General Discussion
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(26,651 posts)Sneederbunk
(17,447 posts)bigtree
(94,097 posts)Its a ploy. Theyre asking for a ridiculous number so Republicans can cut it to half (also a ridiculous number) and look like they reigned in Trump.
dweller
(28,298 posts)Out of lobster already ?
✌🏻
Norrrm
(4,885 posts)Trump seems to be greedy in his graft.
bigtree
(94,097 posts)https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/national-international/first-6-days-iran-war-cost-11-3-billion/6475633/
Quiet Em
(2,894 posts)Glens Falls is a small city, 15,000 population in upstate NY. It is a Republican leaning, Stefanik, district.
They drew a few hundred enthusiastic people, standing room only, which is quite impressive if you know the area.
I really appreciate the time and effort Pat and AOC are putting in to electing Democrats all over NYS.
wnylib
(25,825 posts)help to beat Nick Langworthy, a Trump shill just like his alcoholic, sexually harassing predecessor, who resigned in disgrace.
babylonsister
(172,740 posts)Wiz Imp
(9,869 posts)by day 12. We are now on day 19 (I think). That means the total now is likely over $25 billion.
https://komonews.com/news/nation-world/fact-check-team-how-much-has-the-war-with-iran-cost-the-american-taxpayer-operation-epic-furty-pentagon-tomahawk-iran-iraq-afghanistan
WASHINGTON (TNND) The price tag on the U.S. war with Iran is climbing fastand its already in the tens of billions.
Early estimates from the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) put the cost at about $16.5 billion by day 12 of what the Pentagon has called Operation Epic Fury, based in part on briefings provided to Congress reported by The New York Times. Now, on day 18 of the conflict, the Pentagon hasnt publicly confirmed official figures.
Why did the costs skyrocket early?
The short answer is simple: weapons, and a lot of them. According to CSIS, the biggest driver of early costs was high-end munitions, especially in the opening days of the campaign. The U.S. relied heavily on long-range precision weapons like Tomahawk cruise missiles, which can cost roughly $3.5 million per missile, which adds up fast. Reporting from The Washington Post, citing Pentagon briefings, found that about $5.6 billion was spent on munitions in just the first two days of fighting. Combined with other operational costs, total daily spending in the early phase reached as high as $2 billion per day, according to CSIS estimates.
summer_in_TX
(4,155 posts)Jeez.
AloeVera
(4,216 posts)That was $250-300 million per day on average.
wnylib
(25,825 posts)AloeVera
(4,216 posts)Maybe they shouldn't have gone on a rampage of death and destruction of at least 15,000!! sites across Iran. Or given 27,000 missiles to Israel recently without even congressional approval.
Maybe somebody should have planned. Or thought. Or said NO to the orange psychopath. But there is no one like that left in the Pentagon.
