November 13, 2024

IG: Biden’s $1B boondoggle to the Taliban-controlled Afghanistan unaccounted for

Afghanistan #Afghanistan

FOX Business Flash top headlines for November 4

SHARE

SHARE

TWEET

SHARE

EMAIL

What to watch next

  • Trump legal peril: Blows past Jan. 6 subpoena as DOJ eyes special counsel

    Trump legal peril: Blows past Jan. 6 subpoena as DOJ eyes special counsel

    MSNBC

  • 'It will be a long haul': Nancy Pelosi speaks out following attack on husband

    ‘It will be a long haul’: Nancy Pelosi speaks out following attack on husband

    MSNBC

  • Musk lashes out in interview as brands pause Twitter ads

    Musk lashes out in interview as brands pause Twitter ads

    CNN

  • Video shows moment former Pakistan Prime Minister was shot

    Video shows moment former Pakistan Prime Minister was shot

    CNN

  • Judge in Pelosi attack case worked with daughter

    Judge in Pelosi attack case worked with daughter

    The Associated Press

  • CNN reporter measures airline seats and puts them to the comfort test

    CNN reporter measures airline seats and puts them to the comfort test

    CNN

  • CNN's Donie O'Sullivan explains concerns around the timing of Twitter layoffs

    CNN’s Donie O’Sullivan explains concerns around the timing of Twitter layoffs

    CNN

  • Biden 'optimistic' about Democrats' midterm chances

    Biden ‘optimistic’ about Democrats’ midterm chances

    The Associated Press

  • Control of the Senate rests on a knife's edge as candidates head into the final weekend of campaigning before election day

    Control of the Senate rests on a knife’s edge as candidates head into the final weekend of campaigning before election day

    CNN

  • Daylight saving time ends on Sunday. But the practice has sparked a nationwide debate.

    Daylight saving time ends on Sunday. But the practice has sparked a nationwide debate.

    CBS News

  • Chuck Norris Jumps Into U.S. Midterms, Backing Key Senate Candidate

    Chuck Norris Jumps Into U.S. Midterms, Backing Key Senate Candidate

    Newsweek

  • Shapiro vs. Mastriano: What To Know About Pennsylvania Governor Race

    Shapiro vs. Mastriano: What To Know About Pennsylvania Governor Race

    Newsweek

  • MTP NOW 11/4 — Four days until Election Day; Senate ‘What-if’

    MTP NOW 11/4 — Four days until Election Day; Senate ‘What-if’

    NBC News

  • Here’s how the midterm elections could shake up control of state legislatures

    Here’s how the midterm elections could shake up control of state legislatures

    NBC News

  • The dangerous rising tide of anti-Semitism

    The dangerous rising tide of anti-Semitism

    MSNBC

  • Alex Murdaugh talks with his sister-in-law from jail

    Alex Murdaugh talks with his sister-in-law from jail

    NBC News

  • Click to expand

    UP NEXT

    UP NEXT

    The U.S. government gave $1.1 billion in U.S. tax dollars to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan in humanitarian aid since the U.S. withdrawal in August 2021 — and a top federal watchdog says several U.S. agencies are refusing to explain how the money was spent.

    The U.S. government remains Afghanistan’s single largest donor more than one year after the Taliban takeover of the country and the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) says for the first time in history — they don’t have the answers.

    In SIGAR’s quarterly report to Congress the Inspector General explains that they are unable to track down how more than $1 billion taxpayer dollars was spent because multiple government agencies are refusing to cooperate.

    Inspector General John F. Sopko says, “SIGAR, for the first time in its history, is unable this quarter to provide Congress and the American people with a full accounting of this U.S. government spending due to the noncooperation of several U.S. government agencies.” Sopko adds that both United States Agency for International Development (USAID), which administers the majority of U.S. government spending for Afghanistan, and the Treasury Department “refused to cooperate with SIGAR in any capacity.”

    The Inspector General says the State Department was “selective” about what information it provided and failed to provide details of the agency-supported programs that the billion dollars in taxpayer money funded.

    U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida speaks at the Turning Point USA's (TPUSA) Student Action Summit (SAS) in Tampa, Fla., U.S., July 23, 2022. Reuters/Joe Skipper © Reuters/Joe Skipper U.S. Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida speaks at the Turning Point USA’s (TPUSA) Student Action Summit (SAS) in Tampa, Fla., U.S., July 23, 2022. Reuters/Joe Skipper

    AFGHANS RESETTLING IN US STRUGGLE TO FIND AFFORDABLE HOUSING

    READ ON THE FOX BUSINESS APP

    FOX Business exclusively obtained letters from Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, and US AID Administrator Samantha Power — demanding accountability over $1.1 billion in taxpayer money that has been funneled to Taliban-controlled Afghanistan since the U.S. military’s exit.

    Gaetz wrote in his letters: “I found it even more shocking, and maddening, that much of these illicit fund transfers are unaccounted for because your Department withheld information in violation of federal law.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX BUSINESS APP

    A spokesperson with USAID says they have been cooperating with the inspector general and have provided hundreds of pages of documents and dozens of evaluations responding to requests for information. 

    A Treasury spokesperson tells FOX Business, “Treasury has complied with all legal requirements and shared information with SIGAR.”

    The White House and State Department did not respond to FOX Business prior to publication. A state department spokesperson told Bloomberg that they have answered dozens of questions and provided thousands of pages of documents to SIGAR — and points out that the inspector general’s mandate does not cover humanitarian aid — only funds spent on Afghanistan’s reconstruction which the US ended with the Taliban takeover. 

    Afghan girls hold flags of the Islamic Emirate while participating in the first anniversary of the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan, on a street in Kabul, Afghanistan, Aug. 31, 2022. Reuters/Ali Khara © Reuters/Ali Khara Afghan girls hold flags of the Islamic Emirate while participating in the first anniversary of the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan, on a street in Kabul, Afghanistan, Aug. 31, 2022. Reuters/Ali Khara

    Gaetz told FOX Business that SIGAR’s bombshell report is a “searing” indictment of the Biden administration’s lack of transparency compared to prior administrations.

    “57 times when SIGAR has issued their quarterly report they have declined to level this type of an indictment against [the] Trump Administration, the Obama Administration, or the Bush Administration … the unwillingness to participate in transparency is the highest with the Biden government after the Biden government left the Taliban a military and now insists on unreviewed transfers of aid that has already exceed a billion dollars.”

    CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOX BUSINESS

    Republicans say this will be a top issue if they take control of the House following Tuesday’s midterm election and have subpoena power, “We are entering the era of investigations and oversight and in the upcoming Republicans Congress we’re going to have an ability to haul in administrative officials and get answers.

    “This is going to be near the top of my list on the Armed Services Committee,” Gaetz said.

    Leave a Reply