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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: cnyndwllr who wrote (131313)5/4/2004 4:25:39 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 281500
 
WHAT AMERICA DOES WITH ITS HEGEMONY WATCH:
Oxblog

This via email from Baghdad (and just in the off chance you won't be hearing about it on the evening news):
A new multipurpose recreation facility has opened in the Al Dura neighborhood, benefiting thousands of residents in Baghdad's Al Rashid district.

The Al Dura Sports Complex includes a soccer field with bleachers, basketball court, a place for volleyball and a playground with several types of exercise equipment. The area was a vacant lot full of trash when the project started. It is an example of renovating and improving areas for public recreation called for by Ambassador Bremer in his Baghdad Beautiful initiative.

This success is the result of neighborhood District Advisory Council (DAC) leaders working together with the US Army First Cavalry Division to determine a project which would most help the area.

The ribbon cutting ceremony opening the facility was led by Sami Ahmed Sharif, the Al Rashid DAC Chairman, and Colonel Stephen Lanza of the US Army First Cavalry Division. Also in attendance were Baghdad City Councilman Sabin Radhi Zubun and US Army Brigadier General Jeffrey Hammond. Over 500 local residents, mostly children and their parents, attended the ceremony

Councilman Saba' Radhi Zubun said, "This will benefit many families in my district. For example, 60 soccer teams will play here in a tournament soon. And there are five schools with over 1,000 children each who can use this facility."

The children liked it as well. A twelve year old named Jafa said, "This is a very good idea. I play soccer, and my brother is on the field right now playing for the Iraqi Police Service team." His friend Mustafa added, "Thank you, American Army!" A soccer game was played between the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps (ICDC) and the Iraqi Police Service (IPS). IPS was victorious by a score of 2 to



To: cnyndwllr who wrote (131313)5/4/2004 4:27:32 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 281500
 
What has gone right in Iraq

Jeff Jacoby
April 2, 2004
townhall.com

With all the news coming out of the Middle East, here is a detail you might have missed: A few weeks ago, the United Nations shut down the Ashrafi refugee camp in southwestern Iran. For years Ashrafi had been the largest facility in the world housing displaced Iraqis, tens of thousands of whom had been driven from their homes by Saddam Hussein's brutality. But with Saddam behind bars and his Baathist dictatorship crushed, Iraqi exiles have been flocking home. By mid-February the camp had literally emptied out. Now, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees reports, "nothing remains of Ashrafi but rubble and a few stones."

Refugees surging to Iraq? That isn't what the antiwar
legions told us would happen if George Bush made good on
his vow to end Saddam's reign of terror. Over and over
they warned that a US invasion would trigger a
humanitarian cataclysm, including a flood of refugees from
Iraq. This, for instance, was Martin Sheen at a Los
Angeles news conference a month before the war began:

"As the dogs of war slouch towards Baghdad, we need to be
reminded that as many as 2 million refugees could become a
reality, as well as half a million fatalities."

Writing on the left-wing website AlterNet last March,
senior editor Tai Moses dreaded the coming of a war that
"could create more than a million refugees in Iraq and
neighboring countries."

The BBC, citing a "confidential" UN document, predicted
that up to 500,000 Iraqis would be seriously injured
during the first phase of an American attack, while 1
million would flee the country and 2 million more would be
internally displaced -- all compounded by an "outbreak of
diseases in epidemic if not pandemic proportions."

The Organization of the Islamic Conference foresaw
the "displacement of hundreds of thousands of refugees,"
plus "total destruction and a humanitarian tragedy whose
scale cannot be predicted."

Wrong, every one of them, along with all the other
doomsayers, Bush-haters, "Not In Our Name" fanatics, and
sundry "peace" activists who flooded the streets and the
airwaves to warn of onrushing disaster. How many have had
the integrity to admit that their visions of catastrophe
were wildly off the mark? Or that if they had gotten their
way, the foremost killer of Muslims alive today -- Saddam -
- would still be torturing children before their parents'
eyes?

Instead they chant, "Bush lied, people died," and seize on
every setback in Iraq as proof that they were right all
along.

But they were wrong all along. Operation Iraqi Freedom
stands as one of the great humanitarian achievements of
modern times. For all the Bush administration's mistakes
and miscalculations, for all the monumental challenges
that remain, Iraq is vastly better off today than it was
before the war.

And the Iraqi people know it.

