Politics | Afghanistan The US Totally Blew $3M on Boats for Afghanistan Afghanistan is landlocked, the boats were abnormally expensive, and more By Kevin Spak Posted Jun 13, 2014 9:34 AM CDT Copied Afghan young men walk back from a nearby desert with their camels on the outskirts of Kandahar, Afghanistan, Wednesday, Jan. 15, 2014. (AP Photo/Allauddin Khan) The US has wasted money in many ways in the Afghan war, but the Washington Post highlights a particularly egregious one revealed by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction yesterday: The US spent $3 million in 2010 to buy the Afghan police eight patrol boats. That works out to $375,000 per boat—for boats that normally sell for $50,000 in the US. What makes the purchases even more bizarre is that Afghanistan is landlocked. The boats were intended to patrol the Amu Darya River between Afghanistan and Uzbekistan, but the US reportedly gave 19 boats to Uzbekistan in 2004 to patrol the same river. (Another odd detail: The closest port Afghan forces would have been able to use? That would be in Pakistan, some 1,000 miles away.) But wait, it gets even worse: The US and NATO quickly decided that these abnormally expensive boats weren't necessary after all, and never delivered them—they're still sitting in storage in Virginia. "The list of unanswered questions is particularly troubling," the inspector general said in a letter to the Pentagon. Read These Next Husband of the Coldplay 'Kiss Cam' woman breaks his silence. Wall Street is getting twitchy over falling lumber prices. He was on the run with his kids for 4 years. It just ended badly. Those discarded COVID masks are shedding chemicals. Report an error