In the Field: IraqUSIP experts are more than analyststhey are practitioners that can often be found far outside Washington, D.C. putting conflict resolution methods into practice and aiding in the rebuilding and stabilization of communities that have experienced conflict. This series summarizes recent examples of USIP efforts to resolve conflicts around the world. ![]() USIP's Iraq program aims to reduce interethnic and interreligious violence, speed up stabilization and democratization, and reduce the need for a U.S. presence in Iraq. As part of this program, USIP has maintained a small office in the Green Zone in Baghdad since early 2004. Rusty Barber, a former political officer in the Foreign Service, has run the office since March 2007. His regular dispatches offer a lively and sobering insider's view of the promise and peril facing U.S. efforts in that country. We'll update this section each week, making only minimal changes for security reasons. July 2, 2007
The staff was most interested to hear about my time spent in D.C., particularly in terms of how folks at USIP and on Capitol Hill viewedour work and how they reacted to descriptions of our daily lives. Most importantly, however, they expressed enthusiasm at the prospect of improved cooperation and coordination between the Baghdad office and D.C. in support of their program activities. As I found when I first arrived in Baghdad, one is immediately plunged into things. A brainstorming session with USAID's governance team produced a number of ideas about how to directly integrate USIP's conflict management resources with the PRTs (Provincial Reconstruction Teams) around Iraq. A recent request by a district mayor in the so-called "Sunni Triangle" has evolved into a tribal reconciliation initiative in which USIP and its facilitators may play a key mediation role. In addition, the Baghdad PRT has requested help with mediation/reconciliation in a particularly restive neighborhood in the Rusafa district. Planning for a SENSE training for Iraq's 18 Provincial Councils continues to churn along despite ongoing security challenges. Finally, the civic lesson plan for Iraqi youth, drafted by an Iraqi USIP staffer, is being vetted by Baghdad educators for eventual rollout in selected schools later this fall. This is just a sampling of our current activity roster. Despite the heat and the tension, it is good to see familiar faces, to feel myself no longer a stranger to a strange place. Tomorrow is July 4th, and though there are no official fireworks scheduled, I have no doubt that we'll be sufficiently supplied with them. The embassy is festooned with red, white and blue streamers so that Saddam's former reception room is starting to look more like an American convention hall at election time; how appropriate. |
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