18 March 2005

Inside Iraq from the 1st Cav

This is said to be an email making the rounds within the military. Some highlights:

3. He showed a graph of attacks in Sadr City by month. Last Aug-Sep they were getting up to 160 attacks per week. During the last three months, the graph had flatlined at below 5 to zero per week.

4. His big point was not that they were "winning battles" to do this but that cleaning the place up, electricity, sewage, water were the key factors. He said yes they fought but after they started delivering services that the Iraqis in Sadr City had never had, the terrorist recruiting of 15 and 16 year olds came up empty.

13. Said that of all the money appropriated for Iraq, not a cent was earmarked for agriculture. Said that Iraq could feed itself completely and still have food for export but no one thought about it. Said the Cav started working with Texas A&M on ag projects and had special hybrid seeds sent to them through Jordan. TAM analyzed soil samples and worked out how and what to plant. Said he had an E7 from Belton, TX (just down the road from Ft. Hood) who was almost single-handedly rebuilding the ag industry in the Baghdad area.

14. Said he could hire hundreds of Iraqis daily for $7 to $10 a day to work on sewer, electric, water projects, etc. but that the contracting rules from CONUS applied so he had to have $500,000 insurance policies in place in case the workers got hurt. Not kidding. The CONUS peacetime regs slowed everything down, even if they could eventually get waivers for the regs.

300 large. No larger. No, LARGER. REAL GODDAMN LARGE. AS IN BILLION. What we've spent or have in the queue, and there's more to come. Let's let the Majors and Lt Cols spend cash putting locals to work cleaning the streets, wiring the place up, providing water, building schools and hospitals. Maybe our boys could be spending more time making friends than catching bullets and shrapnel.

In trying to get a handle on the veracity of the above, I came across Argghhh!. Argghhh! has it posted as well. Now there is an interesting blog. I'm making a link...

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