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B-213137 1 (1986-01-30)

handle is hein.gao/gaobacvtz0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 



                COMPTROLLER GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES
                         WASHINGTON D.C. 20548

                                     Ilf f11111  llt   111111111lil ll
                                          129177
B-213137                                  1
                                     January  30, 1986

The Honorable Bill Alexander
House of Representatives               DO NOT MAKE AVAILABLE TO PUBLIC READING

Dear Mr. Alexander:

     This responds  to your April 19, 1985, request that this
Office update our  legal decision B-213137, June 22, 1984
(published in unclassified  form at 63 Comp. Gen. 422 (1984)).
That decision addressed  the propriety of the Department of
Defense's  (DOD's) use of operation and maintenance (O&M)
appropriations for  three categories of activities in connection
with its conduct of  joint combined military training exercises
in Honduras: construction  activities, training of foreign
forces, and provision  of civic and humanitarian assistance to
Honduran civilians.   In response to your request, we have
reviewed actions taken  by DOD in light of our previous
recommendations concerning  each of these three categories of
activities.  We have  also reviewed the manner in which the
Department has conducted  exercise activities since Ahuas Tara
II.  Our detailed  legal analysis is set out in the enclosure.

     Our previous decision  addressed the propriety of DOD's  use
of O&M appropriations,  during military exercises in Honduras,
for a variety of  activities ordinarily funded from other appro-
priation categories.   Specifically, we concluded that DOD had
improperly financed  foreign aid and security assistance activi-
ties through  its O&M accounts.  We also concluded that the
Department may have misapplied  O&M appropriations for exercise-
related military  construction, if costs of specific projects  in
Honduras exceeded $200,000  per project.  We recommended that
the Department make  funding adjustments where necessary to
reimburse its O&M  accounts, or declare Antideficiency Act
violations to the extent  adjustments could not be made.

     In conducting our  review of DOD's implementation of our
previous decision, we  encounterea a considerable amount of
disagreement by DOD  officials with some of our basic legal
conclusions, particularly  with regard to the treatment of
exercise-related engineering  activities as military construc-
tion.  In light of  these comments, we have reexamined our pre-
vious conclusions  in some detail.  As discussed in the
enclosure, we reaffirm  the legal conclusions reached in our
previous decision.  We  have attempted to address the specific
concerns raised by DOD  officials, again particularly as to
exercise construction  activities.




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