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For someone of my generation, (early boomer) there is no more shocking effect of this war than to have all one's childhood self-image of Americans as a practical, inventive, proactive and above all, competent people, destroyed in Iraq. A lot of people all over the world have literally "bet the farm" on that image of competence and its destruction will have as far reaching effects as the collapse of the USSR. Note: I've chosen a photograph of Primo (the bigger they come the harder they fall) Carnera as a symbol of this. DS
For someone of my generation, (early boomer) there is no more shocking effect of this war than to have all one's childhood self-image of Americans as a practical, inventive, proactive and above all, competent people, destroyed in Iraq. A lot of people all over the world have literally "bet the farm" on that image of competence and its destruction will have as far reaching effects as the collapse of the USSR. Note: I've chosen a photograph of Primo (the bigger they come the harder they fall) Carnera as a symbol of this. DS
Abstract: Bechtel, the giant engineering company, is leaving Iraq. Its mission — to rebuild power, water and sewage plants — wasn’t accomplished: Baghdad received less than six hours a day of electricity last month, and much of Iraq’s population lives with untreated sewage and without clean water. But Bechtel, having received $2.3 billion of taxpayers’ money and having lost the lives of 52 employees, has come to the end of its last government contract. As Bechtel goes, so goes the whole reconstruction effort. Whatever our leaders may say about their determination to stay the course complete the mission, when it comes to rebuilding Iraq they’ve already cut and run. The $21 billion allocated for reconstruction over the last three years has been spent, much of it on security rather than its intended purpose, and there’s no more money in the pipeline. The failure of reconstruction in Iraq raises three questions. First, how much did that failure contribute to the overall failure of the war? Second, how was it that America, the great can-do nation, in this case couldn’t and didn’t? Finally, if we’ve given up on rebuilding Iraq, what are our troops dying for?(...) Consider the symbolism of Iraq’s new police academy, which Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, has called “the most essential civil security project in the country.” It was built at a cost of $75 million by Parsons Corporation, which received a total of about $1 billion for Iraq reconstruction projects. But the academy was so badly built that feces and urine leak from the ceilings in the student barracks. Think about it. We want the Iraqis to stand up so we can stand down. But if they do stand up, we’ll dump excrement on their heads. As for how this could have happened, that’s easy: major contractors believed, correctly, that their political connections insulated them from accountability. (...) And we’re not planning to do anything about it: the U.S.-led reconstruction effort in Iraq is basically over. I don’t know whether the administration is afraid to ask U.S. voters for more money, or simply considers the situation hopeless. Either way, the United States has accepted defeat on reconstruction. READ MORE
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