Dam and other Afghanistan projects being scaled back as U.S. picks up pace of withdrawal
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/dam-and-other-afghan-projects-being-scaled-back-as-us-picks-up-pace-of-withdrawal/2013/03/04/565fe7d0-84f1-11e2-98a3-b3db6b9ac586_story.html
The United States has worked for years to secure and repair the Kajaki Dam in Afghanistan. Now, USAID intends to hand over to the Afghan government the challenging task of installing a large hydropower turbine.
Dam and other Afghanistan projects being scaled back as U.S. picks up pace of withdrawal
By Rajiv Chandrasekaran, Published: March 4
When U.S. Marines surged into southern Afghanistan in 2010, one of their top priorities was to secure a towering dam on the Helmand River so the U.S. Agency for International Development could begin a construction project to provide much-needed electricity to Kandahar, the countrys second-largest city.
Simply reaching the outskirts of the Kajaki Dam was perilous. More than 50 American troops were killed in combat operations to evict the Taliban from areas along a 30-mile road leading to the structure.
Now that Marines and Afghan soldiers have seized the dam and the surrounding areas, USAID has decided not to complete the most critical part of the $266 million project. Instead, the agency intends to hand over to the Afghan government?the challenging task of installing a large hydropower turbine.
The dam is one of many reconstruction projects,
once deemed essential, that are being scaled back rapidly and redesigned in the waning days of Americas long war in Afghanistan as troop reductions, declining budgets and public fatigue force a realignment of priorities. But USAIDs decision to walk away from the turbine installation one of the most important and symbolic development efforts associated with President Obamas troop surge is drawing unique scrutiny.
unhappycamper comment: Let's declare Victory and bring 'em home.