The liberation of Iraq by DHS Club
VIP Member Everett Willis
Since President Bush declared an end to major combat on May 1...
... the first battalion of the new Iraqi Army has graduated and
is on active duty.
... over 60,000 Iraqis now provide security to their fellow citizens.
... nearly all of Iraq's 400 courts are functioning.
... the Iraqi judiciary is fully independent.
... on Monday, October 6 power generation hit 4,518 megawatts-exceeding
the prewar average.
... all 22 universities and 43 technical institutes and colleges
are open, as are nearly all primary and secondary schools.
... by October 1, Coalition forces had rehabilitated over 1,500
schools - 500 more than scheduled.
... teachers earn from 12 to 25 times their former salaries.
... all 240 hospitals and more than 1200 clinics are open.
... doctors salaries are at least eight times what they were under
Saddam.
... pharmaceutical distribution has gone from essentially nothing
to 700 tons in May to a current total of 12,000 tons.
... the Coalition has helped administer over 22 million vaccination
doses to Iraq's children.
... a Coalition program has cleared over 14,000 kilometers of Iraq's
27,000 kilometers of weed-choked canals which now irrigate tens
of thousands of farms. This project has created jobs for more than
100,000 Iraqi men and women.
... we have restored over three-quarters of prewar telephone services
and over two-thirds of the potable water production.
... there are 4,900 full-service telephone connections. We expect
50,000 by year-end.
... the wheels of commerce are turning. From bicycles to satellite
dishes to cars and trucks, businesses are coming to life in all
major cities and towns.
... 95 percent of all prewar bank customers have service and first-time
customers are opening accounts daily.
... Iraqi banks are making loans to finance businesses.
... the central bank is fully independent.
... Iraq has one of the worlds most growth-oriented investment
and banking laws.
... Iraq has a single, unified currency for the first time in 15
years.
... satellite TV dishes are legal.
... foreign journalists aren't on 10-day visas paying mandatory
and extortion fees to the Ministry of Information for minders and
other government spies.
... there is no Ministry of Information.
... there are more than 170 newspapers.
... you can buy satellite dishes on what seems like every street
corner.
... foreign journalists (and everyone else) are free to come and
go.
... a nation that had not one single element - legislative, judicial
or executive - of a representative government, now does.
... in Baghdad alone residents have selected 88 advisory councils.
Baghdad's first democratic transfer of power in 35 years happened
when the city council elected its new chairman.
... today in Iraq chambers of commerce, business, school and professional
organizations are electing their leaders all over the country.
... 25 ministers, selected by the most representative governing
body in Iraq's history, run the day-to-day business of government.
... the Iraqi government regularly participates in international
events. Since July the Iraqi government has been represented in
over two dozen international meetings, including those of the UN
General Assembly, the Arab League, the World Bank and IMF and, today,
the Islamic Conference Summit. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs today
announced that it is reopening over 30 Iraqi embassies around the
world.
... Shia religious festivals that were all but banned, aren't.
... for the first time in 35 years, in Karbala thousands of Shiites
celebrate the pilgrimage of the 12th Imam.
... the Coalition has completed over 13,000 reconstruction projects,
large and small, as part of a strategic plan for the reconstruction
of Iraq.
... Uday and Queasy are dead - and no longer feeding innocent Iraqis
to the zoo lions, raping the young daughters of local leaders to
force cooperation, torturing Iraq's soccer players for losing games,
or murdering critics.
... children aren't imprisoned or murdered when their parents disagree
with the government.
... political opponents aren't imprisoned, tortured, executed,
maimed, or are forced to watch their families die for disagreeing
with Saddam.
... millions of long-suffering Iraqis no longer live in perpetual
terror.
... Saudis will hold municipal elections.
... Qatar is reforming education to give more choices to parents.
... Jordan is accelerating market economic reforms.
... the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded for the first time to an
Iranian -- a Muslim woman who speaks out with courage for human
rights, for democracy and for peace.
... Saddam is gone.
... Iraq is free.
... President Bush has not faltered or failed.
... Yet, little or none of this information has been published
by the Press corps that prides itself on bring you all the news
that's important.
Iraq under US lead control has come further in six months than
Germany did in seven years or Japan did in nine years following
WWII. Military deaths from fanatic Nazi's, and Japanese numbered
in the thousands and continued for over three years after WWII victory
was declared.
It took the US over four months to clear away the twin tower debris,
let alone attempt to build something else in its place.
Now, take into account that almost every Democrat leader in the
House and Senate has fought President Bush on every aspect of his
handling of this country's war and the post-war reconstruction;
and that they continue to claim on a daily basis on national TV
that this conflict has been a failure.
Taking everything into consideration, even the unfortunate loss
of our sons and daughters in this conflict, do you think anyone
else in the world could have accomplished as much as the United
States and the Bush administration in so short a period of time?
These are facts of Valour our men and women are fighting for, along
with over 40 other courageous countries.
Submitted by DHS Club VIP Everett Willis
2002-2004
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