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U.S. Army refurbishes Iraqi schools
Amarillo Globe-News ^ | Friday, September 26, 2003 | AP

Posted on 09/26/2003 8:45:18 AM PDT by ladtx

TIKRIT, Iraq - Sitting inside a dusty office in a shrapnel-damaged building, Gerald Fox stares intently at his laptop, juggling the cost of electrical wiring, pipes, brick and mortar.

In recent weeks, the 34-year-old U.S. Army sergeant has been working on a proposal to have nine schools rebuilt in Saddam Hussein's hometown of Tikrit, at a cost of $243,300. He already has contracts for repairs to 14 other schools and has assessed 92 others.

His work is part of a project designed to repair some of the 2,000 schools in the three Iraqi provinces controlled by the U.S. Army's 4th Infantry Division. The aim is to have some schools ready by Oct. 1, when students go back to class.

"Operation Pencil Box" will also help provide many of the schools with pens, notebooks and other supplies gathered during a charity drive around Fort Hood, Texas, where the 4th ID is based.

"We had an adopt-a-school program in towns surrounding Fort Hood, where soldiers help out at schools. We thought, why don't we do this here?" Maj. Josslyn Aberle said.

The idea came from the division's commander, Maj. Gen. Raymond T. Odierno, and was initially aimed at having units build a small number of model schools. It also sought to more closely involve soldiers with Iraqi society.

"It's engaging families at home and the soldiers here in something other than raids," said Maj. John Williamson, of Exeter, N.H., who is with the Army's 443rd Civil Affairs Battalion.

He said the troops were so enthusiastic about the project that it mushroomed and grew to 309 schools.

The repairs range from replacing windows to putting in electric cables, plumbing, painting walls and rebuilding damaged sections.

Money comes from Odierno's emergency relief project fund, which has been supporting reconstruction projects until the U.S.-controlled Coalition Provisional Authority in Baghdad can channel funds through a nascent Iraqi government early next year. Of $16.3 million allocated so far for infrastructure work, half has gone to education, Williamson said.

"People have to know what we are doing. We do so many projects each week," he said. "People only hear when we kill Iraqis, not when we help them."

Not everyone agrees, however, that such projects will restore the confidence of Iraqis in U.S. occupation forces.

"I am happy for what the coalition forces are doing for the community, especially the school renovation," said Abdullah Jasim Talib, a member of the Tikrit City Council.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: iraq; iraqi; schoolhouse; schools; usarmy
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Another example of what is truly going on in Iraq and why the United States and it's soldiers are the most compassionate government and military to have ever existed in history. Too bad the Amarillo-Globe-News isn't on the reading list of the Dems. Although if it was they would still ignore the true news.
1 posted on 09/26/2003 8:45:18 AM PDT by ladtx
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To: Ragtime Cowgirl
ping
2 posted on 09/26/2003 8:46:15 AM PDT by Pan_Yans Wife ("Life isn't fair. It's fairer than death, is all.")
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To: ladtx
Great story.
3 posted on 09/26/2003 8:48:47 AM PDT by MEG33
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To: ladtx
related thread
4 posted on 09/26/2003 8:51:27 AM PDT by dogbrain
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To: ladtx
bttt
5 posted on 09/26/2003 8:57:26 AM PDT by ladtx ( "Remember your regiment and follow your officers." Captain Charles May, 2d Dragoons, 9 May 1846)
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To: ladtx
Our military members and their families give in so many ways - real giving that is beyond the comprehension of so many Americans. And thank God for people like them!
6 posted on 09/26/2003 8:59:15 AM PDT by Coop (God bless our troops!)
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To: ladtx
However heartlfelt, this is a misuse of our armed forces. Armies are sent into battle, not the school construction business. At least that what was said when Clintigula was in office.
7 posted on 09/26/2003 9:03:08 AM PDT by KantianBurke (Don't Tread on Me)
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To: Coop
Don't know why FOX doesn't run stories like this to counter the doom and gloom portrayed on the big 3 networks. I know it's news when one of our guys gets killed or wounded over there but there's a whole lot more to it than that.
8 posted on 09/26/2003 9:03:11 AM PDT by ladtx ( "Remember your regiment and follow your officers." Captain Charles May, 2d Dragoons, 9 May 1846)
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To: KantianBurke
That's the purpose of our Civil Affairs Battalions. They're doing their job.
9 posted on 09/26/2003 9:04:19 AM PDT by ladtx ( "Remember your regiment and follow your officers." Captain Charles May, 2d Dragoons, 9 May 1846)
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To: ladtx
Because bad news sells. You see it here all the time. Threads like this one and the associated one linked above have a dozen or so hits, while threads on bombings and the like get 100 or more posts. It's human nature, as disturbing as that is.
10 posted on 09/26/2003 9:05:57 AM PDT by Coop (God bless our troops!)
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To: ladtx
Perhaps when Sgt. Fox comes home, he can work on building 9 schools here for $243,000. I harbor a strong suspicion that the Iraqi kids who attend those no-frills schools will end up getting better educations than many American kids attending multi-million dollar, air conditioned, high tech schools.
11 posted on 09/26/2003 9:06:32 AM PDT by GovernmentShrinker
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To: GovernmentShrinker
You're right. Maybe we can get vouchers to send our kids over there. At least they wouldn't to contend with NEA influenced teachers.
12 posted on 09/26/2003 9:07:52 AM PDT by ladtx ( "Remember your regiment and follow your officers." Captain Charles May, 2d Dragoons, 9 May 1846)
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To: ladtx
With our armed forces stretched to the limit, perhaps these sorts of jobs should be taken up by for profit companies or non profit organizations. Once again, one can see these tasks as a luxury with the ongoing situation in Iraq, our current troop levels as well as the possible threats from Syria, Iran and North Korea.
13 posted on 09/26/2003 9:08:28 AM PDT by KantianBurke (Don't Tread on Me)
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To: KantianBurke
If they were done by for profit then the Dems would be screeching about how the money is going in Cheneys buddies pockets.
14 posted on 09/26/2003 9:10:10 AM PDT by ladtx ( "Remember your regiment and follow your officers." Captain Charles May, 2d Dragoons, 9 May 1846)
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To: ladtx
I think FOX does have something planned for this weekend. Yesterday they had Steve Harrigan on. He is just back from BD. He said there was a big disconnect between what is being reported, and what is really happening. They mentioned a special, but I missed the date and time.

