Archive for February, 2007

The Inner Circle - T.C. Boyle

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

The Inner Circle Once upon a time, I remember really, really liking T.C. Boyle. I devoured The Road to Wellville, Riven Rock, The Tortilla Curtain, and various books of shorts. His writing is so effortless, and he has a unique ability to capture the truly bizarre. But I lost patience with Drop City a chapter in–and while I finished The Inner Circle, I wonder if I’ve outgrown my T.C. Boyle phase or whether his more recent novels have lost their spark.

The Inner Circle is about Kinsey and his sex studies. The protaganist is one John Milk, who tells the story of his involvement with Kinsey as a researcher. He’s recruited while still in college, gets married, conducts research, and basically screws pretty much everything until the lackluster end. The thing is, sex sells and T.C. Boyle is cashing in. And now that I think of it, he’s always cashed in. His writing is as effortless as ever, but I finished the novel with a strong sense of disappointment.

Yesterday’s Houses - Mavis Cheek

Wednesday, February 28th, 2007

You note there is no handy-dandy little Amazon picture next to this one; I picked it up at Heathrow, and it’s available only in England. It’s too bad. This was a lovely little novel–apparently Mavis Cheek is big on the other side of the pond. I get the feeling based on past titles and the somewhat too-catchy title that this novel represents a departure from her previous books. Anyone know? In any case, the novel follows the life of her hapless heroine as told through a history of the crummy houses she lives in. It’s full of pithy insight and penetrating observations, and if you can get ahold of a copy, I think you may be reminded of a British Ann Tyler.

Conde Nast Dream Trip Contest

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

My mother called this morning because she was having problems uploading her photo for this contest. Well, who could resist? I won’t win–I wrote the thing in two seconds–but if you feel compelled to vote for me, I won’t complain.

As if the bathroom weren’t enough …

Monday, February 26th, 2007

Steve called this morning to see if his mother had made it off okay.

Actually, let’s rephrase that. He ostensibly called to see if his mother had left, but really just wanted to inform me that we are ripping out the kitchen cabinets tonight.

“All of them?” I asked.

“Yep.”

“Will we have anything in there? I mean, will we even be able to make coffee?”

“Oh,” he said offhandedly. “We’ll make coffee in the bathroom.

This is my life, people.

Yet Another Article

Monday, February 26th, 2007

For those of you googling my mother. Taken from the Washington Post–warning, this is LOOOONNNGGG. Also, see her statement for the record to the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

Iraq Rebuilding Short on Qualified Civilians

By Rajiv Chandrasekaran
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, February 24, 2007; A01

In Diyala, the vast province northeast of Baghdad where Sunnis and Shiites are battling for primacy with mortars and nighttime abductions, the U.S. government has contracted the job of promoting democracy to a Pakistani citizen who has never lived or worked in a democracy.

The management of reconstruction projects in the province has been assigned to a Border Patrol commander with no reconstruction experience. The task of communicating with the embassy in Baghdad has been handed off to a man with no background in drafting diplomatic cables. The post of agriculture adviser has gone unfilled because the U.S. Department of Agriculture has provided just one of the six farming experts the State Department asked for a year ago.

“The people our government has sent to Iraq are all dedicated, well-meaning people, but are they really the right people — the best people — for the job?” asked Kiki Skagen Munshi, a retired U.S. Foreign Service officer who, until last month, headed the team in Diyala that included the Pakistani democracy educator and the Border Patrol commander. “If you can’t get experts, it’s really hard to do an expert job.”

Almost four years after the United States set about trying to rebuild Iraq, the job remains overwhelmingly unfinished. The provincial reconstruction teams like those in Diyala are often understaffed and underqualified — and almost unable to work outside the military outposts where they are hunkered down for security reasons. Today, there are just 10 of the 30-person teams operating in all of Iraq.

