Iraq - USAID-07: 10-Nov-03
United States Agency for International Development
Iraq Reconstruction and Humanitarian Relief
Weekly Update #7, Fiscal Year (FY) 2004
November 10, 2003
This fact sheet highlights overall accomplishments and some weekly
activities from USAID's reconstruction efforts in Iraq. For more
information on USAID's programs in Iraq please see: www.usaid.gov/iraq
USAID assists the people of Iraq to reconstruct their country by working
within the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA). USAID programs are
implemented in coordination with the United Nations, nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs) and private sector partners. The USAID Mission in
Iraq carries out programs in education, health care, food security,
infrastructure reconstruction, economic growth, community development
initiatives, local governance, and transition initiatives.
Program Descriptions and Updates
1. Restore Essential Infrastructure
Electricity --objectives include: the emergency repair or rehabilitation
of power generation facilities and electrical grids. A team of engineers
from the Iraqi Electric Commission, USAID, Bechtel, and the Corps of
Engineers has been working since May to restore capacity to Iraq's power
system, which had been looted and was dilapidated from decades of neglect
and mismanagement.
Accomplishments to date:
- Power generation in Iraq peaked on October 6 at 4,518 MW. Power
generation is now approximately 3800 MW daily, while routine seasonal
maintenance and repairs are being made to build a sustainable power grid.
- Having achieved power production above the 4400 MW target, the Ministry
of Electricity, USAID and the CPA are performing plant maintenance this
autumn. Generation capacity of approximately 500 MW will be out of
service as individual generating plants are off-line.
- The combined Iraqi-American power team is now working on repair of
existing generation capacity to reach 6,000 MW by the summer of 2004.
Highlights this week:
- Power generation reached a peak of 3,855 MW on November 2. During 25 of
the last 33 days the system produced more than 3,800 MW. Syria contributed
60 MW to the grid and Turkey 94 MW.
- Scheduled autumn maintenance continues at power plants across Iraq
resulting in over 300 MW reduction of potential generation.
- Maintenance at Bayji unit 1 and Mussayib unit 3 has been postponed, and
maintenance at Dibis thermal plant will occur at unit 4 rather than unit
1.
- Hartha's unit 1 is producing its target load of 150 MW. Unit 4 was
taken offline October 24 for scheduled maintenance to be completed by
December 7.
- All available units are running at Qudas (two units), An Najaf (three
units), Al Hillah (four units).
- Along the length of the 400-KV power transmission line that runs from An
Nasiriyah to Khor Zubayr, 110 towers are down. A subcontract to restore
the line is expected to be issued by USAID Infrastructure partner Bechtel
by November 10.
- Unit 3 at the Mussayib thermal plant was taken offline on November 5 for
scheduled maintenance, which is expected to be completed by December 20.
Unit 2 is also offline for maintenance, to restart November 12. The
remaining two operational units each produced a peak of 200 MW.
Mussayib's production target for 4 generation plants is 860 MW
Airports --objectives include: providing reconstruction material and
personnel for the timely repair of damaged airport facilities; the
rehabilitation of airport terminals; the creation of systems to permit
humanitarian, international commercial and passenger flights and
reconstruction material and personnel; and preparation for the eventual
handover of airport operations to the Iraqi Airport Commission Authority.
Accomplishments to Date:
- Daily NGO charter flights take place between Amman and Baghdad, with
plans for expanding service at Baghdad International Airport in the near
future.
- Over 500 military and NGO flights since July have arrived and departed
smoothly at the airport.
- USAID partner Bechtel assisted several partners with the
rehabilitation of Baghdad International Airport after the end of major
combat, including installing power generators and an air traffic control
communications system and repairing the runways, terminal, lounges, and
security apparatus.
Bridges, Roads, and Railroads -- objectives include: the rehabilitation
and repair of damaged transportation systems focusing on the most
economically critical networks.
Accomplishments to Date:
- A 1.5-kilometer, four-lane bypass for the damaged Al-Mat Bridge was
completed. The Al-Mat bridge, a key bridge used for humanitarian efforts,
now allows up to 3,000 vehicles daily to travel between Jordan and
Baghdad.
- Demolition of irreparable sections of three key bridges, Khazir, Tikrit
and Al Mat, and reconstruction has begun.
- Rehabilitating a 72 kilometer section of track from Umm Qasr to Shuiaba
Junction, near Basrah. Estimated completion date is July 2004 at a cost
of $16.8 million.