In a nationwide survey conducted for ABC and the BBC by Britain's Oxford Research International, 56 percent of Iraqis say their lives are better now than before the war; only 19 percent say things are worse. Asked how things are going for them personally, seven out of 10 Iraqis say that life is good. Because of "Bush's war," Iraqis today brim with optimism. Fully 71 percent expect their lives to be even better a year from now; less than 7 percent say they'll be worse. Iraq today may just be the most upbeat, forward-looking country in the Arab world.

With hard work and a little luck, it may soon be the best governed as well. The interim constitution approved by the Iraqi Governing Council last month protects freedom of speech and assembly, guarantees the right to privacy, ensures equality for women, and subordinates the military to civilian control. It is, hands down, the most progressive constitution in the Arab Middle East.

Nearly a year after the fall of Baghdad, Iraq is hugely improved. Unemployment has been cut in half. Wages are climbing. The devastated southern marshlands are being restored. More Iraqis own cars and telephones than before Saddam was ousted. Some 2,500 schools have been rehabbed by the US-headed coalition. Spending on health care has soared thirtyfold, and millions of Iraqi children have been vaccinated. Iraqi athletes, no longer terrorized by Saddam's sadistic son Uday, are training for the summer Olympics in Greece.

Above all, Iraq's people are free. The horror and cruelty
of the Saddam era are gone forever. In the 12 months since
the American and British troops arrived, not one body has
been added to a secret mass grave. Not one woman has been
raped on government orders. Not one dissident has been
mauled to death by trained killer dogs. Not one Kurdish
village has been gassed.

Is everything rosy? Of course not. Could the transition to constitutional democracy still fail? Yes. Do innocent victims continue to die in horrific terror attacks, or at the hands of lynch mobs like the one that dragged the corpses of four Americans through the streets of Falluja this week? They do.

ut none of that changes the bottom line: In the ancient land that America liberated, life is more beautiful and hopeful than it has been in many decades. Bush's foes may loudly deny it, but the refugees streaming homeward know better.

©2004 Boston Globe

townhall.com



To: cnyndwllr who wrote (131313)5/4/2004 4:31:00 AM
From: Sully-  Respond to of 281500
 
Quagmire-Free News: Reservist Contradicts Media's Iraq Coverage

chronwatch.com

Posted by Cinnamon Stillwell
Saturday, May 01, 2004

This open letter from Ray Reynolds, a medic in the Iowa Army National Guard, serving in Iraq, was forwarded to me via e-mail.
<font size=4>
As I head off to Baghdad for the final weeks of my stay in Iraq, I wanted to say thanks to all of you who did not believe the media. They have done a very poor job of covering everything that has happened.<font size=3> I am sorry that I have not been able to visit all of you during my two-week leave back home. And just so you can rest at night knowing something is happening in Iraq that is noteworthy, I thought I would pass this on to you. <font size=4>This is the list of things that has happened in Iraq recently. Please share it with your friends and compare it to the version that your paper/TV is putting out:

* Over 400,000 kids have up-to-date immunizations.

* School attendance is up 80% from levels before the war.

* Over 1,500 schools have been renovated and rid of the weapons stored there so education can occur.

* The port of Um Qasar was renovated so grain can be off-loaded from ships faster.

* The country had its first 2 billion barrel export of oil in August.

* Over 4.5 million people have clean drinking water for the first time ever in Iraq.

* The country now receives two times the electrical power it did before the war.

* 100% of the hospitals are open and fully staffed, compared to 35% before the war.

* Elections are taking place in every major city, and city councils are in place.

* Sewer and water lines are installed in every major city.

* Over 60,000 police are patrolling the streets.

* Over 100,000 Iraqi civil defense police are securing the country.

* Over 80,000 Iraqi soldiers are patrolling the streets side by side with US soldiers.

* Over 400,000 people have telephones for the first time ever.

* Students are taught field sanitation and hand-washing techniques to prevent the spread of germs.

* An interim constitution has been signed.

* Girls are allowed to attend school.

* Textbooks that don't mention Saddam are in the schools for the first time in 30 years.

Don't believe for one second that these people do not want us there.<font size=3> I have met many, many people from Iraq that want us there, and in a bad way. They say they will never see the freedoms we talk about, but they hope their children will. We are doing a good job in Iraq and I challenge anyone, anywhere to dispute me on these facts.

So if you happen to run into John Kerry, be sure to give him my email address and send him to Denison, Iowa. This soldier will set him straight. If you are like me--very disgusted with how this period of rebuilding has been portrayed--e-mail this to a friend and let them know there are good things happening.

Ray Reynolds, SFC
Iowa Army National Guard
234th Signal Battalion