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Iraq Report, 21 November/05

| 6 Comments | 1 TrackBack

Welcome! Our goal at Winds of Change.NET is to give you one power-packed briefing of insights, news and trends from Iraq that leaves you stimulated, informed, and occasionally amused every Monday & Thursday. This briefing is brought to you by Joel Gaines of No Pundit Intended and Andrew Olmsted of Andrew Olmsted dot com.

TOP TOPICS

  • Is Abu Musab al-Zarqawi dead? Probably not, but Coalition forces are checking to see if he was one of eight insurgents killed in a gun battle in Mosul on Sunday. The U.S. is downplaying the rumors that Zarqawi was killed, saying it is highly unlikely, but the search will go on, just in case.

Other Topics Today Include: NG Colonel talks about the war; new Yon dispatches; resistance ready to negotiate(?); a message to all Americans; Kurds seek outside investors; reconstruction highlights; Carnival of the Liberated; Egypt promises help for Iraq; Britain talks troop reductions; Hussein lawyer issues continue.

REPORTS FROM THE FIELD

  • Check out this recent briefing from Colonel James "Red" Brown from the 56th Brigade Combat Team of the Texas National Guard.
  • A self-described member of the resistance in Iraq told reporters there are seven resistance groups ready to negotiate with the US to end their participation in the violence in Iraq. The group will not talk with the Iraqi government.
  • US Army Maj. Rich Spainhour expresses bewilderment that some Americans view the war in Iraq as a failed mission.

RECONSTRUCTION & THE ECONOMY

  • Washington had agreed to lift the suspension of AWB Ltd, a wheat exporter under investigation in the UN OFF scandal, from US export credit programs.
  • Take a look at this week's reconstruction highlights: The Government of Iraq has approved by a single vote majority $250 million per annum to implement the USAID solution for a Social Safety Net program to help the poor and the vulnerable. The Social Safety Net and Pension Reform Program, part of the USAID-funded Economic Governance II Program, provides the government of Iraq with a comprehensive, targeted social mechanism to help protect the poor and vulnerable from the negative effects of future economic reforms. Living standards for many Iraqis have fallen since the war, potentially creating unrest and low public confidence in the new leadership. Previous Iraqi governments have failed to reach a consensus for undertaking necessary macroeconomic reforms, such as removing subsidies and restructuring the state economy, due to the lack of a Social Safety Net able to help people cope with the unavoidable impact of these reforms. Over 250 Iraqi business leaders throughout the country attended a seminar on private sector development. The recent creation of a strong Insurance Commission moves this key industry towards compliance with international best practice. Agricultural Reconstruction and Development (ARDI) assists the Ministry of Agriculture (MoA) to monitor for incidences of avian flu. ARDI provides computer equipment grant to the State Board for Agricultural Extension. A partner in USAID’s Higher Education And Development (HEAD) program delivered a mobile dental clinic to the medical college of a northern Iraqi university. Printing will soon begin for 100 full-text research papers presented at a recent Environmental Health Conference. A water resource directorate in northern Iraq was able to restore its office building through an Iraq Transition Initiative (ITI) grant. Over 1,000 students in five organizations developed and voted on projects for ITI grants, learning about the democratic process. A culture and sports center in northern Iraq was rehabilitated by an ITI grant.

IRAQI POLITICS

  • Iraq's primary Sunni political party has called for an investigation into the apparent abuse of nearly 200 detainees by Iraq security forces. The US has backed the call for an investigation.

THE INTERNATIONAL STAGE

  • Congressman John Murtha believes U.S. troops will be out of Iraq for the November congressional elections. Accurate or not, Murtha's words are likely to get great play in the Arab media and will have an effect on both sides in Iraq.
  • Tony Blair has stated, if Iraqi forces are strong enough, British forces could begin leaving Iraq next year.
  • Iraq has asked Yemen to extradite a nephew of former president Saddam Hussein, Omar Sabawi Ibrahim Hasan al-Tikriti, so he can face charges of committing acts of terror in Iraq.

