The battle to win the war in Iraq will apparently be not only include a surge of 20-30,000 US troops, but will include an absolutely massive hearts-and-minds employment-creation campaign:
"The other sweetener will be a doubling of reconstruction efforts. Up to $1bn is to be spent on a programme in which Iraqis are employed to clean the streets and repair and paint schools.
The Pentagon-run scheme would try to draw young men away from insurgent groups and back into the mainstream economy. It would be administered by officials embedded in US combat brigades in a bid to persuade Iraqis that the Americans were there as a force for good and not just of occupation."
The 'embedding' issue will clearly be one for humanitarian organizations to fume about; more importantly, even the least-experienced development worker would ask about the sustainability of spending 1 billion US dollars on ad hoc employment generation projects.
Friday, 22 June 2007
Looking at early ideas for the Iraq Surge: Bush $1bn jobs plan to draw Iraqis into fold
Labels:
Civil Society,
Economic Foundations for Growth and Development,
Economic Strategy and Coordination of International Assistance,
Employment Generation,
Local Governance,
Public Administration and Government Strengthening,
Security and Public Order,
Social and Economic Well-Being and Humanitarian Relief
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