Title: NS 3041
1The Iraqi Economy II EconomicPrograms at the
Local Level
- NS 3041
- Economic Development and
- Comparative Economic Systems
- August 2008
- Dr. Robert E. Looney
- relooney_at_nps.edu
2Outline I
- Introduction
- Regional Contrasts and General Considerations
- Income Patterns
- Unemployment
- Development and Reconstruction Expenditures
- Internal Migration
- Development StrategiesGeneral Consideration
- Links with Counterinsurgency Strategy
- Economic Development and Provision of Essential
Services - Strategy Trade-Offs
3Outline II
- Elements of a Localized Strategy for Iraq
- Relevant Studies
- Socio-economic Linkages
- Shadow Economy
- Deterioration of Social Capital
- Evolution of Insurgent/Criminal Networks
- Bottom-up Development Strategy
- Integrated Framework for Growth
- Implications for Local Projects
- Vocational Training
4Outline III
- Questions? -- Break
- Implementing An Economic Strategy At the Local
Level - Micro-Credit
- CERP Program
- Provincial Reconstruction Teams (PRTs)
- Al Anbar Case Study
- Areas for Improvement
- Lessons learned -- Possible Strategies for the
Future - Suggestions for the Army
5Regional Income Disparities
6Employment and Wage Structure by Governorate
(2004)
7Iraqi Development and Reconstruction Expenditures
8Availability of Goods
9Internal Migration I
- 1.4 million refugees
- Tend to displace to an area where they have
family or friends and the environment is
considered safer -- typically an area with
homogenous Sectarian composition. - Northern Iraq
- Northern provinces outside Kurdistan are
multi-sectarian melting pots that have complex
patterns of migration. In Kirkuk, the situation
is unstable. - Sunni areas
- Many Sunnis from dangerous multi-sectarian
communities, and cannot afford to travel abroad,
have relocated to predominately Sunni Provinces
such as Al-Anbar and Salahuddin. Many non-Sunnis
have left these provinces.
10Internal Migration II
- Central/Southern Provinces
- Large numbers of Shia left Baghdad for the nine
predominately Shia provinces of central and
Southern Iraq - The majority will seek to settle in new areas
- Baghdad
- The number of displaced persons inside Baghdad
has doubled since February 2006 - Eighty five percent of these migrants have
relocated from one part of the city to another - 72 are Shia Arabs
- 99 feel they are safer since they moved to
neighborhoods controlled by their sectarian bloc
11Internal Migration III
- Within Iraq, displaced persons strain local
economies by - Inflating rents, and prices of food and
commodities - Reducing local access to jobs, healthcare and
fuel - Several more stable governorates now restrict
entry or closed governorates to migrants - Karbala now requires new residents to demonstrate
they have family in the local area to sponsor
them.
12Internal Migration IV
13Elements of Development Strategy I
- The Counterinsurgency Field Manuel recommends a
strategy that relies on first restoring essential
services, then promoting economic development - Essential services
- Should be restored immediately regardless of the
security situation - These include police fire protection water
electricity schools transportation networks
medical aid sanitation food supply, fuels and
basic financial services - Economic Development programs to improve living
standards - Includes job creation local investment
clarifying property ownership and resolving
conflicts protecting property rights market
creation, and vocational training.
14Elements of Development Strategy II
- The distinction between essential services and
economic development is one of timing - Restoration of services must be begun
immediately. Economic development must often wait
until security is restored. - As a general rule, at present time, economic
development should be the focus in peaceful
regions such as Sahul, Irbil, Sulaimaniya,
Qadisya, Misan and Muthanna - Essential services are more important in the
unstable areas of Ninevah, Baghdad, Babil, Anbar
and Basra.
15Elements of Development Strategy III
- The key is to demonstrate that programs are
bringing prosperity to the average Iraqi - Where possible, focus on economic development
projects that have a quick pay-off and create as
many winners as possible with a stake in the
future - Effectiveness is more important than efficiency
- More efficient, integrated state-of-the-art
systems, like a national electricity grid, are
fragile and vulnerable to the insurgency - More robust systems, like community generators,
are equally effective and much less vulnerable
16Elements of a Localized Strategy I
- The security situation dictates the role of
government in the economy - Active government substitutes for the lack of
markets - Government focus should be on establishing an
institutional framework that will allow markets
to develop and grow - The security situation and shrinking budgets also
dictate strategy - The first priority is to use aid-related funds as
a tool to bring about stability, not long- or
medium-term growth. - This implies a bottom-up approach, rather than
the traditional top-down strategy
17Elements of a Localized Strategy II
- To deal with the insurgency, it is critical to
address the way projects, programs and policies
impact and interact with - The informal/shadow economy,
- social capital formation
- Insurgency/criminal gangs.
