One Soldier's Viewpoint of Iraq

by ThiChi 92 Replies latest social current

  • ThiChi
    ThiChi

    One Soldier?s Viewpoint of Iraq

    Greetings (Names withheld)

    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):

    Over 4.5 million people have clean drinking water for the first time ever in Iraq.

    Over 400,000 kids have up to date immunizations.

    Over 1500 schools have been renovated and ridded of the weapons that were stored there so education can occur.

    The port of Uhm Qasar was renovated so grain can be off loaded from ships faster. School attendance is up 80% from levels before the war.

    The country had it's first 2 billion barrel export of oil in August. The country now receives 2 times the electrical power it did before the war.

    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.

    Sewer and water lines are installed in every major city.

    Over 60,000 police are patrolling the streets.

    Over 100,000 Iraqi civil defense police are securing the country. Over 80,000 Iraqi soldiers are patrolling the streets side by side with US soldiers.

    Over 400,000 people have telephones for the first time ever. Students are taught field sanitation and hand washing techniques to prevent the spread of germs.

    An interim constitution has been signed. Girls are allowed to attend school for the first time ever in Iraq. Text books that don't mention Saddam are in the schools for the first time in 30 years.

    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. So, if you happen to run into John Kerry, be sure to give him my email address and send him to Denison, Iowa. This soldier will set him straight. 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.

    Ray Reynolds, SFC Iowa Army National Guard 234th Signal Battalion

  • Simon
    Simon

    ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha

    Is this going to be like the last "letter home" that ended up being some propaganda dreamt up by the PR core I wonder ?

    The accounts I see are that a country is in chaos, security is non-existent and they have to queue for fuel and the power still goes off constantly.

  • Simon
    Simon

    Well, a quick internet search casts some doubt on it's value:

    http://www.snopes.com/politics/war/reynolds.asp

    I did write it and I am in Kuwait now on my way home. I wrote it while at home because I felt that too many people were exploiting the violence in Iraq to sell papers and gain votes. Sometimes the silent majority need to be awakened to respond to the bad things in our world. I am passionate about our President's decision and support this rebuilding whole heartedly...Yes legit..I am a fire fighter in Denison, Iowa and to verify, call Mike McKinnon of the Denison Iowa fire department

    So. Written without being there either before or well after the event (if he ever was in Iraq). And done for political reasons because he's a passionate Bush supporter.

    And some answers to the "facts" presented.

    Nice try though ThiChi but I think I'll stick to the BBC, CNN, Reuters, NBC and Al Jazeera to find out what is going on over there and not some bogus Republican propaganda, however "well intentioned" the person behind it may be.

  • Richie
    Richie

    This is an excerpt from Fox News Sunday (shown May 10/04) on some of the good news about Iraq (you can go to FoxNews.com and download the video as well, so you can see for yourself):

    "As many of you may know by now, we thought the ABC News program, "Nightline", made a mistake by listing all the brave men and women who died in Iraq but without providing the context of what they died for. So we said that we would put together our own tribute, our own list of what these brave men and women have built in Iraq.

    A couple of points before we begin. Some of you have written in saying that we're pushing the White House agenda. As you saw in the last segment, there are plenty of hard questions to ask about the Bush administration's policy in Iraq, and we will keep asking them.

    There were also times this week when you couldn't help but wonder about putting on the good news from Iraq, as we saw those ugly pictures from inside Abu Gharib prison. But the more we thought about it, what better time to talk about what the vast majority of our troops are doing there? What better time to try to make sense of the sacrifice of the 767 men and women who have died in Iraq?

    We call our tribute, "What We've Accomplished."

    First, ending the brutal regime of Saddam Hussein . Ending the systematic torture and murder of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis. Since Saddam was overthrown, investigators have found dozens of mass graves, in which more than 300,000 Iraqis were buried.