President Bush proposed last month to double the number of teams, saying such civilians are central to American efforts to “pursue reconciliation, strengthen the moderates and speed the transition to Iraqi self-reliance.” But the new plan is running into what Munshi and several officials familiar with their work described as the problems that have plagued the U.S. government effort from the start: Turf wars between federal agencies. Outright refusal to fill certain vital posts by some departments. A State Department in charge of the teams that just doesn’t have any agronomists, engineers, police officers or technicians of its own to send to Iraq. “No foreign service in the world has those people,” Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice complained.

After Bush’s new plan was announced, Rice asked the Pentagon for help filling 140 slots on the teams until State is able to hire private contractors to do the work, which could take up to a year. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said he was “troubled” by State’s request, then grudgingly agreed. The teams are supposed to be up and running by next month.

It’s time to “step up,” a frustrated Bush lectured his Cabinet.

As State and the Pentagon were sparring over who would staff the reconstruction teams, Bush used his State of the Union address to call for the formation of a civilian reserve corps — three years after the State Department first proposed it and several influential senators backed it. “It would give people across America who do not wear the uniform a chance to serve in the defining struggle of our time,” the president said.

But the corps won’t be built anytime soon: The administration’s 2008 budget, which was sent to Congress earlier this month, includes no money for it. A senior administration official said the White House plans to wait another year before asking Congress for funding.
Ambitious Plans Meet a Tight Purse

“There has been real inertia and myopia,” said Sen. Richard G. Lugar (R-Ind.). “We have not really approached this in the right way.”

By the fall of 2003, Lugar had grown worried about the U.S. reconstruction effort in Iraq. L. Paul Bremer, who was running the occupation government in Baghdad, had been pleading for more staffers with skills in post-conflict rebuilding — people who could repair the electricity infrastructure, rehabilitate hospitals, retrain the police. Bremer urged Cabinet secretaries to send experts in their departments to Iraq. Some did; others blew him off. Pentagon officials, meanwhile, were recruiting young Republican Party loyalists for tours in Iraq. Many of them lacked reconstruction experience, but they were willing to work in Baghdad.

At the time, Lugar was thinking beyond Iraq. “We need to be ready for the next crisis,” he told his aides.

They summoned experts in postwar rebuilding, among them James Dobbins, a Rand Corp. expert in post-conflict stabilization, and John J. Hamre, a former deputy secretary of defense. Most participants embraced the civilian reserve corps idea.

Lugar did, too, and in February 2004 he introduced a bill with Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. (D-Del.) to create the Response Readiness Corps, its mission to stand prepared “to be called upon at a moment’s notice to respond to emerging international crises.”

State didn’t bother waiting for the legislation to pass. Four months later, then-Secretary of State Colin L. Powell announced the formation of the State Department Office of Reconstruction and Stabilization (SCRS).

The job of running the SCRS was given to Carlos Pascual, a former ambassador to Ukraine. Pascual wanted to create a 200-person active-duty response corps, half of whom would be drawn from State and the rest from other parts of the federal government. They would serve in the corps for two years and then become reservists. In just four years, Pascual noted, the government would have 200 active reconstruction personnel and 400 reservists.

In addition, Pascual sought to create a 3,000-person contingent of people drawn from state and local governments and the private sector. That group was to include police officers, civil engineers and economists. And there would be a fund to hire and deploy private contractors to help with reconstruction within weeks of a crisis instead of waiting months for a special budget request, which is what State is now being forced to do.

The problem was the price tag: $350 million for the first year, Pascual and his staff figured.

The White House budget office balked. Pascual’s request was whittled down to $100 million.

Congressional appropriators were even more skeptical. Republicans questioned whether the initiative was a priority for the White House. Democrats expressed concern that the reserve corps might encourage the administration to invade another country.

The appropriators chopped so much that in the end the SCRS got just $7 million in 2005. The message from Congress was clear: If State wanted to fund the corps, it would have to find the money elsewhere in its budget.

“The bureaucratic antibodies were immediately activated,” said Michèle Flournoy, president of the Center for a New American Security. “The rest of the State Department tried to kill SCRS because it was a competitor for funds. It never had a chance to succeed.”
Broad Support but Little Traction

In 2006, Pascual tried again. This time, he first hit resistance in his own department.

