Showing posts with label Projects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Projects. Show all posts

May 3, 2009

Babil Province reconstruction projects.

This is from the MNF-I website and is a project supported by our PRT.

Renovated Vocational Center Increases Job Training in Babil Province
Saturday, 02 May 2009


BABIL — Community leaders, media and Coalition representatives recently gathered here for the grand opening of the newly renovated $5.4 million Iskandariyah Vocational Technology Center.

Dr. Reyad Hassan, executive general manager of the Iraqi Ministry of Labor, officiated the grand opening with the assistance of newly-elected Babil provincial leaders.

The Vocational Center and Industrial Complex, located 25 miles south of Baghdad, was once the industrial jewel of north Babil province, boasting such facilities as the State Company for Automotive Industries (SCAI), the State Company for Mechanical Industries (SCMI) and Hateen munitions.

During April 2003 all these facilities were ransacked and torched by looters, leaving behind burned out shells of what had been home to 25,000 employees.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers oversaw the Center’s upgrade, utilizing Iraqi contractors. The three-phase project included renovating seven dorms, a classroom building, an auditorium and mechanical shop. The Iraqi crew, consisting of 200 local workers, finished the project three months ahead of schedule. Of those workers, 50 were recent graduates of the center.

When the Center’s renovations began in 2007, the school was offering a limited curriculum for an enrollment of 30 students. This year the center is expected to train and house 4,000 students in a variety of occupational specialties including hair dressing, sewing, administration, clerical, computer maintenance, masonry, electrical, carpentry, welding, computers, and auto mechanics.

“The renovation project became a reality because of the partnership between city and provincial government leaders, Coalition forces, the Babil PRT, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, and the Iraqi construction crews, along with unwavering support from the local community,” said Col. Jack Drolet, district commander of USACE’s Gulf Region South district, at the grand opening. “The young men and women who come to this Vocational Center will learn skills, laying a foundation for future prosperity. We’re honored to be part of this effort.”

Many look to the Center’s renovation as the first step to improving the local economy. According to Pradeep Patnaik, Babil PRT’s senior economic advisor, the Center “is critical in our efforts to attract foreign investment to Babil province.”
Because the center is able to provide needed training, more than five international firms are considering manufacturing contracts with SCAI and SCMI industries, Patnaik added.

Currently SCAI is building prefabricated housing units, oil refineries, buses, construction equipment, greenhouses, and much more. “We are working with local and international businesses so that there will be enough work for everyone,” Patnaik said. (By Alicia Embrey, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers)

January 9, 2009

Babylon Gets US Funding

The Famous Lion of Babylon. It is not actually indigenous, but . . .

There are many such reliefs of dragons and lions on the ancient walls of the procession way which passed through the Ishtar Gate.

Below is the text of a Bloomberg News article by Patrick Cole, dated January 8. It concerns efforts by the State Department, working through the World Monuments Fund, to help Iraq preserve the ancient city of Babylon, located just two miles away from our PRT. We will be hosting visits in 2009 by officials from the World Monuments Fund and also from UNESCO, which is the entity that has the authority to designate a place a world heritage site. With that often comes UN funding for preservation.

All of this is important to many Iraqi officials who see toursim in the future as an important part of the areas economic development.

It is not hard, of course, to imagine how many people around the world would like to be able to visit one city and see the Tower of Babil, the ruins of Nebudchanezer's palace, including the hanging gardens, the famous procession which passed through Ishtar's Gate (now in a Berlin Museum) and other ancient venues, such as Abraham's home, and the tomb of the Prophet Ezekiel.

Babylon Is Targeted in Project of World Monuments Fund and Iraq

By Patrick Cole

Jan. 8 (Bloomberg) -- The World Monuments Fund is launching a project with Iraq to preserve the ancient city of Babylon, where King Nebuchadnezzar II (630-562 B.C.) built his hanging gardens, one of the Seven Wonders of the World.

The New York-based nonprofit group, which protects architectural and cultural sites, will work with Iraq’s State Board of Antiquities and Heritage to develop a master plan to promote conservation and tourism in the city, located about 55 miles (90 kilometers) south of Baghdad on the east bank of the Euphrates.

“Future tourism will be one of the tools for economic development in Iraq, and we fear that Babylon could be eaten up by unmanaged development like the paving of roads,” World Monuments President Bonnie Burnham said in a phone interview. “The city has never been mapped, and there have been very dramatic changes to it.”