    Ending the theft of billions of dollars from the Iraqi people. Since 1991, Saddam built 48 palaces, at a time when his regime said it did not have the sources to build housing. And an investigation has found Saddam stole more than $11 billion from the U.N.'s oil-for-food program.

    Ending the threat that weapons of mass destruction will be developed and used. Since the invasion, U.S. inspectors have not found WMD. But during its time in power, Saddam's regime manufactured chemical and biological weapons and, at one point, actively pursued nuclear weapons.

    Second, quality of life . Daily life has improved dramatically for the average Iraqi since the fall of Saddam, but it has come at a cost. These three soldiers were killed last July while they guarded a hospital in Baquba.

    Under the old regime, little money was spent on education and there was no schedule for maintaining school facilities. So far, 2,500 schools have been renovated, with another 800 to be finished soon.

    (BEGIN VIDEO CLIPS)

    UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE (through translator): They put in electricity for us and a fan for us so we could get some air, and I say thanks to god.

    UNIDENTIFIED CHILD (through translator): Before, the school was dirty and not clean, and even the bathroom was not good. This year they made a new bathroom for us, and they changed the building and painted it well.

    (END VIDEO CLIPS)

    What children are learning in school has also changed. Before the war the government fired teachers for not following the party line. Almost 9 million new math and science textbooks have been printed and distributed. Old books were filled with pro-Saddam propaganda.

    And here are U.S. troops handing out napsacks full of school supplies in Samarra. This just days after those four American contractors were killed and their bodies mutilated in Fallujah.

    Major progress has also been made in health care. Under Saddam, the Ministry of Health spent $16 million a year. The current budget is almost $1 billion. The health care system is now open to all Iraqis, with 30 percent more people now using the facilities. Doctors, who used to get $20 a month, now earn up to $180. Modern medication such as cancer drugs are now available, something unheard of during the Saddam years.

    Last Sunday, these five Navy Seabees were killed in the Sunni triangle while on assignment rebuilding schools and medical facilities for the Iraqis.

    Third, human rights. Since the end of Saddam, a fully functioning legal and judicial system has been developed. More than 600 judges are working in courtrooms across the country. Iraqis charged with crimes now have rights that would have been laughed at under the old regime: the right to remain silent when they're arrested; the right to a fair, speedy and open trial; the right to a defense lawyer at all stages of the process.

    Iraqis now enjoy freedom of speech. Street protests against the U.S. occupation are now routine in Baghdad, something that in the past would have earned these demonstrators imprisonment or death.

    There is also something approaching freedom of the press. Under Saddam, all newspapers were controlled by the government. This woman was a reporter for 27 years.

    (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

    UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE REPORTER: Before, we write as they tell us to write. Now we write what we believe.

    (END VIDEO CLIP)

    Now, 120 papers are being published, some of them critical of the U.S. The coalition has shut down only two papers, which it said were inciting violence.

    This is another sign of new freedom: Internet cafes. Before, few people had access to computers, fewer still to the government-monitored Internet. Now people can communicate, get information or sound off in Web blogs.

    And here's more technology that was banned under Saddam Hussein: satellite dishes. Now more than one-third of Iraqi households receive news from around the world by way of these dishes.

    Finally, the economy and infrastructure. There's a new currency in Iraq. Gone are those ever-present pictures of Saddam in a country that used to have two weak currencies, there is now one stable form of money.

    Iraq's most important resource, oil, is showing a strong revival. Production now exceeds pre-war levels, averaging half a million barrels a day more than when Saddam was forced from power.

    Still, gasoline shortages have meant that U.S. soldiers often have to guard filling stations to prevent looting. Private First Class Jason Wright from the 101st Airborne Division was killed by a drive-by shooter as he protected Iraqis who were buying gas.

    One crucial area that has seen solid improvement is basic utilities. After years of neglect, Iraqis have electricity for only part of the day. By this summer, the average Iraqi will have electricity for 16 hours a day, 40 percent above pre-war levels. Under Saddam, only half of the country had access to clean drinking water. Now extensive renovations of water plants have brought cleaner water to more people, almost 15 million, on a more reliable basis.

