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U.S. Must Repair Iraq’s Infrastructure, Or Else …

If the United States pulls out of Iraq without repairing the damage that has been done by the war, what would be the consequences? According to this op-ed from Iraq’s Azzaman newspaper, if America fails to “come through” in this regard, Washington can forget achieving what it claims its goal has been: Creating a strong ally at the heart of the troubled Middle East.

“There is a dire need for a rapid restoration of basic services like water and electricity … and unless the American side comes through, they shouldn’t expect Iraqis to seek close ties with them in the future.”

By Fatih Abdulsalam

Translated By James Jacobson

October 24, 2007

Iraq – Azzaman – Original Article (Arabic

Any observer can see that over the past five years, Washington has tried to ally itself with all parties in Iraq. At the height of hostilities, the U.S entered into alliances with every possible faction in order to put itself in a position to escape its predicament.

Although at one point, through its former civil administrator Paul Bremer and over Iraq objections, America preferred some factions at the expense of others [Shiites over Sunni Baathists], believing that this policy would rapidly restore safety and security to parts of Iraq, but also knowing that other areas of Iraq would be set ablaze [Al Anbar, for example].

Then came American attempts to correct this abnormality, which created yet another problem … Factions of the armed resistance agreed to negotiate as a single unit – but only on the condition that in matters of concern, it would be Washington that they would deal with rather than the Iraqi government [Again, Al Anbar is a perfect example].

This reinforced the fact that Washington had become the common political denominator for all sides, just as it had become the common military denominator when government factions had to stabilize the situation on the ground. Since the resistance believes that the government forces they confront are controlled by the occupier, the best option for both sides is to meet with Washington.

During the transition toward a U.S. withdrawal, the question is this: How can Iraqis turn the huge numbers of military forces that occupy the country to their advantage, and then make use of American assistance to rebuild the country afterwards? And by rebuilding, we do not refer to the recent embezzlement of $20 billion [in U.S. aid], but the actual rebuilding of Iraq’s infrastructure …

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3 Responses to “U.S. Must Repair Iraq’s Infrastructure, Or Else …”

  1. [...] House U.S. Must Repair Iraq’s Infrastructure, Or Else … » This Summary is from an article posted at The Moderate Voice » Domestic and international news [...]

  2. Sam says:

    There are some huge factors preventing the rebuilding. First off is the violence and how easy it is to blow up said infrastructure once its built. There simply isn’t enough security(stability rather) to cover every square mile where infrastructure needs to be built. Namely, every square mile where there are people that need water and electricity. Until the factions stop targeting that the rebuilding is not going to happen in any lasting way.

    Second is the utter corruption of the local officials and those in charge of allocating resources for the rebuilding. This to me seems even more intractable than the violence, since no amount of security is going to erase the opportunism that seems prevalent in the tribal leaders or whoever is in charge over a given area. Until those folks realize the destructive nature of their greed and feel its more important to fix things than take their cut of the bribes nothing is going to change.

  3. buzz6 says:

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