Seaport --objectives include: port administration, hiring of port pilots
to guide ships up the channel, coordinating onward transport from the
seaport, and facilitating cargo-handling services such as warehousing,
shipment tracking, and storage.
Accomplishments to Date:
Restored commercial and passenger service to the Umm Qasr port in the
summer of 2003, which exceeded program objectives pertaining to
humanitarian shipment usage.
- An Iraqi dredge is being refurbished, which will be assigned to
routinely clear accumulating silt from Umm Qasr port.
- All 21 berths at Umm Qasr have been dredged and are available for use.
- Dredging to 12.4 m. depth (1.3x volume of the Pentagon).
- At the Umm Qasr grain-receiving facility, train load-out systems are
complete, and work continued on the administration building and fire water
systems. All other systems are operational.
- All the power substations at Umm Qasr's new port have energy and the
entire port is now lit at night. Several electrical fixtures on the
towers are being replaced.
Highlights this week:
- As of November 2, 13,200 tons of Australian grain had been smoothly
discharged from the ship Banastar, which docked at berth 10 in Umm Qasr on
October 25. The cargo is expected to be completely discharged by mid
November.
- Tuzla, a salvage ship from the United Nations Development Program, is
removing a sunken tug vessel from berth 14. It expects to be completed by
mid November, at which point it will begin to work at berth 9.
Telecommunications -- objectives include: linking 21 cities by fiber optic
cable and preparing 1.2 million wired lines to be operational; repairing
the nation's fiber optic network from north of Mosul, through Baghdad and
Nasiriyah to Umm Qasr by November 2003; and repairing the 2,000 km cable
to connect 20 cities to Baghdad.
Accomplishments to Date:
The satellite gateway system at Al Mamoun, which will allow international
telephone service, has been installed and is fully operational and
integrated with the site switches. The fiber connection between the
system, Baghdad and national networks is expected to be completed by
mid-November, linking all active subscribers to the system.
- The rehabilitation of Iraq's public switched telephone network
continues, coordinated by the Iraqi Telephone and Postal Commission and
Bechtel and will benefit 30,000 subscribers by the end of October.
- Work is underway at eight of the twelve switch sites--Sinek, Bab
Almuadham, Alwiya, Adamiyah, Baya, Abu Ghraib, Samarra, and Salihiya.
- Splicing and cable testing is complete at Al Mamoun, Kadamiyah, Baya,
Abu Ghraib, and Samarra.
2. Support Essential Health and Education
Health --objectives include: supporting a reformed Iraqi Ministry of
Health; delivering essential health services; funding medicines and
supplemental nutrients; establishing a rapid referral and response system
for the most serious cases; providing medical equipment and supplies;
training and recruiting health staff; providing health education and
information; and determining the specific needs of the health sector and
of vulnerable populations such as women and children.
Accomplishments to Date:
- Over 30 million doses of vaccines have been procured and distributed by
the Ministry of Health (MOH) since July, which was supported by USAID and
UNICEF.
- An estimated 3 million out of a total of 4.3 million Iraqi children
under the age of 5 have been vaccinated.
- 20 delivery rooms in hospitals and primary care centers have been
rehabilitated serving 300,000 residents in Basrah.
- More than 100,000 pregnant, nursing mothers and malnourished children
under 5 years have received 2.5 kg of high protein biscuit supplementary
food rations.
- In Najaf and Karbala', emergency health programs supporting 18 Primary
Health Centers have been completed with over 92 midwives and 247 health
promoters trained.
Highlights this week:
- Rehabilitation of four clinics in Mosul was completed last week, and
four more (one in Kirkuk, three in Arbil) are on schedule to be completed
this week. Contracts have been awarded for the rehabilitation of 55 other
clinics around the country, including 25 in Baghdad, 20 in Al Basrah, and
10 in An Nasiriyah.
- A team of 80 Iraqi health and education professionals will visit
Kirkuk's 273 inner city schools to conduct two-day interactive hygiene
workshops. The team includes 50 officers from the Ministry of Health who
are currently being briefed on the hygiene curriculum. USAID's partner
International Rescue Committee (IRC) is assisting with the Urban School
hygiene campaign.
