September 25, 2007

Good News That the NYT Will Never Report

After many months of work lead by Iraqi contractors and council members members of 3rd Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment, and 489th Civil Affairs Battalion joined with their Iraqi counterparts to open a refurbished school in Saba Nissan:


FORWARD OPERATING BASE HAMMER, Iraq — City council members and school leaders hosted a ribbon-cutting ceremony to signify the re-opening of a renovated school in Saba Nissan Sept. 22.

Soldiers and leaders of 3rd Squadron, 1st Cavalry Regiment, and 489th Civil Affairs Battalion, who facilitated the rebuilding of the school, attended the ceremony. Although Coalition Forces supported the project through funding and mentoring, Iraqi contractors and council members headed the project.

Juma’h Mawat Badday, the school principal, cut the red ribbon as Capt. Jared Albright, of Lancaster, Pa., commander, Troop B, 3-1 Cav. Regt., and Hassan Maheed Hamza, a member of the city council, stood by in support of the event.

“When the school year begins, this school will be one of many that will educate and prepare the future leaders of both your community and Iraq,” Albright said.

According to 2nd Lt. Richard Perry, of Durham, N.C., Troop B fire support officer, the project to rebuild the school has been in progress for about four months.

The entire structure was restructured, he said. The broken walls were fixed, new classrooms were set up and a new playground was constructed.

After the ceremony, Lt. Col. John Kolasheski, of Louden, Tenn., commander, 3-1 Cav. Regt., toured the new school. At the same time, Soldiers from 3-1 Cav. Regt. and 489th Civil Affairs Battalion handed out book bags filled with school supplies to teachers and children.

“Today we not only celebrate the opening of this school, but we also celebrate the Iraqi government’s commitment to building a strong country that is able to meet the needs of its citizens,” Albright said. “This new school is a prime example of what can happen when the Iraqi government and Coalition Forces work together.”

It's not glamorous or exciting but its simple actions like this that will win the war in Iraq. Ecvery school that re-opens is a nail in al-Qaeda's coffin. Al-Qaeda is on the run, all over the country I hear reports of schools and police stations opening, citizen's stepping up to secure their towns and villages and insurgents being forced out or killed.

Hope is returning to Iraq, it would be a shame to yank it away from them again, because you have the mis-guided belief that "those people" aren't worth it.

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