- The object of policy is to create positive
linkages between these elements and the economy
so as to create virtuous circles of growth and
development
18Socio-Economic Linkages Insurgency
19Large Shadow Economy
20 Deficient Social Capital I
- Social capital deteriorated significantly under
Saddam and continues to deteriorate under today's
stresses. - Social capital can be defined as networks of
relationships that bind people together - Trust is a key element of Iraqi social capital.
- There are three main kinds of trust
- Ascribed Trust Kinship groups and family
members. - Process-Based Trust Individuals that have known
each other for some time a key element in
business networks. - Extended Trust Transactions between individuals
with limited information about one another
21Deficient Social Capital II
- Currently in Iraq
- Most networks are built on ascribed trust
- A smaller number are built on process-based trust
- Few rely on extended trust
- Improving process-based and extended trust is
critical to establishing a market based economy - Restoring trust and social capital is a long
process that can best be done through community
development and the restoration of stability.
22Insurgent/Gang Networks I
- Iraq exhibits many of the key elements described
in the Third Generation (3G2) Gang Model - Violent networks exist in the context of a state
constrained by minimal capacity, - The country suffers from is poor economic
performance - There are significant social, political and
economic disparities - Many Iraqi insurgent gangs have evolved over time
- Their influence has grown from street to
sub-national level - They have evolved from protective groups into
prominent political and economic actors - Gangs have been able to expand due to the vacuum
created by state retrenchment, corruption and
incompetence - Gangs have increasingly turned to criminal
activities in the shadow economy and use violence
to increase their resources
23Insurgent/Gang Networks II
- The 3G2 Model divides gang activity into 3
generations - Generation 1 consists of traditional street gangs
which do not pose a major threat to security - They are localized, turf-oriented, with
inter-gang rivalries - They lack sophistication and have a loose
leadership structure - In Iraq, they may protect ethnic or tribal groups
- They quickly exploited the vacuum after Saddam's
overthrow - They finance themselves through opportunistic
criminal activity - Generation 2 gangs are a major threat to security
and law enforcement - They evolve from the most successful Generation 1
gangs through violence and intimidation and often
have ties to the insurgency - They have sophisticated structures, similar to
businesses, and tend to think in markets rather
than turf - They finance their activities through shadow
economy activities, like oil smuggling, drugs,
and kidnappings
24Insurgent/Gang Networks III
- Generation 3, the final stage of gang evolution,
is a major problem for security - Gen 3 gangs are highly sophisticated and have
fully evolved political aims - Their goals are power and financial acquisition
- They are protected by government officials, whom
they have corrupted - To increase their support and funding, they form
foreign alliances with states like Iran - They may evolve into enclave states that provide
services and function as de facto governments
25Insurgent/Gang Networks IV
- To combat the insurgency and slow or stop the
formation and evolution of gangs, in addition to
better law enforcement and security, it is
necessary to - Rapidly create jobs in the formal sector
- Reduce the size of the informal/shadow economy
- Increase the strength of the legitimate political
sphere
26Bottom-Up Development Strategy
- A bottom-up orientation that focuses on the local
population is best for addressing Iraq's shadow
economy, social capital deterioration and
criminal/insurgent gangs - Instead of a simple free market strategy, opt for
an "evolutionary" development strategy that
begins by focusing on a limited number of
critical development constraints - Use trial and error at local level to find out
what works before making major commitments of
funds and personnel - Build on established institutions and traditions
to prevent further economic disruption and social
capital deterioration - Sequence activities to generate a virtuous circle
so that local Iraqis become winners invested in
advancing reform process
27Integrated Framework for Growth
28Implications for Local Projects
- The following general actions are useful at the
provincial and regional levels - Improve essential services like electricity,
water, fuel , sewage, focusing on robust, easily
maintained technologies - Encourage labor-intensive employment
opportunities in agriculture and small business - Employ local labor to improve the quality of
transportation and infrastructure, i.e., phone
system, roads, bridges, pipelines - To reach those who would otherwise be locked out
of the economy introduce - Microfinance
- Vocational training
- Establish more efficient provincial government
and institutions
29Vocational Training I
- Vocational training is another key program at the
local level - It enables localities to draw on their strengths
and put underutilized resources to use - It helps solve the shortage of skilled labor,
which surveys suggest is a major concern of
private businesses in Iraq. - Key elements of a setting up a vocational
training program include - Determining locally needed skills and desired
qualifications - Choosing a school site, keeping in mind that
vocational training sites are an insurgency
target - Securing buildings and conceal students/instructo
rs identities
30Vocational Training II
- Other key elements of a setting up a vocational
training program - Training the trainer
- Balance language versus technical skills
- Consider team teaching or sending an Iraqi
translator to school - Selecting the students can be the most difficult
challenge - Be sensitive to ethnic and gender considerations
- Consider paying students for their participation
or charging tuition to raise their stake in the
outcome - Remember that subsidies are required to cover
travel and living expenses - Set up a service to place the students in
appropriate jobs
31Questions -- Break
- Questions?
