Depends which surge you’re talking about. We definitely do know however, that electricity is not surging in Iraq:
"I felt happy when the U.S. invaded Iraq because I thought the electricity problem will be solved, and we would have it all the time like other countries," Abdul-Kareem Hasan, a trader in Baquba told IPS.George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, John McCain and others talk about how great things are in Iraq. This doesn’t sound like things in Iraq are going very well:
But promises of reconstruction by western contractors proved empty, and there is now less electricity than during the sanctions.
In some cities, homes get electricity just an hour or two a day. Sometimes, there is no electricity for a week. People struggle to get alternative source of electricity.
The winter has been hard without electricity. "We use wood fire to warm up the houses," resident Safa al-Hamdani said. "Electric heaters have become useless. So now we use a metal container, say 50cm by 20cm and burn wood in it. We have abandoned the world of modern technology."George W. Bush pushes a country back to the “stone ages” and then lies to us that the “surge” is working. George W. Bush is the Anti-Midas, everything he touches turns to crap:
"I dream of waking up and having a hot shower," said a local resident. "But I am now exhausted complaining about lack of electricity. I'm sure nobody can bear living in Iraq. It's a country in the stone ages."
Iraq remains a great sump of human degradation and poverty, unaffected by the "surge." It was not a government critic but the civilian spokesman for the Baghdad security plan, Tahseen Sheikhly, who pointed out this week that the city is drowning in sewage because of blocked and broken pipes and drains. In one part of the city, the sewage has formed a lake so large that it can be seen "as a big black spot on Google Earth."And we have the audacity to wonder why “they” hate us and want to kill us. Thanks to Georgie and his ilk the next 9/11 will probably be bigger and more devastating than the last one.
In the coming weeks, we will see the fifth anniversary of the invasion of Iraq by American and British forces on 19 March, and the fall of Saddam Hussein on 9 April. There will be much rancorous debate in the Western media about the success or failure of the "surge" and the US war effort here.
But for millions of Iraqis like Bassim, the war has robbed them of their homes, their jobs and often their lives. It has brought them nothing but misery and ended their hopes of happiness. It has destroyed Iraq.
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