CBS/AP/ February 11, 2009, 5:49 PM

Report: 14,000 Weapons Missing In Iraq

Thousands of weapons the United States has provided Iraqi security forces cannot be accounted for and spare parts and repair manuals are unavailable for many others, a new report to Congress says.

The report, prepared at the request of the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, Virginia Republican John Warner, also found that major challenges remain that put at risk the Defense Department's goal of strengthening Iraqi security forces by transferring all logistics operations to the Defense Ministry by the end of 2007.

A spokesman for Warner said the senator read the report over the weekend in preparation for a meeting Tuesday with Stuart W. Bowen Jr., the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction.

Warner, who requested the report in May, "believes it is essential that Congress and the American people continue to be kept informed by the inspector general on the equipping and logistical capabilities of the Iraqi army and security forces, since these represent an important component of overall readiness," said Warner spokesman John Ullyot.

The Pentagon cannot account for 14,030 weapons — almost 4 percent of the semiautomatic pistols, assault rifles, machine guns, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and other weapons it began supplying to Iraq since the end of 2003.

The missing weapons will not be tracked easily: The Defense Department registered the serial numbers of only about 10,000 of the 370,251 weapons it provided — less than 3 percent.

Missing from the Defense Department's inventory books were 13,180 semiautomatic pistols, 751 assault rifles and 99 machine guns.

The audit on logistics capabilities said there is a "significant risk" that the Iraqi Interior Ministry "will not be capable of assuming and sustaining logistics support for the Iraqi local and national police forces in the near term." That support includes equipment maintenance, transportation of people and gear and health resources for soldiers and police.

Meanwhile, the U.S. military on Monday announced the death of the 101st servicemember killed in Iraq this month.

In a brief statement, the military said the latest casualty was a member of a police brigade who was killed by small arms fire this morning in eastern Baghdad.

Earlier, a Marine assigned to Regimental Combat Team 5, died from injuries sustained during combat on Sunday, the military said in a brief announcement.

The Marine's name was being withheld pending notification of next of kin.

October is already the fourth deadliest month for American troops since the war began in March 2003. The previous high monthly death tolls were 107 in January 2005; at least 135 in April 2004, and 137 in November 2004, when U.S. forces swept through the insurgent stronghold of Fallujah.

The military said Sunday's death came in Anbar province west of Baghdad, a hotbed of the Sunni resistance to U.S. forces and their Iraqi government allies.

CBS News chief foreign correspondent Lara Logan reports that Anbar has long been the front line of the U.S. military's fight against al Qaeda affiliated militants in Iraq, and, until recently, was one of the most deadly provinces for American forces.

The capital region has taken over as the scene of the overwhelming majority of U.S. troop deaths.

Logan says that one of the factors making life infinitely more difficult for U.S. troops in Iraq is the increasing level of attacks from Shiite militia groups.

Shiite militias — in particular the Mahdi Army, headed by the radical Baghdad-based cleric Muqtada al-Sadr — are taking more and more American and Iraqi lives, as a vicious cycle of attacks and revenge spirals out of control in the country.

In other developments:

  • At least 31 people were killed in a bomb attack Monday targeting poor Shiites seeking work as laborers in the sprawling, impoverished Shiite neighborhood of Sadr City. The early morning blast tore through food stalls and kiosks, cutting down men who gather there each morning hoping to be hired as construction workers. Sadr City is a stronghold of the Mahdi Army and has been the scene of repeated bomb attacks by suspected al Qaeda fighters seeking to incite Shiite revenge attacks and drag the country into full-blown civil war. The attack couldn't have come at a worse time, according to Logan, who says Iraqis around the capital are now bracing for sectarian revenge killings.

  • A U.S. Army translator missing after being kidnapped in Iraq had broken military rules to marry an Iraqi woman and was visiting her when he was abducted, according to people who claim to be relatives of the wife. According to a report in Monday editions of The New York Times, the relatives said that the soldier, previously unidentified by the U.S. government, is Ahmed Qusai al-Taei, a 41-year-old Iraqi-American. The family did not know he was a soldier until after the kidnapping, the relatives said.

  • Saddam Hussein's chief lawyer walked out of court Monday after most of his requests were rejected, but the chief judge immediately appointed other attorneys to defend the deposed president. The walkout came shortly after chief defense lawyer Khalil al-Dulaimi ended a monthlong boycott of the trial in which Saddam and six other defendants are charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity for a 1987-88 offensive against Iraq's Kurdish population.

