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After a month, U.S. losing credibility in Iraq
Atlanta Journal-Constitution ^ | May 8, 2003 | Larry Kaplow

Posted on 05/10/2003 8:32:42 AM PDT by Chirodoc

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- When Lt. Gen. David McKiernan declared last week that U.S.-led forces were the "absolute authority within Iraq," and that Iraqis should return to work, hardly anybody heard.

Most Baghdadis did not have electricity for television and printed leaflets of the speech were not distributed.

Hanna Kamal, 36, and her colleagues were already trying to return to jobs at the Ministry of Trade. Her workplace had been burned and looted repeatedly since American troops captured Baghdad. She kept going to the charred building, dragging her children along, hoping for American aid or instructions that never came.

"We went for two weeks, standing in the street, and no one paid any attention," said Kamal, who said she owes two months back rent and has no income. She called McKiernan's order "just ink on paper."

Friday marks one month since U.S. Marines and a crowd of Iraqis in downtown Firdos Square triumphantly toppled the statue of Saddam Hussein, signaling the end of the war.

Since then, at least by the measure of Iraqi sentiments, America is losing the peace.

Goodwill toward U.S. troops is eroding quickly. Iraqis look in disappointment at the collapse of law and order and the continued lack of basic services such as electricity, water and telephones.

A month might seem like a short time to rebuild a country and Iraqis still usually greet American troops warmly and with gratitude for toppling Saddam. But they are increasingly angry -- living conditions are improving too slowly in some areas and are worsening every day in many others.

"We like the American troops because they got rid of Saddam, but if it keeps going from bad to worse, we will resist them," said Hussein Abd Zayyed, 22, who confronted U.S. troops guarding the Palestine Hotel in a quest for a job. "Our patience is limited."

Like hundreds of others, Abd Zayyed had filled out a job application a week earlier. Troops accepted it dutifully, apparently unaware that the applications were for jobs with a self-proclaimed mayor who would soon be arrested by the Army for trying to form an illegitimate government.

U.S. officials have admitted to instances of disorganization and that they did not expect the rampant looting and other postwar problems. The force of 12,000 U.S. troops in the capital has failed to provide security and order, so U.S. commanders are calling in 4,000 extra troops.

The spasm of looting that plagued the capital immediately after Saddam's statue fell has settled into a routine. Looters now work with job-like regularity, disassembling buildings often in full view of U.S. troops. Worse, crime is getting more violent each day.

Reliable electricity is still lacking for most in Baghdad. Those who have it get it for just a few hours every few days. As summertime temperatures approach, air conditioners are not running and refrigerating food is difficult.

Public water systems are faltering and health officials said Wednesday that they had found 17 cases of cholera in southern Iraq -- not uncommon for the season, but enough to have doctors worried about the potential for an epidemic amid shortages at hospitals.

There are other problems that could get worse. Many Iraqis saved money and food before the war but are running low on both. They hoarded gasoline but are out now and, with a shortage in production, gas lines of hundreds of cars are now clogging up wide city freeways.

Complaining that they are running out of money and food, looters set out each day in small groups to any of the hundreds of burned buildings in the capital. They dismantle anything that is left -- air conditioning ducts, metal wall and ceiling supports and, if they're lucky, some leftover furniture.

On Wednesday, looters worked doggedly on a police station across an intersection from a post manned by American troops. In another part of the city, troops in Humvees rolled past looters piling their booty onto donkey carts.

Car-jackings -- so unprecedented here that they don't have a word for it yet -- are now so frequent on Palestine Street that some of the few Iraqis who have jobs are walking to work to avoid risking their cars. There are increasing accounts of shootings and robberies. Markets for stolen weapons and cars now operate in plain view.

An American-backed court system began operating this week with Iraqi judges. Though Iraqi police have reported to work, few besides the occasional traffic cop can be seen on the streets. The Iraqi handpicked by the military to run the police quit abruptly.

U.S. officials are trying to regroup. Former State Department official L. Paul Bremer III was appointed Wednesday to outrank Ret. Gen. Jay Garner, who has been heading up the reconstruction effort. Bremer's appointment was apparently meant to smooth over conflicts between the State Department and the Pentagon over the country's political and physical reconstruction.

Garner acknowledged this week that American planners were taken by surprise by the scale of the looting.

Military officials say electric service has been restored to pre-war levels in only nine of 27 main cities. The military also said that water is back to pre-war levels in 14 of 27 cities but as the heat increases, people have been seen cutting open underground water pipes for easy access -- essentially looting water.

