A letter of truth regarding reconstruction of Iraq

Bassy

Lieutenant Commander
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A letter of truth about Iraq reconstruction:<br /><br /> 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. 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. 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 is producing.) <br /> - Over 400,000 kids have up-to-date immunizations. <br /> - School attendance is up 80% from levels before the war. <br /> - Over 1,500 schools have been renovated and rid of the weapons stored there so education can occur.<br /> - The port of Uhm Qasar was renovated so grain can be off-loaded from ships faster.<br /> - The country had its first 2 billion barrel export of oil in August.<br /> - Over 4.5 million people have clean drinking water for the first time ever in Iraq. <br /> - The country now receives 2 times the electrical power it did before the war. <br /> - 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. <br /> - Sewer and water lines are installed in every major city. <br /> - Over 60,000 police are patrolling the streets. <br /> - Over 100,000 Iraqi civil defense police are securing the country. <br /> - Over 80,000 Iraqi soldiers are patrolling the streets side by side with US soldiers.<br /> - Over 400,000 people have telephones for the first time ever. <br /> - Students are taught field sanitation and hand washing techniques to prevent the spread of germs. <br /> - An interim constitution has been signed. <br /> - Girls are allowed to attend school. <br /> - Textbooks that don't mention Saddam are in the schools for the first time in 30 years.<br /><br /> Don't believe for one second that these people do not want us there. 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. If you are like me and very disgusted with how this period of rebuilding has been portrayed, email this to a friend and let them know there are good things happening.<br /> Ray Reynolds, SFC Iowa
 

JB

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
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Mar 25, 2001
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Re: A letter of truth regarding reconstruction of Iraq

Thanks, Bassy.<br /><br />It's nice to hear some good news from Iraq. :)
 

Stratosfied

Ensign
Joined
Mar 14, 2003
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Re: A letter of truth regarding reconstruction of Iraq

I am thankful that tonight, somewhere, there is an American Soldier! God Bless them All!!
 

Bassy

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
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Messages
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Re: A letter of truth regarding reconstruction of Iraq

I am thankful that tonight, somewhere, there is an American Soldier! God Bless them All!!
Me too! :D :D <br />Hopefully they know we're thinking of them and think so much of them. <br />Bassy
 

Bassy

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
Aug 15, 2003
Messages
1,795
Re: A letter of truth regarding reconstruction of Iraq

Alright, alright. I was taking a chance posting it and if something was a miss someone was sure to find it. That's okay. I still think its a good piece of work even if a little fiction. Thanks Snapperbait for keeping us honest.<br />Bassy
 

ebbtide176

Commander
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Jan 22, 2002
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Re: A letter of truth regarding reconstruction of Iraq

i thought this piece was optimistic bassy. here is an excerpt from:<br /><br />The Democratic Boom <br />Kiev to Baghdad: Diverse people chase the same goal. <br /><br />BY DANIEL HENNINGER <br />Friday, December 10, 2004 12:01 a.m. EST <br />
<br />Iraq's instability, notably in the country's center, is well advertised by now. Less appreciated, however, is Iraq's growing measure of economic stability and vitality. <br />"Baghdad is booming," says Mohammed Fadhil Ali, one of three remarkable Ali brothers who oversee the Web log, Iraqthemodel.com. Mohammed and his younger brother Omar came this week to the Journal's offices, their first trip to the States, to discuss Iraq's future. <br /><br />They were not overwhelmed by New York's holiday crush; Baghdad's population is roughly 5.7 million people. Stores there are overflowing with goods and the streets jammed with shoppers. It appears that the number of cars has doubled in a year. "The middle class is growing," says Omar. After the April 9, 2003, "liberation," Mohammed was determined to photograph every new building in Baghdad. "Now there is a new building in Baghdad every day; I can't count them all." Land and real-estate prices are surging. Most of the investment is coming out of the Arab world, not the West. <br /><br />They made a couple of other interesting points about Iraq's political mood. One, Iraqis won't vote for a government dominated by Islamist religionists. Why? The abhorred next-door example of Iran's mullahs. This mirrors elections already held in Iraq. In a local election last year in Nazariya, with 47,000 votes cast amid imams urging support for Islamic parties, the biggest vote-getters were teachers, engineers and other professionals. <br /><br />And current party coalitions notwithstanding, the man on the street is sounding cussedly independent. A farmer in Samarra told them: "I will vote for a good man, Shia or Sunni." "We Iraqis don't trust any government now," says Mohammed, though Prime Minister Allawi's public standing rose after he first cleaned up Shiite Najaf, then Sunni Fallujah. <br /><br />Yesterday in Iraq, the primary Shiite groups presented a voting "list" of 228 candidates. The really notable thing about these emerging lists, or slates, is that they are diverse. Most parties are pursing a "big tent" strategy--by ethnicity, religion and even gender. The Shiite coalition's candidates, for instance, include Shiite Kurds, Sunni independents from the Shamar tribe, minority Turkomans, even Yazidis, a minority religious sect. Banners from the major political parties are showing up all over Iraq carrying the same message: "Vote." Sounds like real politics. <br /><br />In a way, Ukraine had it easier--just two candidates representing the opposition and the status quo. Iraq's "status quo" faction is blowing up other Iraqis. The "opposition" is a diverse population shaping a political future. <br /><br />Ukraine is not Iraq. Iraq is not Afghanistan. Or South Africa or Russia for that matter. The voyage to democratic maturity is never the same. Each passage across requires that a people show themselves willing to brave the tumult that precedes self-governance. Whether Ukrainians or Iraqis (or Iranians), all these peoples deserve public support from the nations and people who are already securely moored to the democratic dock.
the whole story:<br /> http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/dhenninger/?id=110006009
 
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