- The Campaign is also implementing an Inter-school hygiene signage
competition. Students will be asked to design and submit a poster relating
to good hygiene practices, and the best signs will be used to increase
public awareness. The Department of Solid Waste and the governor of Kirkuk
will allow the students to paint their signs on public walls, which will
deliver the message to a wider audience.
- In October, a series of health professional training courses benefited
traditional birth attendants and primary healthcare center managers in At'
Tamim Governorate. The training program, implemented by
- USAID partner International Rescue Committee, has delivered 11,640 hours
of training in techniques, management, and supervision to health
professionals in At' Tamim.
- Four rural health centers outside Kirkuk (At' Tamim Governorate) have
been repaired, re-equipped, and formally handed over to the Ministry of
Health. The clinics--Hassar, Galosi, Kalwar, and Az Zab--were
rehabilitated by USAID partner International Rescue Committee.
- As of November 2, mobile health teams working with the Ministry of
Health had visited 96 families in At' Tamim Governorate who do not have
access to primary healthcare facilities or do not seek it. The teams
vaccinated 135 children and women of reproductive age and distributed 135
hygiene kits. The mobile teams are composed of Ministry doctors and
coordinated by USAID partner International Rescue Committee.
Education -- objectives include: increasing enrollment and improving the
quality of primary and secondary education, ensuring that classrooms have
sufficient materials for the start of the new school year in October,
facilitating community involvement, training teachers, implementing
accelerated learning programs, and establishing partnerships between U.S.
and Iraqi colleges and universities.
Accomplishments to Date:
- Schools throughout Iraq successfully reopened the first week in October.
There are approximately 5.1 million enrolled school children in Iraq (3.6
million primary and 1.5 million secondary). After the conflict, attendance
of the enrolled students had dropped to 60%. It has now returned to
pre-conflict levels.
- 1,595 schools have been rehabilitated and/or repaired and rehabilitation
of an additional 200 schools is ongoing.
- Desks, chairs and other necessary items are also being delivered
throughout Iraq.
- Essential teacher training is underway, which will lead to during the
war. USAID is looking at refurbishing the the training of 64,000 secondary
school teachers school.
- The Ministry of Education is distributing the revised editions of math
and science texts in Baghdad, Mosul and Basrah.
- The Ministry of Education's Accelerated Learning Program is establishing
pilot projects in five cities to speed up the learning process for
children that have been out of school. The Accelerated Learning Program
is being initiated in Baghdad, Karbala', Arbil, Ad Diwaniyah, An
Nasiriyah.
- The Ministry of Education now designates schools through a universal
school ID number, allowing for better student and teacher management and
more accurate budgets.
- The 88 Neighborhood Advisory Councils of Baghdad are collaborating to
enhance school learning quality.
Highlights this week:
- As of November 3, 98 percent of the initial primary student kits have
been delivered and another 300,000 kits are awaiting delivery. Also, 82
percent of school furniture has been delivered.
- Delivery of secondary school kits is well underway; over one million
secondary school kits, including academic supplies and a shoulder bag,
have already been delivered.
- Supplies for 58,500 secondary school teacher kits are being assembled
and prepared for shipment to 3,200 secondary schools. The teacher kits
contain supplies essential to teaching such as chalk and an attendance
register. Teachers in Iraq were frustrated under the previous regime
because these items were rarely available.
- Two hundred Baghdad teachers and administrators opened a program on
November 8 to introduce modern teaching methods, including techniques for
student-centered learning; the teaching methods will be shared with
teachers nationwide through training.
Water and Sanitation -- objectives include: rehabilitating and repairing
essential water infrastructure to provide potable water and sanitation to
communities and improve irrigation.
Accomplishments to Date:
- Water and sanitation projects are providing more water and cleaner water
to over 14.5 million Iraqis.
- Repaired over 1,700 critical breaks in Baghdad's water network, which
increased water flow by 200,000 cubic meters a day
- An Iraqi contractor began expanding Baghdad's Saba Nissan water plant,
which will supply an additional 225,000 cubic meters a day to the water
supply by May.
- Rehabilitated 70 of Baghdad's 90 non-functioning waste pumping stations.
- Refurbishing four sewage treatment plants in Qadisiyah,
Najaf, Hillah and
Karbala' Governorates and a main water treatment plant in Najaf.
- Ongoing cleaning of the terminal reservoir of the Sweet Water Canal
that provides drinking water for Basrah City. When that portion of the
reservoir is completed, the cleaned area will be filled with water to
supply a water treatment plant. The other half of the storage area will
then be drained and cleaned.