The U.S. Department of State has given the fund about $700,000 for the project, called “The Future of Babylon,” Holly Evarts, the fund’s spokeswoman, said in a phone interview. The organization is seeking more funding from other sources, she said.

“Iraqi heritage belongs to all humanity,” Samir Sumaida’ie, Iraq’s ambassador to the U.S., said in a statement. “In the immense task of caring for its world heritage, Iraq welcomes help from and collaborations with the international preservation community.”

The ancient city, founded around the 18th century B.C., has sustained damage in recent years from Saddam Hussein’s efforts to make it a tourist attraction, from looting after the U.S.-led invasion in 2003 and from being used as a military base during the Iraq War.

Second Initiative

The World Monuments Fund’s project marks the second initiative this decade to aid Babylon. In October 2003, the fund partnered with the Getty Conservation Institute to set up the Iraq Cultural Heritage Conservation Initiative to help preserve museums, archeological and historical sites in Iraq.

Founded in 1965, the fund has worked to preserve about 500 historical sites in some 90 countries around the world, ranging from St. Paul’s Cathedral in London to Route 66, an east-west highway in the U.S. The fund placed the nation of Iraq on its list of 100 most endangered sites in 2006 and 2008.

Others sites in Iraq targeted for restoration by the fund include the ancient region of Sumer and sites associated with the Babylonian, Assyrian and Parthian cultures.

This year the fund will begin teaching board of antiquities specialists in Iraq modern techniques of site evaluation and restoration. It also wants to develop a national database for mapping and managing thousands of cultural heritage sites in that nation.

December 21, 2008

Below is an informative article published today that focuses on agriculture in Babil and quotes one of the PRT's Agriculture Advisors, Patrick Broyles.

Iraqi farmers are back in business, and Iraqis love local produce (McClatchy, Adam Ashton, Dec 20)

BABIL PROVINCE, Iraq — Mansour Abdul Khadim's mix of winter crops gives every impression of abundance, despite the double threat of drought and violence that has plagued Iraqi agriculture since Saddam Hussein's fall in 2003.

Rows of red potatoes and green beans grow together in one lot. Winter wheat sprouts in adjacent fields. Tomatoes for the spring already are incubating in mounds of fertilizer.

Khadim is optimistic scanning the fields, not least because the days of government mandates for wheat production appear to have ended. He thinks that will give him more opportunities to earn extra money by selling more-valuable vegetables.

"I am not restrained by any government condition. I am free to use the land the way I want it," said Khadim, 37, whose family has farmed in this rural area south of Baghdad for decades.

Khadim's taking advantage of a drop in violence to rebuild decrepit canals and boost his farm's production as part of a 700-member agricultural cooperative. He's part of a trend that many hope will increase across the country, bolster employment and restore Iraq's status as an historic breadbasket for the Middle East.

As Khadim's farm shows, Babil Province - known not long ago as a part of the "Triangle of Death" - could be a sort of salad bowl for Iraq if the peace holds and farmers are able to invest in their land.

"They could turn Babil Province into an agricultural center like the Fresno valley," said Patrick Broyles, a U.S. Department of Agriculture adviser from Emporia, Kan., who is working in the region around Khadim's farm.

That prospect is about a decade off in the best of circumstances, said several American agricultural experts who have worked in the country since 2003. They're working to support the agricultural sector because it's a vital employer, accounting for as much as a quarter of jobs in Iraq.

The country benefits from a 10-month growing season, good soil and its two rivers, which have supported farming in Iraq for thousands of years — the Tigris and Euphrates.

"The basic system for agriculture is there; it's just in shambles" said Joseph King, a project leader for studies on Iraqi farming conducted by Texas A&M University's Borlaug Institute for International Agriculture

The biggest obstacles that could keep Iraq importing its food well into the future include:

_ A shortage of electricity and fuel that blocks farmers from pumping water out of wells.

_ Poor systems to deliver water from the Euphrates and Tigris rivers to farms. Khadim's area is served by one main canal constructed by the British in the 1930s, and another, in poor condition, that was built about 30 years ago by a Turkish company. Both need continual maintenance, Khadim said.

_ Depleted seed and livestock supplies that were hindered first by the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s and then by United Nations sanctions that followed Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait through the following decade. "Basically with every crop grown in Iraq, there are better varieties that could be grown," Broyles said.