Reconstruction planners have acknowledged they came shorthanded and under-equipped. A senior official in Garner's office was not aware that U.S. troops had killed about 13 Iraqis in the town of Fallujah -- front-page news in most of America -- until almost two days later when informed by reporters.

Getting news out is also a problem. Garner has openly lamented his inability to get information to the Iraqi people amid what he said were insufficient American attempts to start up radio and television broadcasts.

"We haven't done a good job," he said. "I want TV going to the people ... programs they want to see."

But Iraqis have found ways to get their message to the Americans. On the base of the statue that troops pulled down on their entry to the city a month ago, a graffito in broken English states: "All donne(sic). Go home."


TOPICS: Editorial; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Free Republic; Government
KEYWORDS: infrastructure; iraqifreedom; order; postwariraq
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Well lets bring Saddam back in and get him running things like he did in the good ol days and everything will be just peachy. Peoples neighbors may disappear forever but so what? They'll have their favorite TV programs.
1 posted on 05/10/2003 8:32:42 AM PDT by Chirodoc
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To: Chirodoc
Imagine that! After 30 days we have yet to undo centuries of thinking and 25 years of a brutal regime. What ever have we been doing to squander this first month of stabilizing the nation.

These pundits are idiots and a product of the "microwave" generation. I am glad that we have wiser heads running this thing and not the "wham bam...thank you mam" critics.
2 posted on 05/10/2003 8:38:47 AM PDT by Cameron1
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To: Chirodoc
Well we used to go in and kill everyone during wars. It was messy but there was nobody left to cause problems. That made changing the minds of those left alive easier. Maybe we should have done that.
3 posted on 05/10/2003 8:47:07 AM PDT by Khepera (Do not remove by penalty of law!)
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To: Chirodoc
YAWN!

Just like listening to NPR...........

4 posted on 05/10/2003 8:48:18 AM PDT by SkyPilot
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To: Chirodoc
After a month, U.S. losing credibility in Iraq

After a month? Good Lord. Look, we all know that society moves faster these days. We've come to expect it in everything, whether it's finding some arcane info via Google or microwaving a full meal in seven minutes.

But this ingrained sense of expectation, the need to be instantly gratified, is eroding so much else. You see the negative results everywhere: the divorce rate, the music-downloading plague, the whiny kids next to us in the checkout line, throughout this whole Iraq campaign. We've come to expect everything NOW -- what we want, when we want it -- and anything less is perceived as failure.

5 posted on 05/10/2003 8:48:29 AM PDT by wizzler
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To: Cameron1
Quagmire alert
6 posted on 05/10/2003 8:48:35 AM PDT by KeyWest
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To: Chirodoc
This looks like another case of

Bad Reporting in Baghdad

To an amazing degree, the Baghdad-based press corps avoids writing about or filming the friendly dealings between U.S. forces here and the local population--most likely because to do so would require them to report the extravagant expressions of gratitude that accompany every such encounter. Instead you read story after story about the supposed fury of Baghdadis at the Americans for allowing the breakdown of law and order in their city.

7 posted on 05/10/2003 8:53:34 AM PDT by cyncooper ("You and I will not live in an age of terror. We will live in an age of liberty." GWB)
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To: Chirodoc
The AJC has always been a pile of dog-squeeze anyway, so why should we expect any better than this?
8 posted on 05/10/2003 8:55:28 AM PDT by capt. norm
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To: Chirodoc
Obviously, this reporter has never heard the phrase, "Rome was not built in a day." Obviously, he has not read even a cursory history of the reconstruction of Japan and Germany after World War II. Or the history of the reconstruction of any nation after any war in the history mankind, beginning with records in hieroglyphics in Eqypt, 4,000 years ago.

Obviously, this reporter thinks the Americans should be like Samantha in Bewitched, a wiggle of the nose, a few notes on a xylophone, and everything should be just hunky dory. Only a geopolitical moron would write a story like this. Only a geopolitical moron of an editor would print such a story.

But this was published in the Atlanta Constitution.

Ne-VER-mind.

Congressman Billybob

Latest column, now up FR, "Brave New Moment."