- Next Implementation --- Microfinance, CERP,
PRTs
32U.S. Aid to Iraq Overview
- Immense effort between 2001 and 2007 with many
local successes. However many problems remain - No meaningful measures of effectiveness developed
- SIGIR has documented immense waste and corruption
- Past aid program 95 dispersed
- Details of combined State and DoD FY2008 and
FY2008 plan, program and budget request unclear.
Congress unlikely to fully support request - Serous shortfalls in qualified aid, PRT and EPRT
personnel - No clear plan to transfer success to Iraqi
government management and funding
33U.S. Aid to Iraq ( billions)
34U.S. Aid Spending, Projects Completed
35Microfinance Institutions (MFI)
- Microfinance institutions are a key component of
bottom-up development - Microfinance puts basic financial services within
reach of the poor - It provides small loans, typically for working
capital - By assessing small amounts of credit at
reasonable interest rates, it gives people the
opportunity to set up small businesses - Based on informal appraisal of borrowers and
investments, it makes capital available to those
who would be turned down by conventional banks - Records show that poor people are a good risk,
with higher repayment rates than conventional
borrowers
36Microfinance in Iraq I
- Currently in Iraq there are 5 MFIs
- Three are run by international NGOs and two by
domestic NGOs - Together, they have twenty-six branch offices in
fifteen provinces, with four more branches being
organized - Outstanding as of 2007
- 19,019 loans totaling 26,765,000 total loan
value - Average loan size 1,407
- Since their establishment, MFIs have made 52,768
loans with a total value of 109,471,000. - Less than 1 of MFI loans are delinquent 30 days
or greater. - This success rate is the result of careful
selection of potential borrowers and proper loan
management - Additional grants to start up microcredit
financial institutions are an excellent
investment in both economic development and Iraqi
goodwill
37Microfinance Outreach, November 2006
38Microfinance in Iraq II
- Microfinance is an indirect conflict resolution
tool. - Microfinance works best for poverty reduction but
is also an efficient job creator. - Micro-loans create about one and a half direct
new permanent jobs per every 2,000 loaned to
small businesses - These small businesses tend to provide essential
goods and services that have stable demand over
time (e.g. localized clothiers, small electronic
retailers, grocers, etc.). - Military support of MFI should be invisible
- The greatest challenge is hiring and training
quality MFI staff
39CERP I
- The Commanders Emergency Response Program (CERP)
enables commanders to respond to urgent requests
for humanitarian relief and reconstruction
assistance - Under MNC-I 092, commanders are directed to use
CERP funds to focus on projects that will employ
substantial numbers of Iraqi workers. - CERP funds can be used for goods or services, as
long as the best effort is made to
identify/employ local Iraqi firms. - All projects must be coordinated with local Iraqi
governorate and regional coordinators, civil
affairs elements, and provincial reconstruction
teams.