_Inefficient drainage on many farms that allows salt to build up over time, ruining soil.

_A shortage of border security agents to prevent Syrian, Iranian or Turkish imports from flooding Iraqi markets and jeopardizing the health of Iraqi crops.

Those challenges are so severe that U.S. and Iraqi officials are chipping away at them instead of tackling them whole.

"In six months, we're not going to change that," said Edwin Price, director of the Borlaug Institute. "In three years we're not going to change it."

A team from Price's institute studied agriculture in Iraq's provinces over the past year, crafting detailed recommendations for each.

It's focusing on educating farmers more than calling for immediate changes in how Iraqis manage their agricultural sector. One of its projects launched 4-H clubs in southern Babil province, where students chose to work together on raising poultry.

The State Department has a similar strategy. It's investing in Iraq's agricultural extension program to spread knowledge about the latest farming techniques.

"The proof to me will be when everyone is happy with respect to ag income," said a U.S. embassy official who spoke on condition that he not be identified. "Ultimately the goal is to provide enough income so people won't be shooting at each other, or at us."

Price noted a regional demand for certain Iraqi exports - dates, eggplants, cucumbers and okra. He has encouraged farmers to focus on those crops, which can earn them higher incomes - and use less water - than cereal grains. Iraqi lamb is considered a delicacy, too.

Iraqis have a pent up demand for locally grown food. Many Iraqis believe their products simply taste better than their counterparts from Syria and Iran.

"The quality of the ag produce is the best in all the Middle East," said Fuad Husseian, a Kurdish man who is working with Broyles on a contract with the State Department in Babil province.

But Iraqi produce is hard to find in the fruit and vegetable markets that dot Baghdad's streets. Most of the cornucopia of pomegranates, tangerines, cauliflower, tomatoes, cucumbers and eggplants at the markets comes from Syria, sellers said.

"Every time retail sellers come to buy from us, the first question they ask is 'Do you have local product,'" said Qusay Abbas Ahmed, 30, a wholesaler in the town of Abu Ghraib west of Baghdad. "After we say no, they start looking around. They prefer it because the Iraqi product tastes better and is fresher, and to tell you the truth, one enjoys eating the product of his own country," Ahmed said.

Wholesalers say they can't get products from Iraqi farmers, who they say have been held back primarily by the electricity shortage. They said it was easier to get Iraqi food during the U.N. sanctions because so few imports were allowed across the border.

Jassim Abu Atheer, 42, owns a wholesale stand in Abu Ghraib and has fruit orchards in the Diyala province east of Baghdad. He said Iraq's Ministry of Agriculture should restore subsidies for fuel and fertilizer to help farmers to pre-war levels. Those subsidies remain, though to a lesser degree.

"Now we are supported with nothing, no seeds, no fertilizers," he said. "If the farmer was to buy what he needed from the market it would be more expensive than the goods that are being imported."

Bloody sectarian violence didn't help, either. The wholesale market in Abu Ghraib was unreachable for some of its customers in 2006 and 2007 because of road closures, the wholesalers said.

Kadhim's province suffered severely during that period, too. Insurgents threatened to kill his parents if they didn't leave their land.

An al Qaida in Iraq cell took up positions along a primary canal, threatening to shoot anyone who tried to fix its leaks. Kadhim and others worked with tribes and the American military to eliminate those cells.

A flourishing agricultural sector could be a key to keeping those cells from returning, said Sayeed Sabaa, a leader of a farming committee on Babil's district council.

He attended a ceremony this week to mark the opening of the U.S.-funded $3.2 million "Central Euphrates Farmers Market," a project that's expected to make it easier for Babil farmers to sell their products.

"We hope to implement this and have people to work here to stabilize the security situation," Sabaa said.

(McClatchy special correspondent Sahar Issa contributed to this report. Ashton reports for the Modesto (Calif.) Bee)

November 9, 2008

Ribbon Cutting in Musayib

Below is a release by MNC-I on the November 5 ribbon cutting that I participated in to celebrate the renovation of the District Council building. One year ago there were tanks in the streets of Musayib. Today you can stroll the streets.

Musayyib opens $85K city hall

FORWARD OPERATING BASE ISKAN, Iraq – Provincial and local government representatives, Iraqi Security Forces and Coalition forces celebrated the grand opening of the renovated Musayyib City Hall Nov. 5.

