August 02, 2006
National Data, By Edwin S. Rubenstein
Do We Want A Border FenceOr 14 Days of Iraq War? Etc
In the early days of our Iraq adventure, the Bush Administration said that the war on terrorism was “better fought in Baghdad than Boston.”
While you dont hear that phrase any more, it is starkly reflected in Bush spending priorities.
From the time U.S. forces invaded Iraq in March 2003, $254 billion has been spent on U.S. military activities [CBO, “Estimated Costs of U.S. Operations in Iraq Under Two Specified Scenarios,” July 16, 2006. PDF] there, according to the Congressional Budget Office. (This does not include $14 billion spent to train and equip Iraqi forces and $22 billion for reconstruction and relief efforts.) In the current fiscal year, the Pentagon is spending about $7.25 billion a month on the war in Iraq, or about $240 million per day.
Meanwhile, the FY2007 budget requests only $42.7 billion for the entire Department of Homeland Security, including immigration enforcementi.e. about six months Pentagon spending in Iraq.
The vast bulk of this is for routine administrative expenses and FEMAs post-Katrina work. When it comes to new initiatives to secure the nations borders, seaports, airports, and immigration enforcement, HS spending commitments are alarmingly small.
Below is a sample of homeland security items in the FY2007 Budget, their estimated costs, and the time it takes the Pentagon to burn through the same amount in Iraq.
1,500 new Border Patrol agents: $459 million ($306,000 per agent)
Iraq spending equivalent: 1.9 days
Container Security Initiative (CSI) to pre-screen U.S.-bound cargo at more than 40 foreign ports: $139 million
Iraq spending equivalent: 13.9 hours.
An additional 6,700 Detention Bed Spaces to replace “catch and release” with a “catch and return” policy: $410 million.
Iraq spending equivalent: 1.7 days
An enhanced Worksite Enforcement program to “send a strong deterrence message to employers who knowingly hire illegal workers”: $41.7 million
Iraq spending equivalent: 4.2 hours
Border technology to enhance electronic surveillance: $100 million
Iraq spending equivalent: 10 hours
18 additional Fugitive Operations teams (raising the total to 70) dedicated to catching the estimated 450,000 individuals who have absconded following their deportation orders: $30 million
Iraq spending equivalent: 10 hours
Completion of the San Diego Border Infrastructure System, including multiple fences and patrol roads: $30 million
Iraq spending equivalent: 3 hours
And now for the grand finale. Although this last item is the least costly, it may yield one of the biggest benefits.
After the first 10 miles of border fence was completed, arrests of illegal immigrants trying to cross the San Diego border sector plummeted from about 25,000 per year to 3,000 per year. But of course the San Diego fence pushed the illegal influx eastward, into the (less hospitable) Arizona desert.
A serious commitment to border security would require fencing off the entire southern borderall 1,891 miles of it. (For comparison, we have 40,000 miles of Interstate highways.) At $1.7 million per mile (the cost of the first 10 mile stretch in San Diego), the entire U.S.-Mexican border could be sealed off for $3.3 billion dollars.
Iraq spending equivalent: 13.8 days.
Cost/benefit analysis, anyone?
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email him) is President of ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.