“There was this perverse cycle that began,” he recalled. “The legislative staff at State would say, ‘The Hill doesn’t like this, therefore we shouldn’t ask for much because we’re not going to get it.’ Then you had the Hill saying, ‘The administration hasn’t made this a priority so we’re not going to fund it.’ ”

The Pentagon was in favor of the idea. “If you don’t fund this, put more money in the defense budget for ammunition — because I’m going to need it,” one Marine general warned at the time.

Eventually, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Marine Gen. Peter Pace, persuaded Congress to allow the Pentagon to transfer up to $100 million to State for post-conflict civilian deployments. But Defense and State couldn’t agree where to spend the money. Defense wanted much of it spent on stabilization operations in Haiti. State wanted to use it to help in the aftermath of last summer’s war in Lebanon, officials on both sides recalled.

And then there was a round of fighting in State over which office should spend the money. Not everyone thought it belonged to the SCRS.

But the money had come with a condition: Spend it before the Pentagon could find other uses for it. By the time it was all sorted out some nine months later, the $100 million had dwindled to $10 million.

Some current and former SCRS staffers, as well as people familiar with the office, contend that Pascual should have focused his operation on helping with State’s two biggest priorities: rebuilding Iraq and Afghanistan. Instead, he and Powell decided in 2004 to use the SCRS to prepare for future crises and to help with smaller-scale stabilization missions.

Pascual said the SCRS would have been “overwhelmed” if it had assumed responsibility for rebuilding Iraq or Afghanistan. “It would not have been able to have done either well,” he said. “The intent was to learn from both of those missions.”

But some current and former SCRS personnel believe the office should have sought to work on part of the Iraqi reconstruction — perhaps assuming responsibility for a few provinces — as a way to make itself more relevant. “If we had been working on Iraq instead of Haiti and Sudan, we would have had a better chance at getting the money we wanted,” a State Department official said.

Had that occurred, the official said, “SCRS could have been producing many of the civilians we need in Iraq today.”
Little Eagerness to Work in Iraq

When Kiki Munshi started the Diyala reconstruction team last April, she expected she would have an agriculture specialist working for her. The Department of Agriculture had promised to send six farming experts to Iraq, including one to her team.

Since fruit and vegetable farming is the principal occupation in Diyala, Munshi figured she could generate support for the American presence in the restive province by helping growers increase their yields. “Knowledge is something the Iraqi farmers really need,” she said.

Winning over the local population through small-scale projects was the logic behind the provincial reconstruction teams. While Washington was squabbling over whether to fund Pascual’s proposed civilian reserve corps, the teams were established in Iraq last year by U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad, who had pioneered the concept in Afghanistan. Before that, the U.S. government had essentially no civilian presence in Iraq beyond the Baghdad Green Zone and a handful of regional embassy outposts in four major cities. In theory, the teams would significantly increase the number of American civilians in places where they could actually help Iraqis on the ground.

But as Munshi found, that was often just a theory. Her agriculture specialist never even arrived.

The USDA had trouble finding six people who wanted to work in Iraq among its more than 100,000 employees. Although a USDA official said the department encouraged its workers to apply, officials at State believe USDA did not move with alacrity because the two agencies had not agreed on a mechanism to reimburse the USDA for the services it would provide in Iraq. Eventually, USDA and State agreed that USDA would provide just two of the six. The other four would be private contractors hired by State.

The first USDA specialist, Randy Frescoln, a rural credit specialist from Iowa, landed in Iraq in December and was sent to the reconstruction team in Tikrit. Although he was supposed to stay in Iraq for a year, he said he plans to leave next month because he received a promotion while he was away. The second specialist has not yet arrived.

Even if USDA and State were to get an agriculture expert to Diyala now, Munshi believes, it is too late. Security conditions have deteriorated so significantly in the province that reconstruction personnel are lucky to make one or two trips a week off the military base where they live and work.

“At this point, nobody can do much in Diyala because of the violence,” said Munshi, who returned to her North Carolina home in January for medical reasons. “The window is closed. I wish it weren’t. I hope it opens. But it is.”