“We worked hard to get this project done … with the help from the Iraqi Security Forces, Coalition forces, and all of you here today, you have all come together to make this project possible,” said Jabber, council chairman.

The Iraqi Commander Emergency Response Program funded the $85,000 project.

The ceremony opened with versus from the Quran followed by speeches from Jabber, Mayor Ali, Ken Hillas of the Provincial Reconstruction Team and the assistant governor.

“For a local government to work well, a community must believe in its future and in the capacity and determination of its citizens to participate in self rule,” said Hillas. “Democracy is not easy … the strength and effectiveness of the democratic government that this structure houses rests with you, the people of Musayyib. I am sure you will take advantage of its privileges and not allow that to slip away.

“The biggest danger is always apathy and indifference.” Hillas said.
“If your community is to be well and wisely governed, the citizens must be involved. Every woman and man has duties as well as rights in a democracy.”

The renovated city hall reflects the transformation of the city of Musayyib.

“The building has a new look, and now it’s more qualified for the members to work better and get our people in Musayyib all kinds of help,” said Ali.

The grand opening shows how far the local government and security forces have come over the past year.

“God willing, it will inspire others to continue striving to build a better community … and may it be a lasting monument for the faith in the future and the power of democracy,” said Hillas. “I want you to know that you are not alone in this endeavor. The U.S. government…is proud to support the efforts of the government of Iraq in meeting the essential needs of the Iraqi people. You may be assured that our partnership will continue as we build on the gains achieved over the last year.”


October 6, 2008

Team Babylonians.



Today I will run a 5km race for the cure to raise money for combating breast cancer in partnership with people in Denver, whence one of our staff hails.

September 25, 2008

Rebuilding Iraq Blog.

SECURITY IMPROVEMENTS PALPABLE BUT FRAGILE

I arrived in Al-Hillah in the beginning of March 2008, and the changes since then have been notable. The gains in security during that time are reflected in an improved quality of life for the province's citizens. Babil -- the most populous (1.6 million) province in the south central region -- is the keystone for the south central region. The U.S. maintains a Regional Embassy Office (REO ) in Al-Hillah, one of four in Iraq (together with Basrah, Kirkuk and Erbil). Babil is largely located between the Tirgris and Euphrates and has been Iraq's breadbasket as well as an industrial center. The northern part of the province lies within the so-called "Triangle of Death," south of Baghdad. This was a Sunni area lying on the Sunni/Shia fault line and the stage in which active fighting was still taking place until early 2008. An embedded sister PRT is paired with U.S. forces in northern Babil, where the changes of the last 10 months have probably been most starkly visible. A place like Jurf as Sakr, a Sunni majority town in northern Babil, was the scene of terrible destruction one year ago. I walked down the main street early this summer and was able to visit stores and talk to shopkeepers, escorted by only two soldiers at a distance.
Read the rest of my report as well as other PRT reports written by colleagues at RealClearWorld.

A view of some of the Babylonian Ruins, which have not been excavated, or maintained, for many years long before 2003.

September 1, 2008

Newspaper article that describes PRT's work.

Can't link this article to the Bangor Daily News, so am reproducing the article below, because it does explain what a PRT does.

Diplomat hopeful, sees Iraqi progress
Wednesday, August 20, 2008 - Bangor Daily News



Kenneth Hillas, the Provincial Reconstruction Team leader in the Babil Province in Iraq, joined Iraqi leaders during an Earth Day date palm tree planting ceremony earlier this year in the city of Al Hillah where he is based. Hillas, a 1976 graduate of the University of Maine, is working with the PRT to rebuild the physical and political infrastructure in the province which is located just south of Baghdad. (Photo courtesy of Kenneth Hillas)

(Photo courtesy of Kenneth Hillas)

The situation in Iraq has improved in the past several months, according to a career diplomat with ties to Maine.

If that trend continues, it could signal the start of a reduction in the U.S. presence in that country, said Kenneth Hillas, the team leader of the Provincial Reconstruction Team serving in Babil province located between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers just south of Baghdad.

Hillas, 55, is a 1976 graduate of the University of Maine and serves on the board of the newly created School of Policy and International Affairs at the university. He also owns a home in Penobscot, although his family is living in Alexandria, Va.

