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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

Washington File

04 April 2003

Free Iraqi Forces Called Critical to Building Local Trust

(Water, food, medicines are beginning to flow in southern Iraq) (520)
By Jacquelyn S. Porth
Washington File Security Affairs Writer
A U.S. Army officer says that the Free Iraqi Forces (FIF) operating
with his civil affairs units in southern Iraq have been critical in
establishing the trust necessary to get the water, food and medical
distribution networks running again.
Speaking to reporters at the Pentagon April 4 via telephone from the
Iraqi port city of Umm Qasr, Colonel Dave Blackledge, commander of the
354th Civil Affairs Brigade, said the contribution of the FIF has been
invaluable because they once lived in or around the city and many have
local family connections. As a result, he said, the FIF have built
relationships with the community quickly.
The FIF have been instrumental in locating former port workers and
reassuring them that their old jobs await them, Blackledge said. He
said some 200 port workers have been rehired by British forces and are
being paid in U.S. dollars. More are being hired daily, he added.
Blackledge said the FIF have helped his units sift through port
documents and provided translation services. They have also helped the
coalition recruit locally resident Iraqis to assist with humanitarian
aid distribution.
Significant progress has been made in less than two weeks, Blackledge
said. The government of Kuwait is pumping more potable water to Umm
Qasr than can be consumed locally, and tanker trucks are transporting
potable water northward under military escort, he said. The drivers of
these trucks are all local hires, he added.
The need for water "has been met," Blackledge stated.  
With regard to food, he said Umm Qasr did not face severe shortages
because there was a pre-existing stockpile of food in the city. He
added that food is being handed out by both military and U.S.
government sources. Representatives of the World Food Program also
completed an assessment on April 4, according to Blackledge, and food
should begin flowing from that direction as well. The Kuwaiti
government has sent in 30 truckloads of food, he said.
Blackledge said emphasis has been placed on bolstering Iraqis' access
to protein sources, especially lentils and rice. Other items that are
flowing in include tea, sugar, and cooking oil as well as
non-foodstuffs such as hygiene items.
"The goal has been to resurrect the Oil-For-Food distribution system"
that had existed because it operated both effectively and efficiently,
he said. "That's what we're looking to use to get the food through,"
he said.
On another front, he said, the first medical supplies were delivered
to Basrah on April 4 courtesy of the International Committee of the
Red Cross.
Blackledge indicated that he met with representatives of the U.S.
Disaster Assistance Response team as well as the World Food Program on
April 4.
The security environment in and around the port city has been declared
to be "very permissive" now, Blackledge said, thanks to coordination
with local leaders. He said stabilization will open the way for
international organizations and non-governmental organizations to come
in.
(The Washington File is a product of the Office of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
http://usinfo.state.gov)



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