40CERP II
- Since FY04, 2,315.9 million in CERP funds have
been allocated to Iraq. These funds have been
used for - Emergency repair of critical facilities
- Critical infrastructure shortfalls that could be
rapidly resolved - Projects to reduce the risk of injury to the
local populace - Procurement of critical equipment to replace
lost, stolen, and non-repairable items or to
establish critical community essential services - Rapid reconstruction following combat operations
41CERP III
- Projects are chosen on the basis of
- How quickly they can be executed
- How many Iraqis can be employed
- How many Iraqis will benefit
- How visible the project is
- Approval levels
- MNC-I CG Projects requiring over 500K
- Division CG Projects requiring less than 500K
- Brigade/Lower At the discretion of the Division
CG - Projects exceeding 200K must be contracted by
warranted contracting officer
42CERP Aid Obligations 2003-2008
43CERP Project Completions 2003-2008
44CERP Project Selection
- How CERP projects are selected
- Commanders, in coordination with Iraqi government
officials, agencies and other staff, identify
projects to meet urgent humanitarian and
reconstruction needs - Units examine the proposed project, developing a
statement of work or a project proposal that - Describes what project is and what it will do
- Identifies the estimated cost of the project
based upon similar projects and other supporting
information - Units provide information to the CERP Project
Manager to identify it as a planned project
45Authorized CERP Projects I
- Here are some examples of the range of CERP
projects authorized in Iraq - Water and sanitation
- Food production and distribution
- Electricity
- Healthcare
- Education
- Telecommunications
- Economic, financial and management improvements
- Transportation
- Rule of law and governance
46CERP Authorized Projects II
- Range of CERP projects authorized in Iraq (contd)
- Irrigation
- Civic cleanup activities
- Civic support vehicles
- Repair of civic and cultural facilities
- Repair of damage
- Condolence payments
- Payment to individuals upon release from
detention - Protective measures
- Other urgent humanitarian or reconstruction
projects - Micro-grants
47Areas Not Authorized for CERP
- Areas not authorized for CERP funding include
- Anything that directly/indirectly benefits MNC-I
or coalition forces - Entertaining the local Iraqi population
- Weapons buy-back programs
- Rewards
- The provision of firearms, ammunition, and the
removal of unexploded ordinance - Services duplicating those provided by municipal
governments - Support to individuals or private businesses
(exception for condolence battle damage) - Salaries and pensions funded directly by GOI.
48CERP Allocation by Function
49CERP Lessons Learned I
- As the number of CERP projects increase, valuable
lessons have been learned - The issue of project maintenance must be
addressed while the project is being
conceptualized so that the beneficiaries get a
realistic idea of future costs. - Transition of CERP projects to the GOI are more
successful when local GOI ministries have been
involved in the project throughout its life-cycle - When the ministries trust the quality of
construction, they are more willing to accept
final product. - Transition to GOI is difficult when GOI
ministries do not know the contractor awarded the
project. - Ministries should be involved in the contractor
selection process.
50CERP Lessons Learned II
- Additional CERP lessons learned
- Dont let GOI ministries get too involved in
projects - Often ministries direct contractors to do work
outside contract scope - Work together before the project starts to define
roles and responsibilities - Be familiar with the local culture and the labor
skills available in the project area - Do not build a complex system if the user does
not have training, funds or parts to sustain it - Great benefits are usually obtained by providing
Iraqis with vocational training in building,
maintenance and repair - Training Iraqis helps sustain the project and
prevent rapid deterioration. - Specific staff should be assigned to this task.
51CERP Issues
- SIGIR and others have raised a number of issues
about CERP - No mechanisms exist for measuring the outcomes of
CERP projects - The high turnover of military personnel in Iraq
produces little continuity in the management and
oversight of projects - Little emphasis has be placed on handing-over
projects to Iraqis and, thus, insuring their
sustainability. - Spending CERP funds to meet local needs may
conflict with PRT efforts to make local
governments assume responsibility and work with
provincial and national authorities to address
problems - Those allocating CERP grants are not development
specialists and have been provided with little or
no training in the selection and management of
reconstruction activities
52PRT Program I
- The Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) Program
for Iraq began in mid-2005 - Under the program, the military provides
protection to U.S. civilian officials and
development specialists, allowing them access to
parts of Iraq that otherwise would be
inaccessible - The purpose of the PRT Program is to help Iraqs
Provincial and local governments govern
effectively and deliver essential services. - PRT teams, coach, and mentor provincial and local
government officials in core competencies of
governance and economic development
53PRT Program II
- Toward the end of 2007, the PRT program consisted
of - 7 PRTs led by the United States and 3 led by the
coalition - 7 provincial support teams (PSTs), which are
small cells of advisors - PSTs reside on a military forward operating base
- They provide advice to provincial officials as
needed - 15 recently deployed ePRTs, embedded with brigade
combat teams (BCTs) in and around Baghdad and Al
Anbar province. - They form Provincial Reconstruction Development
Councils (PRDCs) to identify local projects that
can be implemented with the help of increased
U.S. security - They help provincial governments improve their
relations with the central government - ePRTs show local governments how to more
effectively use the Iraqi government funds
allocated to each province.