Hillas joined the State Department in 1980. He is a senior foreign service officer and served as deputy chief of mission in Prague, Czechoslovakia, and in Warsaw, Poland, until this spring when he volunteered to join the PRT effort in Babil.

"It looked like a valuable effort," Hillas said Monday in a telephone call from Al Hillah, where he is stationed. "I thought it would be rewarding professionally and personally; and when a friend in the State Department asked me about it, I decided to do it."

Hillas completed a four-month temporary tour of duty in Babil this summer and returned recently to begin a one-year tour there.

PRTs are special units that work in conjunction with Iraqi leaders on security and reconstruction efforts in Iraq. While U.S. military units concentrate on security issues, Hillas works mainly with political leaders on a variety of projects that affect the lives of the residents of the province.

The PRT doesn’t actually do the construction work, although the military units often work on some projects. The team members are specialists in different areas and assist Iraqi leaders as they work through the process.

"We help coordinate, plan and execute the projects," Hillas said.

The projects are as varied as the needs of the people: fish stocks for the local aquaculture industry; hospitals and equipment; a cold storage facility for local farmers; and facilities to provide potable water to about a half-million people in the province.

They’ve also helped to build about 20 schools in the region.

"Saddam Hussein took all of the teachers out of the schools and put them in the army during the 1980s and the war with Iran," he said. "The education system fell apart."

The literacy rate dropped from 65 percent in 1980 — two years after Saddam took power — to 45 percent in 2001, Hillas said. Since Saddam was ousted, more teachers are being trained and the literacy rate is beginning to improve, he said.

The Iraqis — not U.S. taxpayers — are now paying the bills for much of the reconstruction work, according to Hillas. With demand for oil high and the price of oil high, the Iraqis don’t lack for money, he said.

"They have enough money," he said. "It’s the ability to get projects conceived and generated, implemented and executed where they need experience. We’re trying to help them do that."

Security is an issue, and Hillas said the situation is improving as the country becomes more stable. Violence is down, although he stressed that there are still dangers from suicide bombers and from the improvised weapons that insurgents employ. Suicide bombings, though rare occurrences, still happen. But the northern part of the province, once included in the so-called "triangle of death," has become much safer, Hillas said.

"You couldn’t fly up there in a helicopter without getting shot at," he said. "I was there recently and I walked down the main street with just two soldiers with me. We’ve worked with the tribal sheiks there and the situation is dramatically improved. The rest of the province is gradually getting better."

The U.S. troop surge late last year, has helped, Hillas said, but it is not the only factor in the improvements on the ground.

"The surge was one of the things, but it’s not the only thing. The Iraqi security forces are improving in their capability and their intelligence gathering."

The U.S. troops no longer work in larger units, he said, but are now deployed in smaller numbers out in small camps where they are able to provide security for smaller towns and villages.

The economy is better — boosted by the demand for oil — and the political system is more stable as Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has solidified his position. The country is poised for another election late this year or early next year, which could be a true indication of how the country is progressing.

Although the elections are being overseen by the United Nations Assistance Mission in Iraq, part of Hillas’ job has been to work with local leaders to prepare for the elections. The Sunni population — which largely boycotted the last election — are beginning to rejoin the political process, which is a positive sign, he said.

The Sunnis, although a minority in Iraq, held power during Saddam Hussein’s reign. Diplomatic efforts are slowly encouraging them to become involved again.

"They are starting to realize that we are not there to help the Shia exclude them from power," he said.

Hillas also said that efforts are under way to talk with supporters of Muqtada al-Sadr, the powerful Shiite cleric who has opposed the coalition occupation of Iraq, and to encourage them to become involved in the country’s political system. Those discussions are delicate and can be deadly for Iraqis who cooperate with U.S. efforts, he said.

"It is dangerous for them," he said. "There are political risks and they have to be concerned for their personal safety. There are still extremists who are willing to kill people who are willing to talk to Americans."

Most Iraqis seem to be friendly toward the Americans and believe that they are not trying to establish a colonial occupation force in the country, Hillas said.

"Every Iraqi I talk to says the same thing: ‘Don’t leave us high and dry, not until the job is finished,’" he said. "They don’t want us to stay forever, but they realize that we’re not at the point where we can pick up and leave."

It won’t happen all at once, he said, and it will be important to get the transition process right, he said.