Maj. Gen. Eric T. Olson, who is in charge of the provincial reconstruction teams in Iraq, called Diyala a “very, very tough place to work.” He added that many of the staffing problems Munshi identified are “Diyala specific.”

Reconstruction teams in Iraq, he said, “are, in general, doing good things under tough circumstances.”
Another Effort to Build a Corps

Today, the SCRS corps that Pascual envisioned as a rapid-response force with 200 federal employees ready to deploy has just 11 people on active duty.

Lugar and Biden reintroduced their bill this week. It mandates the formation of a 250-person active-duty response unit drawn from the federal government and the creation of a 2,000-strong civilian reserve corps. It also authorizes $145 million to fund the operation.

“Hopefully,” Lugar said, “we’ve come to a point where we finally realize we need to do this.”

So, how’s YOUR day going?

Thursday, February 22nd, 2007

1. I hate cleaning. I really hate cleaning under duress, i.e., when my mother outlaw is coming for a visit. On a related note, why is it that when men don’t clean, they’re just being men–and when women don’t clean, they’re slothful pigs?

2. If the house across the street is repossessed, it will be auctioned off. Cash only. The woman whose name was on the notice pinned to the door was harried and not just a little rude. On the other hand, I’m meeting with our realtor tomorrow and she’s doing a bit of research for me. Plus, I’m now officially qualified for a loan.

3. I love the clawfoot in the bathtub, but I think we may just have to get it reporcelained. I just spent five solid minutes scrubbing it. Which doesn’t sound like a lot, but it really is.

4. I wish I had a diet coke.

5. My new laptop shipped today–YAY! I ended up getting the Chembook 4030 (Compal HGL30) from Discount Laptops. Considering the dearth of reviews out there, I’ll probably post one. Or at least I will intend to post one, and thus be on my merry way to hell. For now, I’ll just say that it has a Core 2 Duo 2.16 GHz processor and 2 GB of RAM and a newfangled video card that should support all the Vista goodies–though really, do I care about Aero? Probably not.

6. For those of you wondering whether Harry’s new homemade diet is making a difference, the answer is a resounding YES. The nasty food allergy rashes are gone and he’s regrown all the fur he lost on his belly.

7. Once again, I am woefully behind on book reviews.

8. I really, really, really need to update Quickbooks so I can get my taxes done.

9. Tonight, Geoff and I are going to an auction house in Renton. Should be fun.

and finally

10. Did I mention I hate cleaning? Well, back at it …

New Template

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007
{democracy:2}

Sushi Pug

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007

Next time you order takeout sushi? And the wasabi packet falls on the floor? And the dog chews it?

Need I say more?

You may never ride a camel … but your donated books can

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

From Masha Hamilton via The Elegant Variation:

The Camel Bookmobile made its first run almost a decade ago. Three dromedaries trudged through dusty, arid northeastern Kenya near the border with Somalia to bring a library to settlements so tiny and far-flung they’d become nearly invisible; places lacking roads and schools, where most people had never held a book between their hands and where they lived daily with drought, hunger and disease…

The Camel Bookmobile books are primarily in English. The children are taught the language in outdoor “classrooms” under acacia trees for the younger students, indoor classrooms for the older students. They particularly like children’s storybooks, though all fiction is also sought-after, as well as books about math and astronomy, biology and other sciences. …

… The Camel Bookmobile librarians told me their patrons also really appreciate the sense of connection they get when a book is signed from a particular place and person. It widens their understanding of the world. So send a favorite book or two, sign your donations with your name and city, and add a note if you wish.

So come on all you bleeding heart liberals, send a book:

Garissa Provincial Library
For Camel Library
Librarian in Charge, Rashid M. Farah
P.O. Box 245
Garissa, Kenya

And know that you’re in good company.

Adventures in Disorganization

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

There is a house across the street in the throes of repossession. Again.

The background is worthy of a soap opera, and has been dribbled in by various neighborhoodly sources. Laurie and her first husband lived there. They had a kid. Then they got divorced. Laurie kept the house,married Kevin, transferring the property into his name (probably because she doesn’t work), and had another kid.

