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Radar Chief
07-12-2006, 10:21 AM
I’ll take, “Things you won’t see Denise post” (http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jul2006/20060710_5622.html) for a thousand, Alex. ;)

Iraqis See Infrastructure Renaissance With U.S. Help

By Gerry J. GilmoreAmerican Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, July 10, 2006 – American know-how and dollars are revitalizing a decrepit Iraqi infrastructure that had withered under Saddam Hussein's rule, a senior U.S. military officer said in Baghdad today. The United States has contributed almost $22 billion earmarked for some 3,700 planned infrastructure-renewal projects across Iraq, Army Maj. Gen. William H. McCoy Jr. told reporters in Baghdad. More than 3,400 of those projects have been started, McCoy said, and 2,700 have been completed. This good-news story highlights "some of the positive things that are happening in Iraq," said McCoy, commander of the Gulf Region Division of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. Iraqi reconstruction has been undertaken in every sector, McCoy said. "We have built new power plants and refurbished dozens of turbines around the country," he said. "We are building water treatment plants to provide fresh potable water to Iraqis." Additionally, "we are now installing sewage treatment plants in parts of the country to begin the process to get the sewage out of the streets and make Iraq a more healthy country," the general said. U.S. efforts also have helped build, expand or renovate thousands of schools across Iraq, McCoy said, improving the learning environment for Iraqi schoolchildren. American assistance also has built new police stations, medical clinics and hospitals for the Iraqi people, he said. "All of this has been done in close coordination with the Iraqi government and now, with the permanent government in place, with their leadership," McCoy pointed out. Saddam's brutal rule had a devastating effect on Iraq's people and infrastructure, McCoy said, noting Iraq was the second-most prosperous country in the region before he seized power in 1979. The dictator's policies pushed Iraq into economic decay, McCoy noted, and scant attention was paid to maintaining the country's infrastructure. A World Bank survey conducted in 2003 estimated that $60 billion would be needed to resuscitate Iraq's post-Saddam infrastructure, McCoy said. Follow-on studies now peg those reconstruction costs at $80 to $100 billion. Iraq's infrastructure is nonetheless getting back onto its feet, McCoy said. He noted that investments dedicated to reviving the country's petroleum and gas industries -- one of the richest in the world -- are paying dividends. For example, Iraq will be on target to produce 3 million barrels a day in oil plus 3,000 tons a day of liquid petroleum gas after related projects are completed at the end of this year, McCoy predicted. U.S.-assisted reconstruction efforts, in tandem with a democratically elected government, have put the Iraqi people on the path toward brighter economic times, he said. "With a stable and maturing government will come increased security, which will be good for the Iraqi people," McCoy said. "The facilities with the Iraqis today are but the beginning of the great future this country has."

memyselfI
07-12-2006, 10:28 AM
I’ll take, “Things you won’t see Denise post” (http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Jul2006/20060710_5622.html) for a thousand, Alex. ;)

American Forces Press Service

How about an independent source for this?

Radar Chief
07-12-2006, 10:31 AM
How about an independent source for this?

What part of “originally posted by DOD” did you not understand?
That DOD=Department of Defense? :hmmm:
Besides, didn’t you post that you read these sites? Why haven’t you posted something like this before? It’s not exactly the first story like it. :shrug:

memyselfI
07-12-2006, 10:36 AM
What part of “originally posted by DOD” did you not understand?
That DOD=Department of Defense? :hmmm:
Besides, didn’t you post that you read these sites? Why haven’t you posted something like this before? It’s not exactly the first story like it. :shrug:

Actually, the articles I've reposted from Military.com have an AP or other third party non-military origination...

Radar Chief
07-12-2006, 10:40 AM
Actually, the articles I've reposted from Military.com have an AP or other third party non-military origination...

Good for you. I also see that your fingers aren’t broke so if it really means that much to ya, you can go search up a second source on your own. :shrug:

jiveturkey
07-12-2006, 10:54 AM
Great news!

We should probably invade Kansas City next. The roads and schools could use a refurb and I heard that they have WMD's. :)

Radar Chief
07-12-2006, 10:57 AM
Great news!

We should probably invade Kansas City next. The roads and schools could use a refurb and I heard that they have WMD's. :)

Oh, I hear ya, ever drive south on 169 to Tulsa? :eek: Good Lawd Oklahomans got that highway screwed up, particularly ‘round N. Tulsa. :shake:

Loki
07-12-2006, 12:50 PM
radar, what's with the positive news article in DC??!!

for shame sir, for shame... :shake:



* * * * * *

McCoy...

"dammit jim, i'm a doctor, not a infrastructure rejuvination
specialist..."
http://www.badmovies.org/tvshows/startrek/mccoy.jpg

jiveturkey
07-12-2006, 12:53 PM
Oh, I hear ya, ever drive south on 169 to Tulsa? :eek: Good Lawd Oklahomans got that highway screwed up, particularly ‘round N. Tulsa. :shake:Why in the name of zeus' butthole would I drive to Oklahoma? :p

HC_Chief
07-12-2006, 12:55 PM
Why in the name of zeus' butthole would I drive to Oklahoma? :p

Cow-tipping expedition? :shrug:

Radar Chief
07-12-2006, 12:59 PM
Why in the name of zeus' butthole would I drive to Oklahoma? :p

:LOL: Well, I’ve got family there so I don’t have much of a choice.
But at least Grand Lake O the Cherokees, Skiatook, Tenkiller and Keystone lakes are all close. :thumb:

Iowanian
07-12-2006, 03:14 PM
Non of that is possible Radar.

US troops are bogged down in a relentless quagmire, and when they're not failing to succeed in their unplanned, disorganized mission of dipshittery, they're insulting the honor of all Muslims, raping, pillaging and murdering innocent children. I know this is true, because Dense routinely posts links from independent sources on the interweb.


Was that at least close, Dense? Jaz?

Hydrae
07-12-2006, 03:20 PM
We are getting somewhere. But it is not all roses. This is from the article BC posted about the new contracts:

That office has repeatedly warned of a "reconstruction gap" between what the United States promised in rebuilding the country after the spring 2003 invasion and what it has delivered. For instance, a contract aimed at building 142 new health centers across Iraq instead produced 20 before the program ran out of money.

Bootlegged
07-12-2006, 03:21 PM
Actually, the articles I've reposted from Military.com have an AP or other third party non-military origination...


I'll hold my breath for Reuters or AP to report this. Yeah.

patteeu
07-12-2006, 04:23 PM
We are getting somewhere. But it is not all roses. This is from the article BC posted about the new contracts:

FWIW, this is old news. The reconstruction gap is a result of the need to divert significant reconstruction funds away from actual building and toward security for the projects and many of the projects were abandoned altogether or significantly altered because they realized that the buildings/schools/whatever would end up being inviting targets for the insurgency. There is no doubt that the costs of reconstruction have been much greater than anticipated, but this isn't something that is just being realized now.