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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Krowbar who wrote (473690)10/9/2003 3:29:07 PM
From: JakeStraw  Respond to of 769670
 
Utah native Korologos says U.S. must stay in Iraq

He says Baghdad is a bustling city with many new freedoms
By Lee Davidson
Deseret Morning News

WASHINGTON — Native Utah Tom Korologos, one of the top overseers of Iraqi reconstruction, says one sure way exists for America to lose everything there: leave.
"Staying there does not assume success. Leaving early guarantees failure," he testified Wednesday to the House Government Reform Committee.
Korologos is one of three senior counselors to ambassador L. Paul Bremer, head of Iraqi reconstruction efforts. He urged the committee to stand behind reconstruction and said more progress is being made than is reported in the U.S. press.
"Our lament comes from the fact that there are good things happening and very few Americans know anything about them. The reporting of these accomplishments, unfortunately, takes a back seat to the police-blotter type of journalism which fills the front pages," listing ongoing U.S. casualties, he said.
So Korologos — a former Salt Lake newspaperman and a longtime Washington lobbyist — provided a long list of U.S. accomplishments there and said continuing them is vital to ensure overall success of the U.S. mission in Iraq.
"Baghdad is not a war-ravaged city. Baghdad is a hustling and bustling city where you can buy everything on the streets from air conditioners to refrigerators to satellite dishes to shoes," he said.
"When I first arrived there, we had 9-mile-long gasoline lines. Today, we have traffic jams. We love traffic jams because they mean the gasoline is flowing and people are moving about," Korologos said.
"Schools reopened in Iraq last week. We refurbished 1,000 schools," he said. "We have prepared and are distributing 5 million new math and science textbooks minus Saddam's ideology."
He added, "Saddam budgeted $13 million for health care in 2002. It came to about 50 cents per person. We have allocated $210 million, a 3,200 percent increase. On April 9, there were only 30 percent of the hospitals running. Today, all 240 around the country are open."
Korologos added that "independent voices are being heard for the first time in 40 years," with 200 newspapers now operating plus 27 TV stations and 26 radio stations.
"The Central Bank is now open, providing loans and conducting commerce. Plus we are distributing a new currency to the Iraqis within the next two weeks," he said.
"Oil is pumping. We are at about 1.7 million barrels a day and we hope to get back to prewar levels around 3 million. We plan to generate $2.5 billion in revenue by the end of the year, and we are shooting for $12.5 billion by the end of next year," he said.
Besides such projects, Korologos said advances in the country can be seen by contrasting the mass graves — filled with many of the 1.3 million people missing during Saddam Hussein's reign — with new activities that Saddam long banned.
For example, "Foreign investment is poised to come to Iraq. One member of the governing council told me two months ago when Ambassador Bremer first approached the issue that if anybody had even said the words 'foreign investment' under the old regime, he'd have his throat cut," Korologos said.
He added that Iraq "has enjoyed more religious and political freedom in the past four months than in the past 40 years."
Korologos concluded, "What we have in Iraq is a rich country which is temporarily poor. It has oil, it has water, and it has an energetic, smart population. It's not unlike California, as a matter of fact, including problems with the economy and the government."
He said if America stays the course and does not leave before the country is rebuilt, "the entire Middle East hopefully will stand up and take notice and some sanity will come to that part of the world."
Committee Chairman Tom Davis, R-Va., agreed with Korologos. "We need time, patience and most of all, the resolve to finish the job we started. The people of Iraq deserve no less."

deseretnews.com



To: Krowbar who wrote (473690)10/9/2003 3:30:19 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Respond to of 769670
 
Delbie in view of the fact the war tooks two weeks do you agree with this idiot identification event cue statement.

"Mr Rumsfeld's Iraq campaign plan was fatally flawed from the start. He underestimated the number of troops required and was unable to halt Iraq's descent into post-Saddam, post-sanctions chaos. His appointment of Jay Garner as Iraq's overseer was a disaster, symptomatic of a deeper, astonishing failure to grasp the sheer scale of the reconstruction challenge."



To: Krowbar who wrote (473690)10/9/2003 3:35:38 PM
From: PROLIFE  Respond to of 769670
 
So why don't you attack Saudi Arabia, Dilweed?
Who is stopping you?



To: Krowbar who wrote (473690)10/9/2003 3:57:48 PM
From: Selectric II  Respond to of 769670
 
The Guardian? That's the rag that doesn't know the difference between Iraq and Kuwait. LOL.