Kevin then got another woman pregnant so Laurie kicked him out. About this time, he tried to sell the house for an inordinate sum of money–unsuccessfully, I might add, though this may have been because: a) Laurie didn’t want to move and is so strident and shrill that she puts a fishwife to shame; and b) he insisted on doing a “for sale by owner,” which consisted of a few cheesy signs.

Our friendly sources–including Kevin himself–claim that Kevin then told Laurie he would pay the mortgage for a year, at which point she would have to move out. He and the girlfriend planned on moving in. (Call me crazy, but the last place I would want to live with a current paramour is where I lived with the previous one. But that’s just me.)

She didn’t move.

He threatened her with eviction notices.

She didn’t move.

Finally, he stopped paying the mortgage altogether. He had a buddy repossess the house.

And then he had his new girlfriend buy it.

Should I mention that at some point in this saga he also filed bankruptcy? Does that explain why the notice on their front door states that Kevin and the gf are now 6 months behind on the mortgage payment? I don’t know–but what I do know is that their house has a sweeping vista of Lake Washington and despite various remodels and additions, still has good Craftsman bungalow bones.

And I’m thinking about buying it.

So there I am, on the phone with my bank, walking through the credit application. It takes me awhile to dig out my 2005 tax return, freaking out the whole time. Then I start looking for my 2006 tax return. Where is it? AHHHHH!!!!! The guy tells me I can call back. We hang up.

At which point I realize that my 2006 tax return is NOT missing. It doesn’t exist yet.

That’s True of Everybody - Mark Winegardner

Tuesday, February 20th, 2007

That's True of EverybodyI rarely read short stories; they seem to require a curious mindset, in which one feels intelligent but mildly ADD. Generally, I feel one or the other. That start and stop, start and stop puts me off, before I even begin. And it’s a shame, because my bookshelves are teeming with shorts. Like Mark Winegarder’s That’s True of Everybody. It was one of my Edward R. Hamilton purchases at least a year ago. I had read Winegardner’s novel Crooked River Burning, and liked it. So what the heck, I thought. The book has been moldering away since.

Well, I’m down with the flu–recovering nicely now, thank you–and spent all of Sunday lying in bed reading. One of my informal resolutions for the year is to catch up on the many titles I’ve bought but haven’t read. This was one. And it was a strange one.

Oh, not in a bad way. It’s just that I recently finished this book, and I can barely remember any of the individual shorts–but am still left with a general impression of everything being off somehow, that the strangeness of all the characters is somehow illuminated but universal. It was good.

Fludd - Hilary Mantel

Monday, February 19th, 2007

Fludd: A NovelThe village of Fetherhoughton is a dour place, indeed. Anchored by moors, the people are superstitious and humorless in their isolation. The Catholic church is presided over by Father Angwin, who has lost his faith, and Sister Perpetua (otherwise known as Purpit) of the convent, an austere, cruel terror of a a woman. When the bishop decrees that the statues in the church are nothing more than idolatrous symbols and must come down, he also threatens Father Angwin with a curate. And thus appears Fludd. But Fludd is not all that he appears to be, and strange, miraculous things start to happen. Recommend.

The Undomestic Goddess - Sophie Kinsella

Monday, February 19th, 2007

The Undomestic Goddess Good airplane reading. May the person who found it in the seat pocket enjoy.

On Beauty - Zadie Smith

Monday, February 19th, 2007

On BeautyI had thought that this was an overrated book. I had thought it overhyped. I had thought that it wasn’t nearly as press-worthy as it appeared to be.

Reader, I was wrong.

I’m coming into this a little late in the game, so there’s no point in recapping the story. All I can say is that the e-mail exchange in the beginning makes it hard to get into the book–but once you do, it’s worth it. Well worth it.

