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  1. #25851
    Senior Investor shotgunsusie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by PopaDinar View Post
    I received an email from my buddy I talked to in Iraq about 2 weeks ago...
    He sent the email a few days ago but it was in my spam folder...
    He did not really have any new info, due to not being able to check it out ...
    I have cut out all names and there was some serious personal talk which I cut out as well... I was not going to post it but I thought about it and figured this might be able to help people out on here to understand what a true soldier on the ground has to say about what is going on out there right now and how he see's daily life there, remember he is invested in dinar and is truely on the ground out there right now... Ithought everyone would really love to hear some of this info on daily life in Iraq as we speak from a US Marine



    If we could get some true prayers in for him and all our troops over there right now to keep them safe and on course, I'm sure once I tell him they would muchly appreciate that...

    I'm much behind and in the middle of cooking dinner for the wife and kids right now and will be back on in little bit for any responses...
    wow, thanks. i wanted to point out a couple things he said in that letter:

    People in this area in the North seem to take very slowly to any change, even slower than those down south in the loop. Nothing happens fast over here, nothing. That’s one of the first things you learn now, patience. If you go talk to the police chief, you can't start with business. You have to visit, drink, visit, then work into it. It will take a little more time, a little more influence, a little more learning about what they are capable of. Some don't know what they are capable of because they have been pushed down so long.
    There’s a lot of negative stuff here, but a lot of positives, too. They really need our help in areas like these, taking this on has changed my outlook, these people are actually very grateful, they are also very generous to a fault. They don't have anything, but they will give you all they have.
    speechless??
    Last edited by shotgunsusie; 21-11-2006 at 11:56 PM.
    JULY STILL AINT NO LIE!!!

    franny, were almost there!!

  2. #25852
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    Barzani discuss with the German ambassador opening of the German Consulate

    (Voice of Iraq) - 11-22-2006
    This issue was sent to a friend

    Barzani discuss with the German ambassador opening of the German consulate in Erbil

    Irbil / long
    President of the Kurdistan region Masoud Barzani in the Salah Eddin summer resort yesterday, the German ambassador Karkin ago, the German honorary consul in Kurdistan Kanaan Sheikho expressed his pleasure in the establishment of conditions in Kurdistan in all respects.
    President Barzani and discussed during the interview subject Opening the German Consulate in the Kurdistan region soon.
    In addition to the discussion of economic conditions and the architectural process in the province. as the German ambassador expressed the readiness of German companies to invest in Kurdistan and to participate in the reconstruction process in it.

    For his part, thanked President Barzani position of the German ambassador and the German government, He expressed his full support and the support of the government of the province of any step to consolidating relations between the two sides.

  3. #25853
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    Quote Originally Posted by shotgunsusie View Post
    wow, thanks.>>>>





    speechless??

    Totally. An AMAZING man Popa.

  4. #25854
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    good stuff POPADINAR....tell him we r praying for him and the rest of the soldiers...and tell him thanks also....Pat

  5. #25855
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    Default AT&T has aspirations to do business in the Middle East

    AT&T Expands in Middle East
    Tuesday November 21, 1:31 pm ET
    AT&T Expands Reach in Middle East, Sees Growing Demand


    NEW YORK (AP) -- In addition to opening regional headquarters in Dubai, AT&T Inc. said Tuesday it is expanding its reach in the Middle East, "one of the highest-growth economic areas in the world."

    The telecommunications service provider said its Dubai office will provide home for a "small AT&T team" to work with the company's local partners and customers and support retail and wholesale activity in the region.

    The company said it is seeing growing demand from both its existing customer base as well as local businesses to reach into the region.

    AT&T said it has also opened a global network node, or processing location, in Dubai, and is working with Saudi Telecommunications Co. to deploy a global network node in Saudi Arabia in 2007.

    The company said the moves are part of a wider effort to expand in emerging markets to support its worldwide business customer base.

    AT&T's shares were down 52 cents at $32.69 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.


    Regards,
    JT2154

  6. #25856
    Investor karinc's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by day dreamer
    I'm not able to find the dinars what page or what do i do to see them???
    Page 20:)
    /K

  7. #25857
    Senior Investor shotgunsusie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by karinc View Post
    Originally Posted by day dreamer

    Page 20:)
    /K
    ok, the 5 is Iraq P-70 1981a
    the 10 is Iraq P-71, UNC, (1982)
    the 1 note is Iraq P-69, UNC, (1979)
    JULY STILL AINT NO LIE!!!

    franny, were almost there!!