"I really think that it won’t be a long time before that day comes," he said.

August 29, 2008

Changes for the Better Raise Hopes

Well, it's my first entry since arriving back in Hillah two weeks ago. It is surprising that during my almost two months away there have been noticeable changes -- and for the better. There are lots of small changes, but collectively they make for a different picture.

People now are out on the streets at 9 or 10 at night. That contrasts with the situation in the spring: when the sun went down, people went home. Women (albeit a small minority) walk in public without headscarves for the first time in over two years. Young people play pop music loudly outdoors, and less often does one hear religious music. Several new restaurants opened in Hillah this summer.

The local population talks about how they feel more relaxed. While some of the Special Groups fled or were broken up in the province last spring, their capabilities have not been eliminated and the terrorist threat remains. Just over a week ago a female suicide bomber in the northern part of the province killed a dozen persons in Iskandariyah. In June a car bomb went off in front of a Hillah cafe.

The big question now is whether the political system will be able to renew itself at the provincial level by holding elections. This would allow the Sunnis, who are a quarter of the provinces population concentrated in the northern part of the province, to be reintegrated in the political process. The term for the provincial council is to lapse shortly, but the Council of Representatives (parliament) has yet to pass a needed election law. Actually the COR passed a law but it was vetoed by the Presidential Council with the Kurds wanting to link the election law to a resolution of the status of Kirkuk, which Kurds want included in their region. It's a very contentious issue, but there is a wide-spread hope that the COR will pass the law again in early September and it will enter into force. That would allow elections by the end of the year or January.

In what I am told was a coincidence, the Provincial Council announced a boycott of the PRT just a day before my return. I have had fun razzing the PC Chairman and others about this, and am hopeful that the ostensible issue (which isn't for this forum) will get resolved soon.

In an effort to incentivize the PC to lift the boycott, we have informed the PC members that the boycott will probably impede our ability to go forward with numerous projects. The underlying political dynamic, however, is the competition among some political parties, which have lost popularity over the last few years, to show themselves to be Iraqi nationalist -- which in itself is good in the sense that it shows they are thinking in national and not sectarian terms. Unfortunately, the US is used as a foil by some to show their nationalist credentials. Some of the persons who go on the radio to discuss the boycott, are some of our best interlocutors in private. It will take adjustments on both sides (Iraqi and American) to adapt to new roles and expectations as we go through a transition process in which the Coalition role changes and becomes more limited as the Iraqis take on increased responsibilities in all areas, not just security.

Changing topics, yesterday I received my second text message in Arabic and I excitedly took it to my interpreter to translate. Was it a message from the Governor? From the PC Chair? No, it was a mass text message to all cell phone users from the Ministry of Health warning that August is a particularly dangerous month for cholera and urging that I visit the local health clinic.

Speaking of health and medicine, there was a small piece on US TV the other evening about medihoney, a new treatment for burns. It is something I had never heard about until I came to Iraq. One of the military bases in Babil Province has for months run a burn clinic on its doorstep to treat Iraqi burn victims with medihoney. Medihoney derives from a plant in New Zealand and has lots of antioxidants and speeds healing. It looks and smells like honey. Burn victims have been coming from all over Iraq to get treatment, earning the base tremendous good will. They are now working on making it an Iraqi-run program.

Of course, it's hot this time of year- around 120F during the day, but this has been a somewhat mild August by Iraqi standards. We haven't gone over 130F for two weeks, which is just fine with me. I had decided to enroll in the 5K run on Sunday at 6:30am (which laps around our compound), but I pulled a calf muscle on the tread mill this evening and am now hobbling around like an old enfeebled man. I would have been the second oldest to run in the race, but now I'll just watch.

Lots of planning has begun for the new military deployments in the coming months, which will impact on the PRTs, some of which are embedded in brigade headquarters. Fewer military here will make it harder to have more PRT engagement, since we have depended on the military for transportation and security in some locations. It seems that Bob Gates has become one of the strongest advocates for increasing the State Department's budget to allow it to fill the more than one thousand vacancies in already authorized positions. Despite being 10% below world-wide authorized levels, the Foreign Service has filled all the positions in Iraq that will come open in the summer of 2009. Last Fall that process had still not filled all summer 2008 vacancies. Remember the famous Town Hall meeting? What a changed situation this year! Part of the reason is that the Dept this year started the bidding season earlier for Iraq positions, and it is now linking Iraq assignments to an onward assignment. Officers now bidding will also be told about their post-Iraq assignment, rather than having to start bidding after arriving here.