A Catch of Consequence - Diana Norman

Monday, February 19th, 2007

A Catch of Consequence Someone, somewhere (I wish I could remember who) said that Diana Norman was a great historical writer, so I promptly bookmooched the one book I found, which just happened to be A Catch of Consequence. It’s the Boston Tea Party, and Makepeace Burke rescues a drowning Englishman and hides him in her tavern–the very same tavern that Sam Adams and all his ale-swilling Patriots make all their plans in. When it is discovered that not only is she hiding an Englishman in her tavern, but that he’s nobility … well! And that he rescues her! And that they fall in love and move back to England! Well, and well, and well again. Highly improbable, but also highly entertaining … and I confess that midway through the book, I even shed a tear. So if you’re looking for a well-written historical diversion, look no further. I’ll probably even bookmooch some more Norman novels.

Just in case you’re in the mood for a little 13th century Indian Islamic history ….

Monday, February 19th, 2007

From the Tabakat-i Nasiri, written by court historian Minhaju-s Siraj:

Sultan Raziya was a great monarch. She was wise, just, and generous, a benefactor to her kingdom, a dispenser of justic, the protector or her subjects, and the leader of her armies. She was endowed with all the qualities befitting a king, but she was not born of the right sex, and so in the estimation of men all these virtues were worthless. (May God have mercy on her!)

In the time of her father, Sultan Sa’id Shamsu-d din, she had exercised authority with great dignity. Her mother was the chief wife of his majesty, and she resided in the chief royal palace in the Kushk-firizi. The Sultan discerned in her countenance the signs of power and bravery, and although she was a girl and lived in retirement, yet when the Sultan returned from the conquest of Gwalior, he directed his secretary Taju-l Malik Mahmud to put her name in writing as heir of the kingdom, and successor to the throne.

Before this farman was executed, the servants of the State, who were in close intimacy with his majesty represented that, seeing the kind had grown up sons who were worthy of the dignity, what wisdom could there be in making a woman their heir to a Muhammadan throne, and what advantage could accrue from it? They besought him to set their minds at ease, for the course that he proposed seemed very inexpedient. The king replied, “My sons are devoted to the pleasures of youthm and no one of them is qualified to be kind. They are unfit to rule the country, and after my death you will find that there is no one more competent to guide the State than my daughter.”

It was afterwards agreed by common consent that the king had judged wisely.

When Sultan Raziya succeeded to the throne, all things reverted to their old order. But the wazir of the State, Nizamu-l Mulk Junaidi did not give his adhesion. He, together with Malik Jani, Malik Kochi, Malik Kabir Khan, and Malik Izzu-d din Muhammad Salari assembling from different parts of the country at the gates of Delhi, made war against Sultan Raziya, and hostilities were carried on for a long time. After a while, Malik Nasiru-d din Tabashi Mu’izzi, who was governor of Oudh, brought up his forces to Delhi to the assistance of Sultan Raziya. When he had crossed the Ganges, the generals, who were fighting against Delhi, met him unexpectedly and took him prisoner. He then fell sick and died.

The stay of the insurgents at the gates of Delhi was protracted. Sultan Raziya, favoured by fortune, went out from the city and ordered her tents to be pitched at a place on the banks of the Jumna. Several engagements took place between the Turkish nobles who were on the side of the Sultan, and the insurgent chiefs. At last, peace was effected, with great adroitness and judicious management. Malik Izzu-d din Muhammad Salar and Malik Izzu-d din Kabir Khan Ayyaz secretly joined the Sultan and came at hight to her majesty’s tents, upon the understanding the Malik Jani, Malik Kochi, and Nizamu-l Mulk Janaidi were to be summoned and closely imprisoned, so that the rebellion might subside. When these chiefs were informed of this matter they fled from their camps, and some horsemen of the Sultan pursued them. Malik Kochi and his borther Fakhru-d din were captured, and were afterward killed in prison. Malik Jani went into the mountains of Bardar, and died there after a while.

Mr. WordPress is a Slut

Monday, February 19th, 2007

This is hysterical, especially if you’ve been using WordPress for a long time.

Via Petrona

Mom in the news again.

Saturday, February 17th, 2007

Reuters article, reprinted in its entirety.

My favorite line is “The Bush administration rejects Munshi’s views …”

US envoy says Iraq rebuilding plan won’t work

By Sue Pleming

WASHINGTON, Feb 17 (Reuters) - Kiki Munshi was showcased by the media in September as a seasoned U.S. diplomat who came out of retirement to lead a rebuilding group in Iraq.