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    Quote Originally Posted by PopaDinar View Post
    I received an email from my buddy I talked to in Iraq about 2 weeks ago...
    He sent the email a few days ago but it was in my spam folder...
    He did not really have any new info, due to not being able to check it out ...
    I have cut out all names and there was some serious personal talk which I cut out as well... I was not going to post it but I thought about it and figured this might be able to help people out on here to understand what a true soldier on the ground has to say about what is going on out there right now and how he see's daily life there, remember he is invested in dinar and is truely on the ground out there right now... Ithought everyone would really love to hear some of this info on daily life in Iraq as we speak from a US Marine



    If we could get some true prayers in for him and all our troops over there right now to keep them safe and on course, I'm sure once I tell him they would muchly appreciate that...

    I'm much behind and in the middle of cooking dinner for the wife and kids right now and will be back on in little bit for any responses...
    Last week Tuesday I was scheduled to lead our corporate church prayer (we have every Tuesday Night) and the one thing and first thing that I was impressed to pray for was our military in Iraq as well as for the others serving there for "the cause". I remember saying "I'm not sure why it is so impressed on my heart tonite as there is always something going on over there". We pray for them consistently during our corporate prayer time and at times it will be strong upon me to pray on my own time. Not because I'm vested in the country, but because of what we have read in your post here. This post truly touched my heart, I believe more than any other post I've read in the last couple of years. I think because it was personal and intimate. Really caught the "spirit" of what this man was experiencing. Thank you so much for sharing your friend's email. I liked the part that said he would like to stay there, if he could, as he likes it over there. Something about having a true purpose and a cause and helping the truly needy. Prayer again tonite. They will be lifted up again. Thanks. DL
    Last edited by DinarLady; 22-11-2006 at 01:06 AM.