54PRT Program III
- The five main areas of PRT emphasis at the
grassroots level are - Governance
- Rule of Law
- Economic Development
- Reconstruction
- Political Reconciliation
- Results have been mixed, depending on the region,
due largely to differences in local stability
55PRT and EPRT Locations, March 2008
56Security by Province
57Transferring Provincial Control
58PRT Stability Matrix I
59PRT Stability Matrix II
- The Stability Matrix shows stability by plotting
its two primary components legitimacy and
effectiveness. - Upper right -- Most stable. Authority has
effective security forces, population supports
authority and resistant to criminal activity
Essential services are usually in place--good
environment for emphasis on economic development - Lower right population supports ineffective
government authoritiescriminal and other violent
activity frequently occur due to lack of
government control some services, small
projectsemphasis on up-grading local police
60PRT Stability Matrix III
- Upper Left authoritarian model. Government able
to deliver services and monopolizes use of force.
Criminal activity low, but dissident groups have
significant influence and must be engaged to
bring about stability. Services, economic
development possible, private investment
unlikely. - Lower left most difficult. Government
ineffective, criminal elements run rampant,
dissident groups, insurgency may thrive, creating
instability few or no services -- economic
activity on hold until stability restored. -
61PRT Economic Activity by Region I
- Northern Provinces
- There is healthy economic growth in Kurdish
region - As a result, they are able to attract
international donors and investors - However, shortages of fuel and reliable power
constrain development in the other provinces - PRT activity in the North
- The PRT is attempting to develop financial
sectors and assist small business and
agricultural efforts - Their efforts to date are fairly small and focus
on teaching management skills to provincial
officials, rather than funding construction
projects
62PRT Economic Activity by Region II
- Western Province (Anbar)
- Efforts at economic development are underway but
have been hampered by - The lack of programs to create permanent jobs, a
lack of fuel, and sporadic power access, which
undermine factory restarts and other projects - Initial slow spending of GOI funds for the
reconstruction and rehabilitation of essential
services - PRT efforts in Anbar
- Since the arrival of the PRT in Mid-June 2007, a
factory has been restarted and a main market
reopened - The PRT has also been teaching management skills
to provincial officials
63PRT Economic Activity by Region III
- Central Provinces (Baghdad, Diyala)
- Security issues and sporadic power supplies
hinder growth in Baghdad - North Diyala has stable growth South Diyala
remains dysfunctional due to a tenuous security
situation. - PRT Efforts
- Although the lack of security hinders PRTs,
efforts have been made to secure and reopen
Baghdad's markets, promote micro-lending, and
assist the government in determining the
viability of state-owned enterprises - PRTs are managing reconstruction efforts and
working to teach their provincial counterparts
how to take responsibility for maintaining their
infrastructure. - An example from Tikrit.
64PRT Economic Activity by Region IV
- South-Central Provinces (Najaf, Karbala)
- The region is economically stagnant, with little
evidence of growth or permanent job creation - There is a pressing need to reduce unemployment
to counter recruitment by the militias - Security has restricted commercial credit and
discouraged Iraqi and foreign investment in small
and medium sized businesses - Religious tourism and small-scale agricultural
production are the main economic activities. - PRT Efforts
- PRTs have opened business development centers and
plan to use quick response funds to increase
agricultural production - The security situation limits PRT mentoring of
Iraqi officials.
65PRT Economic Activity by Region V
- South-Eastern Provinces (Basra)
- Until violence subsides, little progress can be
expected - Except for the oil industry and ports, there is
little new economic activity - Unemployment is 40-60 and subsistence
agriculture is main source of jobs - Efforts to restart small-to-medium sized
businesses that flourished before 2003 have been
stymied by lack of skills or interest. - PRT Efforts
- The PRT has tried to relax travel and commercial
restrictions between Basra and Kuwait - PRTs plan to introduce a micro-lending program
and encourage the start of small and medium-sized
enterprises in Dhi-Qar
66PRT Issues I
- SIGIR and others have reported a number of PRT
problems stemming from the lack of security in
some areas - Travel by PRT personnel required a minimum of 3
armored vehicles and 8 shooters - Many PRT members cannot regularly meet with local
government officials to carry out tasks. - Many local Iraqis are too intimidated to meet
with U.S. staff - There is little coordination between PRTs and the
U.S. military in places where security has been
handed over to the Iraqis - Shortages of basic equipment often hinder PRT
efforts.
