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Iraq
Progress in Baghdad.
2003-08-25
From a DoD dispatch
After 30 years of broken promises, two Baghdad communities have been reunited thanks to the joint efforts of the Coalition and local residents. Today, the Coalition Provisional Authority is pleased to announce the opening of a new bridge joining Gazeliyah and Al-Shula. Twenty five years ago, the Iraqi government built a canal separating the neighboring Sunni and Shia communities. For decades residents petitioned the government to build a bridge traversing the canal, but to no avail. In June, the Neighborhood Advisory Councils from Gazeliyah and Al-Shula asked the City and the Coalition for assistance in completing the long overdue project. Neighborhood Advisory Councils have been established in each of Baghdad’s 88 communities since the fall of the former regime to assist the municipal government in identifying issues of importance to local residents. This bridge is just a small example of the community coming together, said Lieutenant Colonel Eric W. Nantz, Battalion Commander of the 1-325 Airborne Infantry Regiment. In the past this type of cooperation would never happen. Iraqis are now making decisions to ensure a better life for themselves and their children, The 1-325 Airborne helped coordinate the procurement of materials and acquire funding.

The project was headed by Basil Tawfik, a local Iraqi engineer who employed 40 people to construct the bridge with the US Army 1 AD 3rd Brigade’s discretionary funds. With Iraqi and Coalition engineers working side by side, construction took only a month. The total cost for the bridge was just under $21,000 and was funded by the 1 AD. The new bridge can accommodate two lanes of traffic and two pedestrian walkways. When the Coalition first got here we talked to them about importance of this bridge to both communities, said Mr. Tawfik. We are grateful for all the help we’ve received to make us one community again.
Note: Members of the Press wishing to visit the site should contact the CPA Strategic Communications Office
Note on the source; the story doesn’t appear posted on the DoD website yet. This copy was recieved via mailing list.
Posted by:Domingo

#4  I love to watch the US military, especially the Army (parochial, I know, but what can you do?) taking care of business.
But, damn, if the sillyvilian side of the government can't make a reasonable showing, with all their highly-educated professional types, we'll soon have a movement to put the DOD in charge of everything just so things work right.
And that would be dangerous.
For the sake of the nation, the sillivilians are going to have to show something.
Practically anything will do, short of bumping their pensions.
Posted by: Richard Aubrey   2003-8-25 9:17:58 PM  

#3  There has to of been an oil well drilled in the bridge foundations so the 1 AD can rape and pillage the poor people of Iraq. Just how far would the whole nation of Iraq be closer to normalization of it's society if more of the young in Iraq had jobs reconstructing the country? Instead of sitting on their asses pissing and moaning about the "American Oppressers"
Posted by: Someone who did NOT vote for William Proxmire   2003-8-25 6:59:08 PM  

#2  The bridge will not be allowed to stand for a week.
Posted by: Steve D   2003-8-25 6:12:37 PM  

#1  The project was headed by Basil Tawfik, a local Iraqi engineer who employed 40 people to construct the bridge with the US Army 1 AD 3rd Brigade’s discretionary funds.

Anyone want to lay odds on Henry Waxman calling for a Congressional inquiry?
Posted by: Pappy   2003-8-25 6:08:15 PM  

00:00