Nato encourages corruption
2010-09-29
If you take Petr Nečas's words at face value about corruption at
the defense ministry having its roots in the 1990s, it means the
"octopus" was already there and thrashing its tentacles about
when the CR joined Nato in 1999. It could be argued (and we
have) that Nato and other international organizations have
negatively reinforced bad behavior in new member-countries by
overlooking obvious failures. Nato continues to encourage
corruption by using GDP to benchmark defense-spending levels.
The more stolen or wasted, the closer the CR (and other
countries) come to the 2% of GDP that is required by Nato.
Defense Minister Alexandr Vondra told TV Prima that GDP isn't
the right benchmark; defense budgets should instead be a set
percentage of the total national budget. But this too misses the
mark. Transatlantic defense is actually one area where more top-
down planning and oversight would benefit the taxpayer. It's
better for Czechs that Nato tell them which (if any) armored cars
to buy than to let Omnipol do it.
[Czech Republic gross national product ODS procurement]
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