    Before the war, few areas had proper sewage facilities. One example of what soldiers are doing on the ground is in Mosul, where a neighborhood was swamped with raw sewage for 17 years. The U.S. Army spent $40,000 to hire local workers, and the problem is fixed.

    Improvements in the infrastructure are widespread. Here are some key examples. Baghdad airport now has 43 passenger flights a day, including regular commercial service to Jordan.

    And look at something as simple as phone service. Under Saddam, cell phones were a luxury, reserved only for top party and government officials. Now, more than 340,000 Iraqis have cell phones, and business is booming.

    There's one other big difference: When Iraqis make a call now, they say no one is listening in.

    (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

    UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I call him now on the phone. Now we can discuss anything. We are not -- I am not afraid to say anything.

    (END VIDEO CLIP)

    As we struggled to put all of this together, we were astonished by all that our troops have accomplished. And we'll keep an eye out so we can update you on some of the ways our troops are making life better for so many Iraqis."

    (copied from Fox News Sunday)

    Richie :*)

  • ThiChi
    ThiChi

    ""I think I'll stick to the BBC, CNN, Reuters, NBC and Al Jazeera ""

    lol, good luck!

    who put the question mark in my topic? geez, lets have some fair play here...it was from a named source...

  • RevMalk
    RevMalk

    Simon, you're being so irresponsible here and it's starting to make me nauseous. We have a sales manager in our company here that has a son in Iraq who's able to email us every few days. The things he's reporting back are like a mirror of what this soldier wrote.

    To sit there and accuse this guy of being a liar while he's putting his life on the line for all of us is disgusting.

    Rev

    PS - You should be ashamed and you owe this soldier an apology (IMHO)

  • LucidSky
    LucidSky
    PS - You should be ashamed and you owe this soldier an apology (IMHO)

    Shame on you Simon for pointing out bias.

    There are good and bad things going on in Iraq. I agree the media could do a better job of showing the good side. Perhaps its been harder to do since the cause of the war changed...

  • Simon
    Simon
    who put the question mark in my topic? geez, lets have some fair play here...it was from a named source...

    What are you on about? If anything is edited it shows as being edited at the bottom.

    Simon, you're being so irresponsible here and it's starting to make me nauseous.
    Yes, seeking the truth and not accepting force-fed propaganda is a dangerous "fad" that shouls not be encouraged eh?
    We have a sales manager in our company here that has a son in Iraq who's able to email us every few days. The things he's reporting back are like a mirror of what this soldier wrote.
    Yippe do. I'm happy that they are happy.

    To sit there and accuse this guy of being a liar while he's putting his life on the line for all of us is disgusting.

    Surely ***LYING*** is the thing that is disgusting? As always, there are a few basic facts mixed in with a lot of nonsense to paint a picture that isn't accurate. This is classic propaganda.

    PS - You should be ashamed and you owe this soldier an apology (IMHO)
    I don't owe him anything and I am not ashamed of my opinions.
  • RevMalk
    RevMalk

    oh that's right, all of our opinions are un-biased.

    That's the amazing thing about having an opinion, we have every right to be biased!

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine
    There are good and bad things going on in Iraq. I agree the media could do a better job of showing the good side.

    The good side is scarcely news. It's a side show to the bad side; a masturbatory distraction for people who'd rather, as Jehovah would say, have their ears tickled. Oh, it could have been done right, with some pre-planning, some international support, with an overwhelming volume of "good deeds" done shoulder to shoulder with Iraqis. Yep, that's the sad thing, we could have shocked and awed them into respecting us in the morning, had our entire presidential administration two brain cells to rub together.

    Instead, the one thing we've done that the Iraqi people could not have done on their own, is rid them of Saddam Hussein; the rest is neo-conservative masturbation: it feels good to them, but it won't form real relationships and the rest of us should not have to watch.

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