Highlights this week:
- Rehabilitation will begin at the Rustimiyah-3 sewage plant in Baghdad.
When complete, the project will treat 93 million liters of sewage per day,
serving 3.5 million municipality residents. Currently, there is no sewage
treatment in Baghdad; water bypasses the looted treatment plants and
flows directly into the Tigris River.
- Major rehabilition work was completed on the final four compact water
plants in An Najaf and Karbala'. To date, 48 plants have been
rehabilitated to provide clean water to more than 100,000 residents in
Karbala' and An Najaf.
3. Expand Economic Opportunity
Economic Growth -- objectives include: currency conversion and monetary data,
state-owned enterprises, small businesses credits, commercial legislation, a national
employment program, a bank-to-bank payment system, a financial management
information system, tax policy and administration, budget planning, insurance, and
electricity reform.
Accomplishments to Date:
- Provided technical support to the Ministry of Finance as it introduces
the new national currency.
- On October 15, the Central Bank of Iraq began accepting currency issued
since 1957, allowing banks throughout the country to exchange old currency
for new.
- Since September, the Central Bank has reduced the amount of old currency
in circulation by roughly one third from approximately 3.4 trillion to 2.3
trillion Iraqi dinars.
- Developed the overall management plan for the currency exchange
operation, including security and logistics.
- Assisting CPA to manage a micro-lending program to begin in late 2003.
- CPA will program $15 million in micro-lending to small firms in the
northern and central regions of Iraq.
- Evaluation of commercial laws pertaining to private sector and foreign
investment is underway. An initial version of a legislative matrix for
commercial law reform has been developed. A formal analysis of provisions
of the bankruptcy law has begun in order to develop potential amendments.
Highlights this week:
- The Iraq dinar, which was introduced on October 15, continues to
maintain strength relative to the dollar as the currency exchange begins
to unify the economy.
- To date, 34 percent of the 4.36 trillion dinar goal has been converted
from old to new Iraqi currency.
- Nearly 20,000 Iraqi people are now employed through the National
Employment Program's job generation program, which is up from 18,290 with
the enrollment of the northern governorates. The program, sponsored by
the Coalition Provisional Authority, is part of a nationwide effort to
absorb unemployed Iraqi workers.
- Also, the National Employment Program was launched in Mosul (Ninawa'
Governorate) which will supplement Ninawa' municipality efforts such as
planting trees, filling potholes, painting streets, and cleaning graffiti.
To date, 3,600 jobs have been coordinate through municipality projects.
Food Security -- objectives include: providing oversight support for the
country-wide Public Distribution System (PDS), which provides basic food
and non-food commodities to approximately 26 million people; participating
in the design of a monetary assistance program to replace the
commodity-based PDS in order to support local production and free-market
infrastructure, and promoting comprehensive agriculture reform to optimize
private participation in production and wholesale markets.
Accomplishments to Date:
- Funded and provided 494,000 MT of food to the UN/World Food Program
(WFP), to avoid hunger immediately after the war.
- Ongoing support and technical assistance to WFP and local Iraqi
authorities working in the Ministry of Trade and the Kurdish Food
Departments to ensure the smooth transition of PDS management tasks to the
Iraqi government.
- Ongoing support and technical assistance to WFP to help train local
authorities in all aspects of managing the PDS, particularly in the
northern three governorates.
- USAID's agricultural project is underway to expand agricultural
productivity; rehabilitate the resource base; and restore the capacity of
small and medium agro-enterprises to produce, process, and market
agricultural goods and services.
Highlights this week:
- The Ministry of Trade is preparing to assume responsibilities for food
rations that currently fall under the Public Distribution System, which is
scheduled to end in late November.
4. Improve Efficiency and Accountability of Government
Local Government --objectives include: promote of diverse and
representative citizen participation within and among communities
throughout Iraq; strengthen the management skills and capacity of local
administrations, local interim representative bodies, and civic
institutions to improve the delivery of essential municipal services;
promote effective advocacy and participation of civil society
organizations; and enhance leadership skills.
Accomplishments to Date:
- Local governance teams are working in 17 out of 18 governorates where
more than 15 million Iraqis are engaging in local policy discourse, either
directly or through their representatives.
