|
An interesting letter which will most likely NOT be published by the Washington Post.
BTW, this letter is consistent with almost everything I see from troops in the
field... you don't suppose the Media has an Agenda, do you?
Regards//Bob Ohm
To All:
I am sending this email out to several hundred of my closest friends, family and
associates. We recently had a Washington Post reporter over here visiting us in
Iraq. Below is a letter to the editor from my boss Major General William McCoy.
It is well worth reading, for I am not sure if the Washington Post will print
it. I would ask that you send it to your friends and family to assist in sharing
of this information. Thanks for all the support and God bless,
CSM William D. McDaniel Jr.
USACE, Gulf Region Division (Iraq)
Division Command Sergeant Major
COM: 540-665-5070 (VOIP)
DSN: 312-265-5070
Cell: 202-413-7128
email NIPR: William.D.McDaniel@tac01.usace.army.mil
email SIPR: william.mcdaniel@iraq.centcom.smil.mil
AKO email: william.mcdaniel@us.army.mil
Website: http://www.grd.usace.army.mil
From: CEGRD-Announcements (Do Not Reply)
Sent: Sunday, August 06, 2006 2:27 PM
To: DLL-CEGRD-Baghdad; PCO_All
Subject: CG's Letter to the Editor of the Washington Post
All:
With respect, I asked you to read Major General McCoy's accompanying letter
which he, earlier today, sent to the editor of the Washington Post.
Any who wish are urged to share this with family members, friends, neighbors,
local print and broadcast media representatives, and their elected officials. It
is a message that needs to be heard.
Tragically, too few of the world's public are being afforded a free, honest and
un-politicized picture of what is being accomplished here in Iraq.
To the best of my awareness, never have individuals of consequence or authority
here in Iraq claimed to have not made mistakes nor asked for only the "good news
activities" to be promulgated. All that is sought is balanced, unbiased
reporting so folks back home can see, hear and read an unvarnished, slanted
version. To those who have striven to do so - thank you. For those who have not,
I respectfully ask that they read - and think about - the General's letter.
From: McCoy, William MG GRD
Sent: Sunday, August 06, 2006 11:48 AM
To: ' letters@washpost.com'
Subject: Letter to the Editor
I am submitting this as a Letter to the Editor based on the terrible, and
largely inaccurate, article I read by Andy Mosher. He knows there is a good side
to the story of Reconstruction in Iraq; he saw it! Yet he chose to write a
negative story based on old SIGIR findings. Why? Don't you want the American
people to know the truth?
Why Won't They Tell You the Truth?
After spending almost three days traveling with and being interviewed by one of
the co-writers of a very poorly written article ("Much Undone in Rebuilding
Iraq, Audit says", Washington Post, August 2, 2006), I'm astounded at how
distorted a good story can become and what agenda drives a paper to see only the
bad side to the reconstruction effort here in Iraq. Instead of distorting the
facts, let's get to the truth.
There is no flailing reconstruction effort in Iraq. The United States has
rightfully invested $20 billion in Iraq's reconstruction - in the opinion of
many here, we should do more. This massive undertaking is part of a wider
strategy for success in Iraq that involves the establishment of a democratic
government, the development of professional Iraqi Security Forces, and the
restoration of basic essential services and facilities to promote the sustained
economic development of this new country.
Yes, this reconstruction effort has been challenged occasionally by security,
poor materials, poor construction program management practices, and in some
cases poor performance by contractors for a variety of reasons. The Department
of State and Defense professionals over here, many of them civilian volunteers,
and the Iraqi associates who risk their lives every day to have a future that
approximates what America has today, continuously see the challenges and develop
and implement solutions. This is a core part of managing construction anywhere
in the world and, while somewhat more complex here, it is successfully being
accomplished. Have we been guilty of poor planning and mismanagement? The answer
to that is, at times, yes. But professionals constantly strive to overcome
challenges that arise and we are succeeding and making Iraq better every day!
