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PRTs making a difference in Iraq (Provisional Reconstruction Teams)
Multi-National Forces-Iraq ^

Posted on 10/01/2006 12:24:35 PM PDT by SandRat

Integral ingredients in Iraq’s long term success are the Provincial reconstruction teams.

They help rebuild the war-torn country. Specifically they help provincial governments develop a transparent and sustained governing capability and to promote security, stability and rule of law.

“There are a lot of hospitals and schools that have opened. A lot of roads have been fixed. There are a lot of positive things happening. The quality of people’s lives has improved,” said Rashid of the Ninewa PRT.

Rashid, who chooses to use only his first name for safety purposes, has been a bi-lingual, bi-cultural PRT advisor for nearly a year.

The Babil PRT, headquartered in Hillah, stood up in November.

"We regard Iraq's success as our own success. We are partners in building this new Iraq." He added that "We believe that working together to rebuild Iraq is not only important to the Iraqi people. It is important to the world, because transforming the Greater Middle East is the foremost challenge of our time," said Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad during the team’s inauguration ceremony.

The PRTs are the primary U.S. link with provincial governments throughout Iraq, helping provide a visible sign of partnership between the US and Iraq on the path to success.

In March, Baghdad province established its PRT.

“Of all the PRTs, the Baghdad PRT may be the most critical one yet to the accomplishment of our joint objective of a free and prosperous Iraq,” said Khalilzad.

It will strengthen the ability of Iraqis to improve their local communities by rebuilding their civil society. But the core mission remains across the board in all PRTs, to strengthen local government, said the ambassador.

The teams have been in place in Afghanistan since 2004, and now the successful model is working in Iraq.

“The improvement of the provincial governments’ capacity to improve the lives of the Iraqi people is not only important to the United States and to the Iraqis, but to the world as well,” said Khalilzad. “A successful Iraq will reshape the future of the Middle East, and the future of the Middle East will reshape the future of the world.”

The PRT staff is a unique group of military and civilian employees with specialized skills and diverse backgrounds. Soldiers and Sailors have a presence, along with representatives from the State Department and Department of Justice.

“I do elections, so I meet with one of the representatives from the election commission,” said 1st Lt. Wade Williams, who has been with the Ninewa team nearly two months.

Despite challenges, Army Col. Bruce Grant, the deputy director of the Ninewa PRT, said the Ninewa government has shown its ability to work as a cohesive unit. He said Mosul is a multi-ethnic crossroads of different cultures due to its location – not far from Syria, Turkey and Iran. The province’s diverse population includes Assyrian Christians, Kurdish Yezidis, Armenians and Turkomen.

“You’ve already got commitment by the leadership to a multi-ethnic society. That is a huge step in this country,” Grant said.

The teams are not just an American venture. The United Kingdom and Italy set up PRTs in Basra and Dhi Qar province respectively. Rounding out the teams are civilian advisors, who speak the local languages and better understand the local culture. Team members try to go out into the province and make at least two contacts per week with their assigned provincial government officials.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: difference; iraq; prts

1 posted on 10/01/2006 12:24:36 PM PDT by SandRat
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2 posted on 10/01/2006 12:25:01 PM PDT by SandRat (Duty, Honor, Country. What else needs to be said?)
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