- Assisted with the design of an interim structure of government to
represent the population in the Baghdad metropolitan area. Neighborhood
councils now represent all of Baghdad's 88 neighborhoods on the district
and city councils.
- Established over 200 neighborhood advisory councils providing essential
services and representing over half of the Iraqi population.
- Awarded over 829 Rapid Response Grants, totaling $40.3 million to
address the most urgent needs identified by the local communities
including for basic services, community impact activities, justice and
human rights activities, civil society organizations, and transparency and
good governance activities.
- To date, 60 ministries, municipalities and government commissions have
received essential supplies and equipment for a total of $6,717,000 in
grants through partner DAI.
- The Association of Free Prisoners, an Iraqi NGO comprised mainly of
former political prisoners, has taken the lead in collecting, recording
and safeguarding former regime documentation pertaining to the
imprisonment, abuse, execution and disappearance of political detainees by
the former Iraqi régime.
Highlights this week:
- 19 of Al Hillah's 64 neighborhoods will establish neighborhood advisory
councils in November as the first step towards a representative municipal
government.
- The Babil Governorate Information Center in Al Hillah is fully
operational and supports operations and policies of governorate entities,
including the Babil interim Governing Council and the Ministry of
Education.
- Tribal and political leaders attended a summit in Maysan Governorate to
draft a peace treaty, agreeing not to solve disputes with violence.
- In Maysan Governorate, Iraqis have begun to take over the management of
public finance, as part of a shift from the past centralized control for
budget allocations, to a decentralized public finance where localities
have a voice in allocation process. Participants at a budget and finance
seminar said it was the first time they had been able to freely express
their frustrations with the previous regime's dictatorial budget
allocation process, as well as with current systematic deficiencies.
- More than 150 women in Ba'quba (Diyala' Governorate) selected 19 women
to make up the new executive committee of the Ba'quba Women's Center.
Community Action Program --objectives include: the promotion of diverse,
representative citizen participation in and among communities to identify,
prioritize, and satisfy critical community needs. CAP is implemented by
five U.S. NGOs with offices in nine major Iraqi cities. Accomplishments
to Date:
- 50 Community Associations (CAs) have been established in 16
Governorates. The CAs, in partnership with the five project NGOs, have
completed or are working to complete 666 projects totaling $16.7 million.
Nearly 7 million people will benefit.
- CHF has completed 60 projects that benefit more than a quarter million
residents in 54 communities. Activities are implemented in close
coordination with community associations and include repairing roads,
cleaning up neighborhoods, and renovating schools and water, sanitation,
and medical facilities.
- ACDI/VOCA has completed 72 activities, emphasizing projects that cost
little but help build a relationship with the community, such as
rehabilitating a youth center in Al Riyad and repairing trash vehicles in
Kirkuk.
- IRD has completed 53 projects and established 74 community action
groups. A marketplace that will serve 250,000 residents is under
construction, and crews are cleaning up medical waste dumps and educating
medical personnel on proper disposal methods.
- Mercy Corps has completed 16 projects and 69 more are underway,
including water, hospital, and school renovation. USAID partner, Save the
Children, is working with community
- Save the Children has completed 55 projects and leaders to identify
projects that will benefit the local
Highlights this week:
- Iraqis have committed $3.6 million of their own resources to projects
being conducted in their communities - totaling 18 percent of total
project funding. The commitments have come primarily in labor, land,
buildings, and in-kind contributions.
- Iraqis in Ad Diwaniyah city initiated health and library projects.
