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The Washington Post today published another piece on the incompetence of the Bush Administration in conducting the Iraq War and in rebuilding Iraq.
The big losers? Every American taxpayer whose monies are being pis$ed away by the Bushies who at the same time are making their best buds wealthier and wealthier. Read this for a harsh dose of reality.
The big losers? Every American taxpayer whose monies are being pis$ed away by the Bushies who at the same time are making their best buds wealthier and wealthier. Read this for a harsh dose of reality.
Source: washingtonpost.comIraq Rebuilding Short on Qualified Civilians
By Rajiv Chandrasekaran
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, February 24, 2007; Page A01
In Diyala, the vast province northeast of Baghdad where Sunnis and Shiites are battling for primacy with mortars and nighttime abductions, the U.S. government has contracted the job of promoting democracy to a Pakistani citizen who has never lived or worked in a democracy.
The management of reconstruction projects in the province has been assigned to a Border Patrol commander with no reconstruction experience. The task of communicating with the embassy in Baghdad has been handed off to a man with no background in drafting diplomatic cables. The post of agriculture adviser has gone unfilled because the U.S. Department of Agriculture has provided just one of the six farming experts the State Department asked for a year ago. (snip)
Almost four years after the United States set about trying to rebuild Iraq, the job remains overwhelmingly unfinished. The provincial reconstruction teams like those in Diyala are often understaffed and underqualified -- and almost unable to work outside the military outposts where they are hunkered down for security reasons. Today, there are just 10 of the 30-person teams operating in all of Iraq. (snip)
...the new plan is running into what Munshi and several officials familiar with their work described as the problems that have plagued the U.S. government effort from the start: Turf wars between federal agencies. Outright refusal to fill certain vital posts by some departments. A State Department in charge of the teams that just doesn't have any agronomists, engineers, police officers or technicians of its own to send to Iraq. "No foreign service in the world has those people," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice complained.