Regards from sunny, sizzling southern Iraq where things are getting better and tomorrow is sure to bring change.

June 3, 2008

Iraq reconstruction.

Barbara suggests to check out The Task Force Marne Transformation Manual for some interesting before-and-after pictures on reconstruction projects in Iraq.



April 2, 2008

Bombings, Babylon and the Bloody Sands.

It has been busy the last two weeks, and I had forgotten that I wrote much of this journal entry on March 13, the day before the first rocket attack on our compound in several months. Another occurred on March 17 and then again -- with more accuracy -- on March 28. We were very fortunate that no one was killed or injured. I have edited and updated the entry.

On March 20 I had the chance to participate in festivities marking Babil's designation as Iraq's cultural capital. It was one of the few "representational" activities in which I have had to engage. PM Maliki was there, and he gave a rather inspiring speech about the need to respect the rights of fellow citizens and about the change that has and is taking place in Iraq's political culture. One phrase -- about each person's freedom being tied to that of his neighbor -- could have come out of a US civics lesson. Although the festivities took place next to the Babylonian ruins -- the most important part of which (the Ishtar Gate) can be found in Berlin -- I did not have a chance to tour the ruins. Embarrassingly, my personal security detail rivaled that of the PM. I learned with surprise from some of the staff that TV viewers that evening saw a dark suited, tall, bearded man exchanging greetings with PM Maliki and assumed that it was . . . . a visiting Iranian official. As an American diplomat, I would prefer to be mistaken for something else.

It is quite impossible for PRT members to move around in a low profile fashion. We always move in a convoy of several vehicles with lots of guns and gunners. There is no alternative, given the present situation, but it is a sore point for the local population.

Another interesting site only a few minutes drive away is Abraham's birthplace, Borsippa. Together with Kish, another ancient ruin site, the tourism potential for Babil Province is not small, if the security situation were to improve significantly. I hope to have a chance to visit these two spots in the coming weeks, in shallah. The Governor last week signed MOUs with some Australian firms to build hotels and housing in Hillah. He wants to develop the tourism trade and I give him credit for thinking ahead. We are working with him to train staff on tourism and investment promotion activities. Not unsimilar to the kind of activity that took place in Eastern/Central Europe right after the fall of communism.

I have met often with Governor Salam -- three times in my first two days for a variety of reasons. He lived for many years in Iran and has an Iranian wife, in addition to his Iraqi wife. We stay in close touch; he is a "hands-on" Governor. All the activity in the south, including Babil, has limited our ability to move around, so the PRT does more work nowadays by phone. Today's announcement by Moqtada al-Sadr, the leader of an opposition Shia poliitical movement (with its own militia, Jaysh al-Mahdi), may open the door to resolution of the ongoing violence in the southern part of the country, most notably in Basrah but also in Baghdad. Today there was a memorial service for one of the Americans who was killed last week in a rocket attack on the IZ (International Zone).

Babil sits astride the main north-south transportation artery along which goods are moved by truck from Kuwait to Baghdad. Babil was under a curfew for the last few days, but that was lifted today -- to the great relief of our local employees. They are a great group and very dedicated. These folks risk their lives to work for the USG.

We have had a few dust storms in the last two weeks. After each, dust coats everything in the office. It makes no difference if your windows are closed. This stuff is so fine it seems to get through anyway. Its almost like a fog and you can taste it in the air.

March 20, 2008

Anglers delight!

Fish farming in Babil?

Today we threw on our armor vests and drove off to visit the Euphrates Fish Farm (EFF, as it is known here), which is the site of a big multi-million dollar project to expand carp production.


Carp, of course, seem to be beloved by all the world except by North Americans, who still consider the fish trash.

Photo by Field and Stream

The project is moving along and at the end of the day Iraq will soon have several million more carp to eat.

Some will be exported down to Diwaniyah, but the Poles will be gone by the time that the carp are big enough to be eaten. (Both Poles and Czechs love their carp. It is their Christmas specialty.)

Did you know, for example, that carp scales are like trees? The EFF Director yanked one scale off a pregnant female -- don't tell PETA -- and showed me five rings for five years.

I now know way more about carp than I thought was possible!