FYI: For the cost of 1 US soldier in Iraq we can send 35-40 students to college

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Timm

Banned
Sep 16, 2008
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#31
Source? I've been to Iraq, I received my normal base pay plus $250 a month in hazard duty pay and $250 a month in combat pay. Didn't get any extra gear, only went with the gear I always had. All I can maybe think of is paying people to work in the chow halls we ate at?

Don't see how 3 meals a day and an extra $500 a month for a year is sending 30 people to college....
his sourceless statement is truth!!!!
 
May 9, 2002
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#35
For those who dont/cant read through shit:

Between 2005 and 2009, it cost an average of $425,000 for each U.S. service member in Afghanistan, and $462,000 in Iraq.
And..

PRIVATE UNIVERSITIES
1 Yale $ 95,549
2 Caltech $ 87,892
3 Wake Forest $ 68,863
4 Wash U $ 59,634
5 MIT $ 59,061
6 Stanford $ 55,399
7 Johns Hopkins $ 54,346
8 Harvard $ 50,878
9 Vanderbilt $ 45,485
10 U Chicago $ 42,313
11 Princeton $ 38,327
12 Dartmouth $ 37,888
13 Columbia $ 34,549
14 U Penn $ 33,723
15 Rice $ 26,496
16 Emory $ 24,998
17 Duke $ 19,857
18 Northwestern $ 18,307
19 Carnegie Mellon $ 16,919
20 Cornell $ 15,468
21 Brown $ 12,908
22 USC $ 9,673
23 Tufts $ 9,486
24 Notre Dame $ 8,060
25 Georgetown $ 6,461

PUBLIC UNIVERSITIES
1 UCLA $ 24,218
2 U North Carolina $ 20,503
3 UCSD $ 15,458
4 UC Berkeley $ 11,521
5 U Wisconsin $ 10,148
6 U Michigan $ 7,199
7 U Virginia $ 5,154
 
Sep 16, 2008
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#37
Between 2005 and 2009, it cost an average of $425,000 for each U.S. service member in Afghanistan, and $462,000 in Iraq.

- Dr. Chinstrap
 
Mar 18, 2003
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#38
So what they do is take the entire cost of the war in a given country and divide that by how many troops are there? Or are these costs directly attributed to each soldier? Because it seems to me like it would be more accurate to say "The U.S. is spending [x] for every [x]", rather than "The cost of [x] is [x]".

I found this especially interesting:

The annual cost per soldier in Iraq next year is projected to jump to $802,000, likely because the size of the force has declined much faster than the infrastructure or spending on the Iraqi security forces.
I wonder how much money we would be spending annually in IRAQ without any active duty soldiers or service members.
 
Jan 29, 2005
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PHX
#40
That report was extremely vague and didn't actually say what was being spent on the troops, from the sounds of it they did what Ethereal said and took the entire cost of the war and just divided by deployed service member which definitely wouldn't be an accurate account of what is spent on a soldier. I can easily break down everything that was spent on me personally and every member of my unit during my 16 months in Afghanistan and 12 months in Iraq.

Flight to get there: A few hundred dollars maybe?

3 meals a day of chow hall food: (maybe)30 dollars a day x 365 = $10,950 (but even then you can't count food considered soldiers eat for free anyway whether deployed or not)

Utilities such as lights, water, etc.: Once again you can't count that because soldiers get free utilities anyway whether deployed or not.

All of our equipment such as gear, our rifle, body armor etc. is something we're issued when we first report to a unit, we bring the same said equipment with us to Iraq and Afghanistan so the only money being spent there is when equipment breaks, tears etc. (but once again it would still be spent on broken equipment even when not deployed)

So the only extra money I can think of is the extra $500 a month.

I can understand that a massive amount of money is being spent on construction, paying civilian contracts etc., but that actually created thousands of jobs (lots of regular joe blow average people are getting a decent check by going there and cooking food and constructing buildings)


Honestly the only large amounts of money that are being spent is on construction projects and paying all of the civilians.

The money isn't directly being spent on each and every single service member deployed, they're just using that as a broad general example.