The heart of the article rests on several old statements by the Special
Investigator General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) which infer these are
recent or recurring problems. The SIGIR knows that, in fact, program management,
construction quality, progress, and accountability have all improved
significantly since the early days of the effort some three years ago. Yet, the
reporters' "project problems" comments infer that these are recent issues. Such
actions inflame public opinion in the United States and create resentment by the
very people so many conscientious Americans over here are trying to help here in
Iraq and worse, embolden our very enemies.
When I arrived here a year ago we planned to complete 3,200 reconstruction
projects. Today we are focusing on the completion of 3,700 projects. We've
started 3,500 of those projects and completed almost 2,800...and work is
continuing! This is not a failure to meet our commitment to the Iraqi people as
the article states. In some cases we are not executing the same projects-we have
changed to meet new priorities of three government changes in Iraq since our
arrival-but in all cases, rest assured, these projects will be completed. We
discussed this at length with the reporter...and he was taking notes and
recording our conversations.
We told the reporter that, while 141 health clinic construction projects were
taken away from a U.S. contractor who failed to perform, they were re-awarded to
Iraqi contractors who are already demonstrating progress, have improved quality
and shown their great desire to work with the United States to help Iraq
improve...and they are doing so phenomenally! We did talk to the reporter about
on electricity. Three-quarters of Iraq gets twice as much electricity today as
they did before the war. Furthermore, we are working with the Minister of
Electricity to improve the situation in Baghdad daily and have doubled the hours
of power from four to eight in the capitol in the last six months in spite of
the fact that demand is markedly increased with Iraqis' new ability to buy
personal electrical products. What is truly amazing to me is that we took the
reporter to the Nasiriyah prison project and, while it is true that we
terminated the prime U.S. contractor for failure to perform, the Iraqi
sub-contractor continues to work there (now directly for us) and his progress
and quality have improved significantly...and he saw that! We are not turning
unfinished work over to the Iraqis as he stated in his article; we are
fulfilling the U.S. commitment to the people of Iraq and using Iraqis to do it!
The reporter didn't tell you about the hundreds of dedicated military and
civilian professionals he saw over here working to make Iraq better, or the
Iraqis who come to work every day at their own peril because they believe in
what we, and they, are accomplishing together. He failed to tell you about Aseel
or Salah who worked for the Corps of Engineers since we arrived in 2003, because
they wanted to make their country like ours, but who were recently brutally
murdered in the streets because they worked for the Americans. He never wrote
about the Water Treatment Plant he visited that will provide fresh potable water
to over half a million people in southern Iraq in just two more months, or the
one in northern Iraq that is providing water for the 330,000 citizens of Irbil. He never told folks back home about the thousands of children that are now in
800 new or rebuilt schools, or about oil production now being back to pre-war
levels and getting better everyday, or raw sewage being taken out of the streets
and put back in the pipes where it belongs, or about the thousands of miles of
new roads, or post offices, police stations or courthouses or... well, he just
left a great deal out now, didn't he?
Why? Perhaps it's because some in the press don't want the American people to
know the truth and prefer instead to only report the negative aspects of the
news because "it sells papers." We deserve better from those who claim the
protection of the Constitution we are fighting to support and defend. America,
don't give up. You are doing much better over here than all too many of your
press will tell you. If you are tired of fighting for freedom and democracy for
those who so strongly long for the country we have, then think of the
alternatives for a moment. Iraq will be better for our efforts and so will the
world. And you are making it happen. Be proud and keep supporting this vital
effort. It is the most important thing America can do.
Thank you. I invite you and your staff to come over at any time to get the
facts. I took a risk with Mr Mosher and obviously got what I consider to be a
very unbalanced representation of what he saw, personally. But I still believe
in general in the press and will always be open to helping you tell a balanced
story.
Essayons! Deliverance!
MG Bill McCoy
CG, Gulf Region Division/Dir, Project and Contracting Office
Multi-National Force-Iraq
|