  • Three gunmen killed a leading Iraqi academic and prominent Sunni political activist Monday as he was leaving his Baghdad home, police said. The killers escaped in a car after gunning down Essam al-Rawi, head of the University Professor's Union and a senior member of the influential Association of Muslim Scholars, according to police Lt. Maitham Abdul-Razaq. The Muslim Scholars Association is a hardline Sunni organization believed to have links to the insurgency raging against U.S. forces and their Iraqi allies.
  • © 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
    58 Comments Add a Comment
    linkicon reporticon emailicon
    sal567 says:
    First missing money, now missing arms and of course, all this time missing lives, thousands of them. What's next? And what's Bush doing about all these? Obviously he can't do the job he was elected for. It's time for him to step down and let someone else do what he can't do. God help us all!
    reply
    linkicon reporticon emailicon
    modisette0 says:
    I agree with your assessment of bush and the war in IRAQ. I was a marine in Korea where I lost a leg and other wounds. I was in a navy hospital for 13 months and can recognize a political war when I see one. JOE
    reply
    linkicon reporticon emailicon
    says:
    brianp55 wrote:

    "Obviously, someone in the Iraqi military sold these weapons to the insurgents."

    It's also quite possible that the weapons never made it into the hands of the Iraqi's to begin with.

    The Black Market, either in Iraq or the US, is probably flooded with these weapons at this very moment.

    What is worrying is that the Defense Department only registered the serial numbers of approx 3 percent of the weapons.
    reply
    linkicon reporticon emailicon
    patriotic9 says:
    If we have not been attacked after 9/11,it doesn't mean we're safe.If we look at Alqaeda's previous operations,they are very patient and well-planned enemies.It seems like BIN-LADEN is waiting for our Military and economy to be destroyed in Iraq and then he will attack us.Because of Bush administration's NON-SENSE policies North Korea has ultimately developed Nuclear Bombs.Before North Korea sells her NUKES to BIN LADEN which we know she will do as she has built nukes for business reason,we Americans need to do something to prevent the catostrophy which we might see in the form of simultaneous bombings in our major cities by NUKES sold to BIN LADEN by North KOREA.All the policies of Bush administration is a complete failure and it seems like his administration is totally unaware of todays GEO-POLITICS.
    reply
    linkicon reporticon emailicon
    clestes-2009 says:
    The middle east is coming apart and all gw can talk about now is gay marriage?? Wow, he is really on top of things, isn't he.
    reply
    linkicon reporticon emailicon
    stevex47 says:
    Lies, corruption, cover-up, perversion, betrayal, incompetence. Next President please do not pardon this president. The crimes are too big.
    reply
    linkicon reporticon emailicon
    stevex47 says:
    Lies, corruption, cover-up, perversion, betrayal, incompetence. Next President please do not pardon this president. The crimes are too big.
    reply
    linkicon reporticon emailicon
    lois747 says:
    missing money, missing weapons. we need to get our soldiers out of their before they all turn on them. they should be home protecting our borders and skies.
    reply
    linkicon reporticon emailicon
    patriotic9 says:
    Now we can easily understand how Hizbollah was so well equipped in fighting Israeli forces.The weapons they were using must have been given to them by their brothers in Iraq as the new Iraqi govt brought into power by our tax money on the name of DEMOCRACY.How can we differentiate,who in the Iraqi force is not working for INSURGENTS,when even the newly formed govt there makes all the decision by AYATOALLAH SISTANI and has brotherly relatioon ship with IRANIAN PRESIDENT.
    reply
    linkicon reporticon emailicon
    patriotic9 says:
    Our Military and tax money were used to remove a Secular Saddam from power and to bring an EXTREMIST SHIA who practically is a GOVERNOR of IRAQ from the IRANIAN AYATTOALLAHs into power.IRAQ is next to IRAN,SYRIA is next to IRAQ,LEBANON is next to SYRIA.Bush administration has given such a great favor to the ISLAMIC RADICALS which not even the most RADICAL MUSLIM could be able to do.Now supplying military equipment from Iran to Hizbollah in Lebanon is not a problem at all.
    Two days before the last Presidential election,Bin Laden had released a video tape in which he was talking agianst Bush.It was obvious when the worst enemy of USA was talking aginst Bush,Americans were supposed to vote BUSH which BIN LADEN actually wanted.Our Army was supposed to be deployed to Iran but because of this administration's policies has only been used to help Iran and Alqaeda terrorists against us.
    reply
    See all 58 Comments