9 posted on 05/10/2003 8:57:57 AM PDT by Congressman Billybob ("Saddam has left the building. Heck, the building has left the building.")
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To: cyncooper
I feel like Iraq was liberated by one country and now observed by another...the US media, which is doing more damage to postwar reconstruction than 18,000 pieces of ordinance did during the war.
10 posted on 05/10/2003 9:01:18 AM PDT by Chirodoc
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To: wizzler
I don't think it's so much of ingrained expectations but rather a deep, undying hatred of Bush and the Republicans. How else do you explain all these big media pundits having so little to complain about during Clinton's Kosovo warmongering versus Bush's defense of the nation? And this in light of the fact the WE were attacked on September 11th, 2001 and Saddam's regime was part and parcel with Islamic America-hating fundementalist/communistic/totaletarian terrorists.

Nope, if this was Gore's war, we'd be seeing scenes of happy Iraqi children getting candy bars, Iraqi women praising the USA, Iraqi men chanting Gore! Gore! Gore!

Not that Gore would have committed the USA to the bold plan Bush devised post 9/11. Still, they tried to push how wrong and terrible it was to attack Iraq (since a Republican administration is in charge), how millions would die, how it had to be multi-national, and how a focus on Iraq would leave the War on Terrorism on the back burner. Since that was proved wrong, they have to go to plan B. "We're failing in the rebuilding of Iraq". They know this now, after one month. How many times do these leftists have to be proved wrong before people stop listening?

11 posted on 05/10/2003 9:04:37 AM PDT by Alas Babylon!
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To: Chirodoc
Bush, Rumsfeld, Powell and others warned that the post-war period would be "messy" at times, at least for the first few months. The problems described in this article is part of what "messy" means. Most of these problems are short-term problems (fixable in a matter of weeks or months), not long-term problems. The biggest problem of all -- a brutal totalitarian regime -- has been removed with extreme prejudice. The short-term problems will be fixed, but the Iraqis will always have their lives back, and their freedom.

To put all this in its proper perspective, it would be interesting to compare how many Iraqis were unjustly imprisoned, tortured, or killed by their government (or any civil authority) in the last month, as compared to the average monthly number of Iraqis who were unjustly imprisoned, tortured, or killed by their government during Saddam's reign.

12 posted on 05/10/2003 9:04:49 AM PDT by kesg
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To: Chirodoc
Rome wasn't built in a day.
13 posted on 05/10/2003 9:04:55 AM PDT by Z-28
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To: kesg
1,245,367 to 28
14 posted on 05/10/2003 9:06:05 AM PDT by Chirodoc
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To: Chirodoc
An American-backed court system began operating this week with Iraqi judges.

They've had a court system for an entire week. Wonder why crime just didn't disappear?

The good news is that it isn't a militry tribunal and that it's manned by Iraqi judges. This little nugget of gold was buried in a bushel of BS, but that's journalism these days.

15 posted on 05/10/2003 9:07:04 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: Chirodoc
More 'liberal expertise' from the Atlanta Urinal and Constipation.
16 posted on 05/10/2003 9:11:00 AM PDT by sydbas
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To: Alas Babylon!
Yes, you're right -- there's no doubt that most of this complaining stems from sheer, petty partisanship.

But the fact that someone even presumes this argument is viable shows how deeply ingrained the instant-gratification mindset has become. Whatever his partisan motivations, however wrong he is, the author takes it as a given that "failure after one month" could be presented as a legitimate criticism.

He couldn't do that if we didn't live in an era where instant gratification is taken for granted. He'd have to go with some other line of criticism to feed his anti-Bush jones.
17 posted on 05/10/2003 9:16:54 AM PDT by wizzler
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To: Chirodoc
"""looters set out each day in small groups to any of the hundreds of burned buildings in the capital. They dismantle anything that is left -- air conditioning ducts, metal wall and ceiling supports """

(no doubt other things as well not mentioned in the article)


The looters are mostly at fault. If our soldiers shoot them, they cry we are gunning down civilians.
How can you get things back in order when the necessary components are gone?
From the way it sounds they are only making things more difficult for themselves and blame America.
18 posted on 05/10/2003 9:19:09 AM PDT by just me
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To: wizzler
I agree with you. Isn't it grand we have Free Republic where we can collectively notice these things and bring these idiots to the shame they deserve? I just wish we could, at least, get every American with a computer to lurk here. They don't have to post, but surely reading Free Republic threads is far more educational and enlightening then the Atlanta Journal Constitution!
19 posted on 05/10/2003 9:23:08 AM PDT by Alas Babylon!
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To: Alas Babylon!
Every American? Surely you don't want, say, Alec Baldwin lurking around here stinking up the place. ;-)
20 posted on 05/10/2003 9:24:38 AM PDT by wizzler
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