Look on FOX's site and see if they have a special with Steve. I'll check too.
15 posted on 09/26/2003 9:13:31 AM PDT by helper
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To: ladtx
War & Peace
Let Iraqis rebuild Iraq.

By Tom Feeney & Stephen Moore

President Bush's request for an $87 billion supplemental-spending bill, at least $20 billion of which is for the rebuilding of Iraq, has met with surprisingly stiff opposition. Opinion polls indicate that the president's approval rating stumbled after Americans learned that the burden of paying for modernizing and repairing the infrastructure of war-torn Iraq would have to be shouldered by American taxpayers, rather than the Iraqis themselves. The opposition to this plan is heightened by problems here at home: the slow recession recovery, still-too-high unemployment, and an already record $400 billion of federal deficit spending.

In the run-up to the war in Iraq, administration officials had consistently argued that Iraq's oil revenues would pay for the costs of reconstruction. That financing plan, which draws from the assets of Iraq to pay for their own economic rehabilitation, seems no less sensible today than it was six months ago. Iraq is not a poor country — at least not for long. It is a resource-rich country, with the highest levels of oil reserves of any nation in the world other than Saudi Arabia. With an estimated 100 billion barrels of known reserves, and probably much more than that is technologically recoverable from these rich desert fields, the discounted present value of the oilfields could easily approach $1 trillion. But these assets only have value once they are linked to a dependable infrastructure of roads, bridges, pipelines, and security.

This begs the question: Why should U.S. citizens have to pay one additional penny for this rebuilding when Americans have already paid tens of billions of dollars for the liberation of Iraq with a huge military operation and more preciously, thousands of our own soldiers' blood?

Skeptics say that using the oil money to pay for the reconstruction of Iraq is no longer a practical option, because Iraq's oil revenues are way down. It is true that the combination of the war and economic sabotage has left the oil fields in poor condition and has brought production levels far below prewar levels. But this situation of disrepair is temporary. Once there has been a return to reasonable civic order in Iraq, oil production will increase dramatically and this nation will once again be flush with petrodollars. It could become like Saudi Arabia: one of the richest nations in the world.

As such, we would propose a fairer way to pay for infrastructure reconstruction in Iraq than the president's plan. First, the dollars for rebuilding this nation should not be given, but rather loaned, to Iraq through the U.S. government, or better yet, through a financial intermediary, such as the World Bank, or the International Monetary Fund. These loans should be collateralized against the future profits of the Iraqi oilfields. A formula which dedicates 50 percent of the oil profits to the repayment of these loans, could mean that within 10 to 15 years the debts would be paid off in full (depending in part on what happens to the world price of oil). Better yet, if the Iraqi government decides to privatize the oil fields through a public offering, some percentage of the sale proceeds should be dedicated to debt repayment. We would even go a step further; a substantial portion of the actual war costs could and should be reimbursed to the U.S. government from this oil money, because the ultimate beneficiaries of this war were the Iraqi people themselves.