  9. #25859
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    Rebuilding in Iraq tops 4,000 projects
    By Rowan Scarborough
    THE WASHINGTON TIMES
    Published November 20, 2006
    Advertisement
    When and if the smoke ever clears in Iraq, Pentagon officials say the world finally will see a minor miracle.
    "Most Americans don't understand something equivalent to the Marshall Plan has been accomplished in Iraq," said Dean G. Popps, principal assistant secretary of the Army for acquisitions, logistics and technology.
    The Army is the program manager for $20 billion in U.S. taxpayer money that flowed to Iraq after the 2003 invasion to spur a building boom of more than 4,000 projects.
    Amid constant deadly threats from bloodthirsty insurgents, and without a viable Iraqi private contracting sector, the Army Corps of Engineers has supervised the construction of electric grids, health care centers, schools, water and sewage treatment facilities, police stations, academies and border posts.
    Not counting the deteriorating security situation, no facet of the Iraq war has received more negative press than the U.S.- and Iraqi-financed reconstruction. The Washington Times, along with other newspapers, has published a series of articles on setbacks and corruption. But, the Pentagon contends there is another storyline.
    "It's quite a heroic story maligned often by the news media," Mr. Popps said during an interview in his E-Ring Pentagon office. A nearby multicolored map designates hundreds of projects started and completed, from Mosul to Basra.
    Stuart Bowen, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction, has issued a steady stream of reports revealing fraud and mismanagement. Perhaps his most damaging finding was that nearly a quarter of $37 billion in United Nations-secured oil money -- not U.S. taxpayer funds -- shipped to Iraq cannot be traced and was likely stolen.
    But Mr. Bowen has said fraud involving U.S. money, while serious, is not widespread and that the huge majority of projects proceeded as required. And, a Bowen report to Congress last summer seemed to back up Mr. Popps' message of progress.
    "Although the story of Iraq reconstruction has been punctuated by shortfalls and deficiencies, the infrastructure overview provided [in] this quarterly report presents a picture of significant progress achieved through a substantial U.S. investment of time, talent and tax dollars in Iraq's relief and reconstruction."
    Mr. Popps said it is first important to understand what the rebuilding team inherited. U.S. intelligence knew little about the actual state of Iraq's energy infrastructure and social service network. When the Army Corps of Engineers got on the ground, there was shock:
    •The three regional sewage treatments plants in greater Baghdad did not work; raw waste poured into the Tigris River and downstream through villages. Sadr City, the impoverished Shi'ite slum repressed by the ruling Sunni Ba'ath Party, lacked any sewage system. "Some slam the Americans because there is sewage in Sadr City," said an incredulous Mr. Popps. "Please."
    •Few towns had a central supply of clean water.
    •The electrical grid suffered under 1950s technology and disrepair. Saddam Hussein starved the rest of the country of power to give the capital of 6 million about 20 hours a day.
    •The country lacked any primary health care facilities; hospitals and schools were run down and lacked supplies. New hospitals had not been built in 20 years. More than half the public health centers remained closed. Of 13,000 schools, more than 10,000 needed significant renovations.
    The Pentagon in 2003 summoned American firms to get reconstruction started in the absence of Iraqi ministries that could supervise and a private sector that was in shambles under Saddam's totalitarian rule.
    "The ministries were jammed with people who did nothing," Mr. Popps said. "They sat around and smoked and drank tea and held 'worry beads.' It was an economy based on incompetence and corruption."
    Today, the Pentagon is handing out a score sheet:
    •Six new primary care facilities, with 66 more under construction; 11 hospitals renovated; more than 800 schools fixed up; more than 300 police stations and facilities and 248 border control forts.
    •Added 407,000 cubic meters per day of water treatment; a new sewage-treatment system for Basra; work on Baghdad's three plants continues; oil production exceeds the 2002 level of 2 million barrels a day by 500,000.
    •The Ministry of Electricity now sends power to Baghdad for four to eight hours a day, and 10 to 12 for the rest of the country. Iraqis are now free to buy consumer items such as generators, which provide some homes with power around-the-clock.
    Mr. Popps said all this was accomplished despite a concerted effort by terrorists to bomb construction sites and kill workers. Thursday's kidnapping of private contractors south of Baghdad illustrates the problem. The State Department was forced to increase spending on security, up to $5 billion of the $20 billion, or risk losing more projects to saboteurs.
    The Army Corps has ferried reporters to what it considers successful sites in an effort to get a few positive stories on reconstruction. But rarely do any materialize, Mr. Popps said.
    "What has hurt the public perception of reconstruction is incomplete leaks to the media that there is a problem with a particular project," he said. "What is sexy to reporters is a police station that has urine in the ceiling. That's what the press prefers to talk about rather than the great successes we have made."
    The "urine" reference was contained in the latest bad news story about reconstruction in Iraq. Mr. Bowen reported in September he was reviewing all projects done by the California-based Parsons Corp. in the aftermath of finding serious plumbing problems at the $75 million Baghdad Police College. Mr. Bowen has criticized Parsons, which uses local Iraqi contractors, on other projects, including primary health care buildings.
    The company has cited the violent environment as part of the problem. A Pentagon spokesman said the company made all repairs by an Oct. 6 target at no government cost.
    There are two key money amounts devoted to reconstruction: One is $37 billion in cash the U.N. turned over to Iraq in 2003. The second is $36 billion appropriated by Congress, $20 billion of which was the Iraq Relief and Reconstruction Fund. The remaining $16 billion is evenly divided for building the Iraqi security forces and for various military projects, some controlled by U.S. commanders.
    In late September, Iraq rebuilders received some praise from Mr. Bowen. He made one of his periodic appearances before the House Government Reform Committee, where Chairman Thomas M. Davis III, Virginia Republican, said there was some good news out of the war-wrecked country.
    "You said accurately in your opening statement that not everything is wrong in Iraq, and that's true," Mr. Bowen responded. "A fair reading of our full report demonstrably underscores that fact. Indeed, 70 percent of the projects we've visited and 80 percent of the money allocated to them indicate that those projects, from a construction perspective, have met what the contract anticipated."


    Arkie.

  10. #25860
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    They were talking about Iraq/Marshall Plan last night on Fox News around this time. Did anyone catch it? I just heard Iraq and Marshall Plan in the same sentence and before I could turn up the tv it was over.

    Cheers!
    DayDream
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