Now she is back home, angry, and convinced that President George W. Bush’s new strategy of doubling the number of such groups to 20 along with a troop surge of 21,500 will not help stabilize Iraq.

A diplomat for 22 years, she quit her job last month as leader of a Provincial Reconstruction Team — groups made up of about 50 civilian and military experts that try to help Iraqi communities build their own government while strengthening moderates.

“In spite of the magnificent and often heroic work being done out there by a lot of truly wonderful people, the PRTs themselves aren’t succeeding. The obstacles are too great,” Munshi said this week in Washington, where she was pressing her view at the State Department and to Congress.

“Once again we are proceeding to lay people’s lives on a line drawn with faulty information. Once again the fantasies of the ‘policy-makers’ drive decisions without much link to the realities on the ground,” said Munshi, who retired from the foreign service in 2002 .

Her postings included Romania, India and Sierra Leone before Iraq, where Munshi said he had felt a “moral obligation to sort out the mess we have made there.”

An audit by the special inspector general for Iraq last October found similar problems with the PRTs to those listed by Munshi, including an “ever-changing security situation, the difficulty of integrating civilian and military personnel, the lack of a finalized agreement on PRT operational requirements and responsibilities.”

REJECTION

Members of Congress have also been critical of the program, which suffered early on from not being able to attract enough civilian staff and a dispute between the State and Defense departments over who would provide security for the teams.

The Bush administration rejects Munshi’s views and the State Department said the expanded PRT plan was more focused, requiring team members to do pre-deployment training and with a clear goal of bolstering moderates and sidelining militants.

“We have been very mindful of the problems our PRT leaders have reported to us. We have worked very hard to streamline it,” said Barbara Stephenson, the deputy coordinator for Iraq at the State Department, which oversees the PRT plan.

Munshi said the PRT plan was ill-conceived, under-funded and poorly staffed.

She said security was so bad that the council in the town in Diyala province where she was based had not had a quorum since last October and that death squads were rife.

PRT members found it hard to meet with Iraqis because of intimidation, she said, giving the example of training sessions that had been canceled because of poor security.

The PRTs are embedded with the military, a tactic Munshi says has varying results depending on the ability of the unit.

“All the PRTs embedded with the military are subject to the vicissitudes of military fortune, for good or ill,” she said.

But the State Department countered that Munshi’s experiences were not repeated in all the provinces and set up interviews with two PRT leaders who said while there were difficulties, they believed their work was making an impact.

Stephanie Miley, a PRT leader in the Iraqi town of Tikrit, said her teams managed to get out to see Iraqi officials five or six times a week but security issues meant they could not stay for long.

“I just hope that people will recognize that this is not something we will achieve overnight,” she said.

The Devil Wears Prada - Lauren Weisberger

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

The Devil Wears Prada: Movie Tie-In Alternative titles to this blog post:
1. I wasted enough time on the movie. I don’t need to finish the book.

2. Damn those nefarious Border “3 for 2″ book schemes, especially in an airport when one is afraid of running out of reading material.

3. Nobody ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American public.

4. Lessons in bad writing: a casebook.

Anyone? Any other alternative titles?

The Queen’s Fool - Philippa Gregory

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

The Queen's Fool: A Novel Hannah Green and her father have escaped the Spanish Inquisition–but only after Hannah’s mother has been burned at the stake for being a Jew. Newly resettled in London, the illustrious Robert Dudley and his tutor come in to purchase books from her bookseller father, it is revealed that Hannah has a gift for the Sight when she sees three men rather than two–and they determine that the third is an angel. Dudley, who is thrillingly handsome to Hannah, capitalizes on his charm and promptly places her as a spy within the court of Queen Mary I. With a new role as the Holy Fool, Hannah becomes embroiled in court politics, balancing her allegiance to Mary with her admiration of the future Queen Elizabeth, and of course, her private life.

A nice diversion. I read this on the plane, and left it there too.

AJAXed with AWP