Making the loans through the World Bank or IMF would have the benefit of avoiding the spurious charge that the hidden agenda of the Bush administration was to secretly take control over the Iraqi oil fields. But in this case the U.S. government would not get a penny of the oil revenues for reconstruction purposes. The loans would be made by multilateral institutions and would be repaid to them.

This straightforward plan for financing this rebuilding process, is said to be complicated by Saddam's foreign debts. Major creditor countries, including war-opponents France, Germany, and Russia, as well as various Arab states, insist that Iraq's oil revenues secure their debt. Estimates of the amount of debt are between $100 and $150 billion, well above the entire cost of reconstruction. While these debts are likely to be renegotiated, Iraq's provisional government and the United States have adopted the questionable position that the debts are valid and will be paid. That is a mistake. To not repay the loans sends a signal to the rest of the world that they will pay a hefty price for engaging in commerce with corrupt, brutalistic, and illegitimate regimes like Saddam Hussein's. It would be a horrendous policy if Russia, Germany, and France were repaid for financing Saddam's wicked repression of Iraqis, while American taxpayers are not reimbursed for liberating and rebuilding Iraq.

President Bush is now pursuing diplomatic means to persuade the Europeans and other industrialized nations to help shoulder the remaining costs of the war and the peacekeeping process. Rather than going hat in hand to the Europeans, the Bush administration should simply cancel the Iraqi debts owed to France, Germany, Russia, and other nations. After all, the debts were incurred by a government that no longer exists and at a time when the U.S. government was boycotting Iraq. These other nation's were effectively undermining U.S. national security by effectively undermining that boycott

What we are proposing is known as the doctrine of odious debts, first proposed by Alexander Sack in 1927. According to Sack: "When a despotic regime contracts a debt, not for the needs or in the interests of the state, but rather to strengthen itself, to suppress a popular insurrection, etc, this debt is odious for the people of the entire state. This debt does not bind the nation; it is a debt of the regime, a personal debt contracted by the ruler, and consequently it falls with the demise of the regime." Beginning to enforce this principle of odious debt would very rapidly defund and thus help topple other oppressive and dangerous tyrants around the globe. If France and Germany want to be repaid, they should start hunting down Saddam and his henchmen.

Americans put their lives at risk freeing Iraq. The French, Germans, and Russians not only sat on the sidelines but, inadvertently propped up Saddam by financing his purchases of arms, palaces, and oil infrastructure. It makes no sense to argue that they should get a claim on the new Iraq's assets before we do. For once in our history, Americans should not be forced to foot the bill for the war and the peace — especially since the means to pay for both is right beneath the Iraqis feet.

http://www.nationalreview.com/moore/moore200309260842.asp

16 posted on 09/26/2003 9:15:51 AM PDT by KantianBurke (Don't Tread on Me)
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To: KantianBurke; ladtx
"With our armed forces stretched to the limit, perhaps these sorts of jobs should be taken up by for profit companies or non profit organizations. Once again, one can see these tasks as a luxury with the ongoing situation in Iraq, our current troop levels as well as the possible threats from Syria, Iran and North Korea."

Fine, you could do that, but what would that accomplish? Just as ladtx said, that's what Civil Affairs units are trained to do. It wouldn't be like you would be freeing up more soldiers to fight. Civil Affairs weenies are some of the biggest REMFs there are, and if they were put into direct combat, they'd probably suffer the same fate as the 507th Maintenance Company. I say let 'em slap the paint on...they're winning the battles they're trained to win...those for the hearts of the Iraqi people.

Scouts Out! Cavalry Ho!

17 posted on 09/26/2003 9:18:33 AM PDT by wku man (Bucs 31, Atlanta 10...oh how sweet it is!)
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To: wku man
Civil Affairs weenies are some of the biggest REMFs there are...

I'll have to disagree with that statement wku. CA troops train at Fort Bragg with the special ops people, many are jump qualified. My son is in CA in Mosul right now. Many in his unit from Lubbock, TX are in the Lubbock PD. Don't think I would call them weenies. But they are trained to get things back up and running after and sometimes during the hot part of the war.

18 posted on 09/26/2003 9:25:41 AM PDT by ladtx ( "Remember your regiment and follow your officers." Captain Charles May, 2d Dragoons, 9 May 1846)
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To: ladtx
I like these stories. Bump for the good guys.
19 posted on 09/26/2003 9:26:10 AM PDT by baseballmom (Baseball is life - the rest is just details)
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To: ladtx
Cheyney!

Halliburton!

Bush is a liar!

Quagmire!

(There...just getting it out of the way for the trolls...lol)
20 posted on 09/26/2003 9:31:19 AM PDT by ItsOurTimeNow ("The board is set. The pieces are moving. We come to it at last...the Great Battle of our time.")
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