they want to bake into the military's training and doctrine that will guide contingency operations from now on.

The department was grossly unprepared for the extent to which it would need to rely on service contractors to prosecute the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, leaders now acknowledge. In part, they blame the fact that the wars lasted much longer than they were supposed to.

But, DoD also says it's clear that the military won't ever go into a contingency operation again without a big contingent of contractors, so it needs to institutionalize contracting expertise into the way it plans operations and trains its people.

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