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In looking for the
secret to successfully rebuilding Iraq, the Bush Administration
may review previous reconstructions in other war-torn lands
such as Kuwait, Bosnia-Herzegovina and even now in Afghanistan.
While much has been accomplished in places where the U.S.
and its allies have waged war in the last dozen years, reconstruction
experts say, nothing helps restore infrastructure like a stable
government, security and new sources of national wealth.
In 1991, as Saddam Hussein's soldiers
were being routed from Kuwait by a U.S.-led coalition, they
laid waste to oil fields, infrastructure and buildings. A
key step came when the Kuwaitis sought prices from private
contractors to lead the rebuilding.
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LONG
ROAD Key highway in Afghanistan is being rebuilt,
but some want more big projects.
(Photo courtesy of Berger Group) |
After some sticker shock, they
persuaded the first Bush Administration to allow them to use
the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. It was hired to repair civil
infrastructure and buildings while Bechtel Corp. led oil-related
reconstruction. By paying Corps salaries plus about 10% for
overhead and additional equipment, the Kuwaitis saved hundreds
of millions, says Ralph Locurcio, a former Corps general who
headed the work in Kuwait and now is senior vice president
of STV Inc., New York City. "Our total bill was about
$600 million for 300 days of reconstruction," recalls
Locurcio, including hard costs, salaries and overhead.
A different scenario applied in
Bosnia-Herzegovina, where a three-year war that devastated
infrastructure ended with a 1995 peace agreement. Some 2,000
km of highways and 70 bridges were destroyed, says the World
Bank. Power generation had fallen by more than a half. The
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) funded at
least $265 million worth of work on 845 power, water, road
and other projects.
Parsons Corp., Pasadena, Calif.,
hired by USAID as program manager there, had to bid openly
for the work, unlike the current Iraq contract, says Djurica
Tankosich, a vice president in London. "At that time,
USAID didnt have a lot of [that kind of] experience
and they went for whichever procurement rules they had at
the time."
John Stewart, Parsons project
director in Bosnia from 1998 to 2000, says work began even
as areas were still being bombed. But a bigger obstacle was
finding subcontractors. "There had been 50 years of state-run
government," he says. "The locals didnt know
how to bid. I had mayors come in and want contracts for their
brothers-in-law."
Stewart says quality and schedule
got a big boost when subs and workers saw they would be paid
on time in cash, rather than in "diesel fuel and cabbages,"
he says. "We put a lot of people back to work, we boosted
the economy and showed local firms how to compete in a world
market."
Reconstruction of Broad Bridge,
a key span between Bosnia and Croatia, was done on time in
15 months and on budget, despite replacement of all precast
girders, each 33 meters long, says Stewart. "We also
rebuilt 14,000 km of low voltage concrete poles," he
says. Stewart also credits the relationship with USAID. "We
had differences, but it was not just client and contractor,"
he says.
While the regional power system
is still unreliable, Parsons USAID contract ends at
the end of the year. The firm hopes for new work through its
long-time local partner. But the rewards are not all financial.
"Young children sang thank you to us when
we left," says Stewart.
A much more modest but still daunting
reconstruction began in Afghanistan last year after the U.S.
largely ousted the Taliban. Little of what infrastructure
had been built still remained after decades of civil war and
deterioration. Today, Afghanistans fledgling government
depends on aid from relief organizations, the U.S. and other
countries. Skirmishes between troops and Taliban remnants
and other hostile groups continue.
Because the new government and
other Afghan organizations are considered incapable of running
reconstruction, it is led by international relief and development
agencies. USAID says it has supported over 225 spot reconstruction
jobs at government buildings, schools, roads and bridges.
It has reopened the heavily used Salang Tunnel and is rebuilding
31 bridges.
USAID also awarded Louis Berger
Group Inc., East Orange, N.J., a wide-ranging contract to
oversee infrastructure redevelopment, including rebuilding
the 600-mile highway from Kabul to Kandahar to Herat. Asphalt
soon will be applied to 52 miles that have been de-mined,
graded, and leveled, USAID reports. Berger, in turn, is awarding
subcontracts to six joint-ventures comprised of Afghan companies
working as partners with firms from other nations.
Berger Chairman Derish Wolff says
the tasks of emergency relief, reconstruction and nation-building
have become inseparable in recent years. Relief organizations
are more involved in construction, and builders such as the
Corps of Engineers are being drawn into relief and economic
development, he says.
Under the new order, Americans
can no longer send in "John Wayne and the Seabees"
and expect that nation-building will result, says Wolff. "Who
would have dreamed that the thing needed in Iraq was police?
The world is changing."
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DAMAGE School in Bosnia (left) gets a USAID-funded
facelift. (Photo courtesy of Parsons Corp.) |
Not fast enough, says M. Saleh
Keshawarz, an Afghan native and chairman of the civil and
environmental engineering department at the University of
Hartford, Hartford, Conn. He has returned to his homeland
to visit since the Taliban fell, but his optimism has given
way to despair. Afghanistan suffers from too many freelance
consultants and non-governmental organizations, he says. Many
want opportunity but have little knowledge of the country.
"There is no visible reconstruction going on except for
people rebuilding their houses and some small-scale jobs,"
he says.
Keshawarz points to squandered
opportunity to improve Afghanistans water systems following
a years-long drought that required international aid to prevent
starvation. USAID says it has completed 6,100 water-related
projects, but he sees what remains undone. "Despite an
abundance of water around the country this year, there is
no sign of reconstruction activity in the irrigation system
or transportation that could make a difference in people's
lives," he says.
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