ruination to revitalization: rebuilding a war-torn city in baghdad

15
RUINATION TO REVITALIZATION: REBUILDING A WAR-TORN CITY IN BAGHDAD Christopher L. Allen Georgia Tech City and Regional Planning Graduate Student

Upload: mirra

Post on 23-Feb-2016

33 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Ruination to Revitalization: Rebuilding a War-Torn City in Baghdad. Christopher L. Allen Georgia Tech City and Regional Planning Graduate Student. CONTENTS. Baghdad: Historical Context Perspective from Saydiyah Lines of Effort Security Economics Essential Services Governance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

RUINATION TO REVITALIZATION: REBUILDING A WAR-TORN CITY IN BAGHDAD

Christopher L. AllenGeorgia TechCity and Regional PlanningGraduate Student

Page 2: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

CONTENTS• Baghdad: Historical Context• Perspective from Saydiyah• Lines of Effort

• Security• Economics• Essential Services• Governance

• Obstacles and Constraints• Lasting Effects• Lessons Learned

Page 3: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

BAGHDAD: MODERN CONTEXT•OIF Post-Surge, 2007.

•U.S. COIN Strategy shift

•2LT Allen deployment

Page 4: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

PERSPECTIVE FROM SAYDIYAH• Pop: ~40,000• Majority Ba’athist

community• 2007: sectarian violence• Jan 2008: abandonment• Rashid District• Internally Displaced

Persons (IDPs), squatters

Page 5: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

LINES OF EFFORT

SECURITY

ECONOMICS

ESSENTIAL SERVICES

GOVERNANCE

STAB

ILITY

Page 6: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

SECURITY

• Weapons trafficking, insurgents

• T-Wall Solution• Joint U.S./Iraqi Army patrols

• Iraqi National Police Checkpoints within walls

• Sons & Daughters of Iraq: local concerned citizens

Page 7: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad
Page 8: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

ECONOMICS•Micro-Grants•Fruit and Fish Market project

•Rafidain Bank Reopening

•Job Creation

Page 9: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

ESSENTIAL SERVICES•Education•Clinic•Roads•Sewers•Trash management

•Power generation

Page 10: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad
Page 11: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad
Page 12: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

GOVERNANCE•Reconciliation•Support Council: “unelected” body, local sheiks

•Balance of power•Primary function: Resettlement

Page 13: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

OBSTACLES AND CONSTRAINTS• Culture gap• Language barrier• Enemy threat• Weather & Climate• Training• Collective Benefit• Adjudicating legitimacy: Iraqi-led

Page 14: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

LASTING EFFECTS• Saydiyah set the standard• January 2010: 7,200 families reintegrated

• Gradual drawdown, return to normalcy• Over $1 Million dollars invested• Sporadic sectarian & insurgency violence

• 31 December 2011: U.S. Withdrawal out of Iraq

Page 15: Ruination to Revitalization:  Rebuilding  a War-Torn City in Baghdad

LESSONS LEARNED• Citizen input CRUCIAL• No perfect 100% solution• Quality of life significantly improved

• No “one best way”• All military objectives accomplished despite obstacles

• Outside agency support• Transition to Iraqi control• Deliberate analysis