Implementing Agency
Partner
Sector
Regions
Amount
FY 2003-2004
RECONSTRUCTION
USAID/ANE Subtotal: $1,536,845,064
Abt Associates
Health
Countrywide
$20,995,000
AFCAP
Logistics
Countrywide
$91,500,000
Army Corps of Engineers
Architecture and Engineering services
Countrywide
$10,000,000
BearingPoint
Economic Governance
Countrywide
$39,000,000
Bechtel National
Airports, buildings, emergency communications, power, railroads, roads and
bridges, Umm Qasr seaport, water and sanitation
Countrywide
$1,029,833,859
Community Development in impoverished Action Program communities
Countrywide
$70,000,000
DAI
Marshlands
Countrywide
$4,000,000
DAI
Agriculture
Countrywide
$5,000,000
Fed Source
Personnel Support
Countrywide
$24,110
IRG
Reconstruction Support
Countrywide
$18,286,094
RTI
Local Governance
Countrywide
$104,611,000
CAII
Education
Countrywide
$37,853,000
UNICEF
Health, Water, and Sanitation
Countrywide
$28,000,000
UNICEF
Education
Countrywide
$7,000,000
UNESCO
Textbook Printing and Distribution: Math and Science
Countrywide
$10,000,000
WHO
Strengthen Health System
Countrywide
$10,000,000
SSA
Port Management
Umm Qasr
$14,318,985
SkyLink
Airport Management
Baghdad
$17,500,000
Al Basrah
Mosul
MSI
Monitoring and Evaluation
Countrywide
$5,500,000
University Partners
Consortium led by the Research Foundation of the State University of New
York (SUNY) at Stony Brook which includes Columbia University, Baghdad
University, Al Mustansiriyah University in Baghdad, Mosul
$13,364,866
Boston University and Oxford University (England), University of
University, Mosul University's College Hawaii, DePaul University College
of of Agriculture and Law and the International Institute of Higher
Studies in Criminal Sciences in Forestry in Hamam al-Alil, and Basrah
Siracusa, Italy; and Jackson State University University and the
Mississippi Consortium for International Development Yankee Group
Telecoms Planning
Countrywide
$58,150
EMERGENCY RELIEF
USAID/OFDA $82,348,040
Administrative
Administrative Costs
Countrywide
$6,788,947
AirServ
Logistics
Countrywide
$5,309,876
ARC
Capacity building, Disaster support
Al Basrah
$537,746
The Cuny Center
Research studies
Countrywide
$40,260
GOAL
Coordination, Nutrition
Al Muthanna'
$1,507,900
International Dispensary Association
Health
Countrywide
$1,284,972
InterAction
Coordination
Kuwait City
$92,860
IOM
IDP programs
Countrywide
$5,000,000
Logistics
Commodities and DART support
Countrywide
$12,005,804
UNICEF
Health, nutrition, water/sanitation
Countrywide
$4,000,000
UN OCHA
Coordination and Information
Countrywide
$1,200,000
USAID Amman
Support for emergency water activities
Countrywide
$500,000
WFP
Logistics and pre-positioning of food
Countrywide
$5,000,000
IMC
Food Security, Health, Nutrition, Water/Sanitation, Capacity building
Countrywide
$8,202,900
IRC
Health, Water/Sanitation
Countrywide
$4,998,685
Mercy Corps
Health, Non-Food Items, Shelter, Water/Sanitation
Countrywide
$5,000,000
SCF/US
Food Security, Health, Shelter, Nutrition, Non-Food Items,
Water/Sanitation, NGO Consortium
Countrywide
$6,883,131
World Vision
Health, Logistics, Non-Food Items, Water/Sanitation
Countrywide
$4,994,959
CARE
Quick-impact projects, Water/Sanitation, Health, Blankets
Countrywide
$9,000,000
USAID/FFP $425,571,000
WFP
Operations
Countrywide
$45,000,000
WFP
Emerson Trust - 81,500 MT
Countrywide
$40,337,000
WFP
P.L. 480 Title II emergency food commodities - 163,820 MT
Countrywide
$140,234,000
WFP
Regional Purchase - 330,000 MT
Countrywide
$200,000,000
STATE/PRM $38,935,691
UNHCR
Emergency assistance
Countrywide
$21,000,000
ICRC
Emergency assistance
Countrywide
$10,000,000
IFRC
Emergency assistance
Countrywide
$3,000,000
IOM
TCN - transportation assistance
Countrywide
$3,630,000
International Catholic Migration Commission
Humanitarian assistance to Iraqi refugees
Lebanon and Jordan
$1,305,691
USAID/OTI $65,348,175
Administrative
Administrative Costs
Countrywide
$1,335,126
IOM
Iraq Transition Initiative
Countrywide
$10,587,595
DAI
Iraq Transition Initiative
Countrywide
$44,162,094
Internews
Media
Countrywide
$160,359
Radio SAWA
Media
Countrywide
$400,000
Spa War
Inter-Ministry Communications
Countrywide
$8,703,001
TOTAL USAID ASSISTANCE TO IRAQ IN FY 2003/2004 $2,110,112,279
TOTAL STATE ASSISTANCE TO IRAQ IN FY 2003 $38,935,691
Total STATE/USAID Assistance to Iraq in FY 2003/2004 $2,149,047,970
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