ETCETERA

  • A member of the Saddam Hussein defense team has fled Iraq after being wounded in an ambush not long ago.
  • Anthony Shadid, a 2004 Pulitzer Prize winner, is the author of Night Draws Near - Iraq's People In The Shadow Of America's War. This is a story of stories. Those of Iraqis coming to grips with the realities of Iraq without Saddam Hussein, an American led invasion, and the outcome up to the January 2005 elections. Mr. Shadid focuses mostly on what many call the "unintended consequeces" of a war in Iraq - he does so with a great deal of persoanl detail and the depth of his discovery should be commended. For more information about this book, search the Henry Holt and Company website.
  • Do you have your GI Bracelet? Many military families fall into financial hardship when the breadwinner is injured or killed. The entire purchase price of the GI Bracelet is donated to support our troops and their families! Please join us to give back to these brave people in their time of need.
  • The troops are still there. So is the Winds of Change.NET consolidated directory of ways you can support the troops: American, Australian, British, Canadian & Polish. Anyone out there with more information, contact us!

Thanks for reading! If you found something here you want to blog about yourself (and we hope you do), all we ask is that you do as we do and offer a Hat Tip hyperlink to today's "Winds of War". If you think we missed something important, use the Comments section to let us know. And if you have a tip for a future Iraq Report, email us at MondayIraqReport(at)windsofchange.net.

1 TrackBack

Tracked: November 21, 2005 4:09 PM
Iraq Report from Stryker Brigade News
Excerpt: Winds of Change has published its weekly Iraq Report, with links to news and analysis of recent events....

6 Comments

Though it is true that Iraq is free from Saddam, it is not yet free from torubles. The economy has a potential, but nothing works well. The government is a mess and violence is all over town. How cxan an economy flourish with a very hostile environment. The challenge for the liberators and the liberated is on how they can traslate the potentials into progress.

Its important to note that so long as the liberated and liberators can rely on their memes acting as the ethereal homunculi behind mechanisms of governance and economic production and culture and society, they will be at a position of memetic advantage, able to better disseminate/propagate their ideas, better appeal/infect (with hopefully persuasive evidence for interested and rational hearts and minds) and can hopefully depend on a sort of memetic inertia that results from the decreasing likelihood of such institutions/mechanisms slipping into the opfor's ideological clutches. If this construction of the state of Iraq is meaningful, perhaps then we've enough indicators (elections, constitution, functional police and army) to be cautiously optimistic, provided the current environment doesn't change and so compell the ecosystem to become overrun with the memetic weeds and pests of islamofascism.

Still, the smart answer would be "wait and see" what happens with all the remnant uncertainty.

Yeah.

What the last guy said.

What we need, obviously, is a memetic lawn mower to take care of all those memetic weeds over in Iraq.

I'm just glad Zarqawi is dead again. Seems like he gets killed about every month or two, then a couple weeks later comes back with an audio tape. This guy is worse that Elvis. I wonder if K-Tel is going to do a "best of" Zarqawi?

Zarqawi alive is as dangerous for his movement as for the Shia or the Kurds. He has even manage to get angry the population of Jordan.

"The troops are still there. So is the Winds of Change.NET consolidated directory of ways you can support the troops: American, Australian, British, Canadian & Polish. Anyone out there with more information, contact us!"

There are no Canadian troops in Iraq.
Royal Canadian Mounties were, however, in New Orleans within a day and a quarter, picking up the Bush & Cheney slack.

The Canadians are in Afghanistan, Tom, and will be there in greater numbers shortly. Do you have anything to offer, at all, besides snark and bile?

And what the Canadians did in New Orleans is called "helping out a friend." It's the same thing the people in Gander did for the Americans stranded there on 9/11, because the intercontinental flights had to stop in Newfoundland outside of US airspace.

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