Dec. 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 2003 – White House office emails are missing for all of these days, according to the later investigation by the House Government Reform Committee.

 

Dec. 15, 2003 – Saddam Hussein is apparently captured. No word on what became of all Saddam Hussein's doubles.

 

Dec. 18, 2003 – The Government Accountability Office (GAO) publishes a report on logistics in the Iraq war:

* “Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) is one of the largest logistics supply and support efforts that the U.S. military has ever undertaken. For example, of the $28.1 billion that the Department of Defense (DOD) has obligated for OIF, the services and the Defense Logistics Agency have reported that $14.2 billion is for operating support costs and $4.9 billion is for transportation costs. This operation required the movement of large numbers of personnel and equipment over long distances into a hostile environment involving harsh desert conditions . . .

*

Although major combat operations during the initial phases of OIF were successful, our preliminary work indicated that there were substantial logistics support problems in the OIF theater, as evidenced by (1) a backlog of hundreds of pallets and containers of materiel at various distribution points due to transportation constraints and inadequate asset visibility; (2) a discrepancy of $1.2 billion between the amount of materiel shipped to Army activities in the theater of operations and the amount of materiel that those activities acknowledged they received; (3) a potential cost to DOD of millions of dollars for late fees on leased containers or replacement of DOD-owned containers due to distribution backlogs or losses; (4) the cannibalization of vehicles and potential reduction of equipment readiness due to the unavailability of parts that either were not in DOD's inventory or could not be located because of inadequate asset visibility; (5) the duplication of many requisitions and circumvention of the supply system as a result of inadequate asset visibility; and (6) the accumulation at the theater distribution center in Kuwait of hundreds of pallets, containers, and boxes of excess supplies and equipment that were shipped from units redeploying from Iraq without required content descriptions and shipping documentation. For example, at the time we visited the center, we observed a wide array of materiel, spread over many acres, that included a mix of broken and usable parts that had not been sorted into the appropriate supply class, unidentified items in containers that had not been opened and inventoried, and items that appeared to be deteriorating due to the harsh desert conditions.”

http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d04305r.pdf

Again, this GAO report strongly indicates the problems–“challenges” in polite bureaucratic parlance–lying ahead for working on reconstruction in Iraq.

 

Dec. 19, 2003 – On a Friday, Attorney General John Ashcroft clears a new Republican congressional redistricting plan for Texas in time for the 2004 elections, saying the plan does not dilute minority strength statewide. The between-census redistricting, pushed by Tom DeLay (R-TX) and opposed by minority groups among others, will effectively wipe out five Democratic U.S. House seats in Texas.

 

Same day -- A three-judge panel in the federal court in Austin throws out part of a lawsuit against the redistricting plan, saying that the legislature can redistrict in the middle of a decade. Opponents argue that the state constitution allows redistricting only once every 10 years, after the Census. When they lose on their day in court, the way is cleared for the special redistricting—overturning a GOP redistricting already accomplished—that will keep the Texas delegation majority-Republican.