67PRT Issues II
- House Armed Services Critique
- PRTs do not receive adequate support from the
U.S. government - They have been given no clear mission or
operation plan - There are no established metrics to judge PRT
effectiveness - There are no clear lines of authority, which
complicates PRT funding by creating a confusing
array of funding pots - PRTs draw heavily on CERP money
- Funds from other sources, like USAID and the
State Department can take months for approval - These funds often come with restrictions that
preclude meeting local needs.
68PRT Issues Staffing
- Staffing Problems
- The State Department has had difficulty enticing
its personnel to volunteer for PRT posts - Some slots have been filled by military civil
affairs personnel, who often lack the skills
needed for local government, city management,
business development and agricultural outreach - The October 2007 SIGIR Report found that many
PRTs were at half-capacity and had a mismatch of
skills to requirements - Of PRT 610 personal, only 29 were bilingual
Arab-speaking cultural advisers - PRT positions are often viewed as career
disrupting, rather than career enhancing
69What Works Al-Anbar
- The US military's experience in al-Anbar province
has shown that these types of simple strategies
work - Demonstrate in practical ways that peace will
bring progress and a better standard of living - Incorporate local authorities into the
development process by - Asking them to design their own projects and
present the completed plans for approval - Using them to help identify contractors
- Requiring local officials to work through their
provincial governments - Establish working relationships with governments,
NGOs and others involved in reconstruction - Focus on smaller, cheaper, more visible projects
that can be completed quickly
70Provincial Reconstruction Status
71Improvement Needed IRMS
- Iraqi Reconstruction Management System IRMS
- IRMS is an MNC-I mandated database for
reconstruction projects - It contains a lot of information, but it is not
very accurate - A recent MND-I assessment of IRMS usability
issues found - It suffers from poor connectivity
- Outside players are not updating information
- It is too difficult to correct errors
- There are no established rules for use
- No one person is in charge
72Strategies for the Future
- A number of innovative approaches are available
to consolidate and expand successful programs.
Taking into account the needs for improvement - Build on integrating and expanding the scope of
existing programs, CERP and PRTs. - Focus on short-run, employment-intensive projects
at the community level. - Let local communities set development priorities,
draw-up budgets, and participate in
implementation - Local participation encourages social capital
development and trust-building activities. - Expand CERP to include funding for private sector
activities larger than those supported by
microfinancial institutions. - Projects could involve expanding informal sector
firms into the formal sector - Give priority to labor intensive activities that
produce an immediate increase in output.
73Suggestions for the Army I
- Because of the security situation the Army will
continue to play the key role in reconstruction
and development. Some general guidelines in
expanding economics-based counterinsurgency
strategy - Develop a two-tiered strategy to
- Assist with local community-based economic
development of formal sector activity - Create projects targeted to reduce the size of
the informal/shadow economy. - Projects and activities should be evaluated in
terms of their contribution to these two goals,
with traditional economic rate of return analysis
secondary.
74Suggestions for the Army II
- Let local governments take the lead and make
their own mistakes. - Select projects/activities that have linkages
that make them capable of initiating a virtuous
circle of economic activity and institutional
change. - Treat aid and economic development as short term
operational necessities until sufficient security
exists for longer term activities. - Give top priority to local jobs, local services
and other efforts that are immediately visible to
and have an impact on local Iraqi citizens. - Focus on sustaining and expanding key sources of
government revenue including sources of local
revenues.
75Suggestions for the Army III
- Do not attempt ambitious efforts to restructure
infrastructure unless these can be managed,
maintained and implemented at the local level. - Do not rely on or use US contractors or other
outside contractors unless absolutely necessary. - Provide on-going US, allied, or local military
security or do not attempt the effort. - Accept the fact that some level of waste and
corruption is inevitable and that meeting urgent
needs on local terms has the higher priority.
76Questions?
- End--The Iraqi Economy II