A British contractor's perspective
June 20, 2008 | Dallas, Texas | Vetting explained
I'm a Brit, now resident in Texas. Being ex-military but now too old for military service, I worked in Iraq for a year as a security contractor. The Iraqis I met and worked with are superb people - friendly, hospitable, earnest, proud yet charmingly humble - and as much as they appreciated being free of a tyrant, the common question was "When are you going to leave Iraq?"
I tried to make the point that we'd love to let them run their own country - and without the insurgents, we'd have no excuse to stay.
My advice would be to continue to help the Iraqis crush any insurgency groups, continue handing over the provinces to Iraqi control once the local commanders prove that they're capable of keeping control - and absolutely appoint someone whose function is to ensure that money goes to the right places and not into private pockets.
- Posted in Assignment:
- Iraq and the next president
iReport welcomes a lively discussion, so comments on iReports are not pre-screened before they post. See the iReport community guidelines for details about content that is not welcome on iReport.
What is iReport?
-
Share
Tell a story, offer an opinion, say what's important to you.
-
Discuss
Join the conversation on the day's big issues.
-
Be heard
The best iReports get vetted and used on CNN platforms.
The label “Not vetted by CNN” lets you know that this story hasn’t been both checked and cleared by a CNN editor.
iReport stories that have a red "CNN iReport" stamp in the corner have been vetted and
cleared. That means they've been selected and approved by a CNN producer to use on CNN,
on air, or on any of CNN's platforms.







Comments