| News from the 2-198 Combined Arms Battalion • Army, Iraqi leaders agree to water-sharing policy in Ninawa (Editor’s
Note: The 2-198 Combined Arms Battalion, 155th Brigade Combat Team,
headquartered in Senatobia, Mississippi, is currently stationed in
various locations in Iraq and includes soldiers from our local area.  | Water supply tapped
An
Iraqi interpreter (center), standing waist deep in lush grass, observes
with Lt. Col. William B. Smith Jr. (left) an unauthorized pipe tapped
into the 16-inch pipeline supplying water to Q-West during a recent
leader’s reconnaissance of the pipeline in the Ninawa Province of
northern Iraq. |
The
battalion Public Affairs Officer is CPT Murray B. Shugars. CPT Shugars
routinely writes articles and sends photos of our troops from this
battalion.) By Capt. Murray Shugars 2nd Battalion, 198th Combined Arms Contingency
Operating Base Q-West, Iraq —Local Iraqi leaders met with the 16th
Sustainment Brigade deputy commander and the Q-West mayor to discuss
water policy and enforcement here August 15. Mukhtars,
or leaders, from five villages, along with representatives from the
Iraqi Army, Iraqi Police, and local government, met in the base mayor’s
conference room and hammered out an agreement in which Iraqis take
responsibility for enforcing the share-the-water policy that guarantees
water to Coalition forces as well as surrounding communities. “Our
goal for this meeting was to get Iraqi authorities to commit to
enforcing the long-standing water-sharing policy,” said Lt. Col.
William B. Smith, Jr., Q-West Mayor, 2nd Battalion, 198th Combined
Arms, Mississippi Army National Guard. Smith, a native of Hattiesburg, said he was encouraged by the meeting. “We received verbal commitments from all the key leaders and will wait to see what happens,” said Smith. Water availability is understandably a significant issue in this desert country. Iraq
is suffering its fourth consecutive year of drought and faces another
low harvest. The “shamal,” a northwesterly wind descending from the
mountains bordering Turkey, has been especially severe this summer,
flooding the country with oceans of dust that linger for days. Iraq
relies heavily on the two great rivers of ancient Mesopotamia—the
Euphrates, which meanders from Turkey through Syria, and the Tigris,
which flows south from Turkey—but river levels have dropped over the
past years, partly due to hydroelectric dams in Turkey. The
Mayor Cell water team operates and maintains the Al-Qayyarah pump house
at the Tigris River, which provides water to many communities in the
province as well as to Q-West. Two pipelines pull water from the site,
a 16-inch line for Q-West and a 12-inch line for the city of
Al-Qayyarah and surrounding communities. During
the last month, Q-West received roughly one-one-hundredth of what it
needed, said Capt. John E. Satterfield, director of public works,
2-198th CAB, and a Midway, Ga., native. “To
sustain operations, Q-West requires less than one-tenth of the water
pumped daily when the pump house is operating at normal capacity,” said
Satterfield. “The rest belongs to the Iraqis.” The
share-the-water agreement stipulates local Iraqis may draw from the
16-inch pipeline as much water as they need from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
after which they must close their taps, allowing water to flow
unhindered to Q-West from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. Furthermore, the agreement
limits the size of taps to one inch in diameter. Historically,
during the hottest months — May to September — water delivered from the
pipeline decreases dramatically because of increased demand from
agricultural activity and day-to-day life support. In
spite of that, there is conspicuous consumption of water in Ninawa
Province. During a recent leader’s reconnaissance, Smith observed lush
gardens, neighborhoods in Qayyarah where tall sunflowers nodded amid
waist-deep grass. Members of the 2-198th CAB found wheat fields watered
by boom irrigation, locals washing cars at high noon, and garden hoses
spilling water that barely puddles before evaporating. These
oases thrive —many of them miles from the Tigris River — on water
siphoned, often without permission, from taps in the 16-inch pipeline. The Qayyarah officials and village mukhtars discussed who was responsible for the situation. “We
have explained to the people a thousand times that they can take as
much as they need during the day, but not to take the water at night,”
said Qayyarah Mayor Salih Nasa, through a translator. When
Salih asked why the Coalition forces no longer prevent infractions,
Smith reminded him that the role of Coalition forces has changed since
the January 2009 Security Agreement. “This is an
Iraqi civil issue, and Iraqis must enforce their own policies,” said
Smith. “I want to make this very clear — we are going to leave Iraq,”
said Smith. “Our intent is to leave this base in good condition for the
Iraqi Army and Air Force to use. This is your country, your base.” “The
Iraqi Army supports the share-the-water policy, but there must be
consequences for violating it,” said Iraqi Army Lt. Col. Khalid Subhi
Muhammed, a civil affairs officer with the 7th Brigade. “Here is what
we must do, and we must do it through the Iraqi legal system, not
through the Coalition forces.” Muhammed, who
had remained silent during much of the animated debate, laid out a
simple, direct plan: warn all the people that if they do not abide by
the share-the-water policy, they will be punished. After that, jail
and fine everyone who violates the policy. Gen. Khalil Hassan Aluk, the Al-Qayyarah police chief, agreed to the plan. “I
will speak with the muktars and shaykhs of every village, and they will
speak to the people and tell them they must remove the illegal taps and
abide by policy,” said Aluk. “I will also send a message to all the
imams.” Lt. Col. Eric Fleming, deputy commander,
16th Sust. Bde., and chair of the meeting, emphasized the importance of
an Iraqi-led solution to the issue. “The most
significant outcome of this meeting was the empowering of the local
government officials,” said Fleming. “In the past, they leaned on
Coalition forces to be the heavy hand and enforce Iraqi law.” Fleming said that the meeting was an important milestone in the transition of the region. “The
Iraqis agreed to conduct patrols on the pipeline and enforce Iraqi law
by arresting those who illegally tap the line,” said Fleming. “The
mayor of Al-Qayyarah stated that he had the power to impose fines and
that he would do so if an Iraqi judge found them guilty of breaking the
law. This is a major step forward in the local population taking
responsibility for their own country. We did not have this a year ago.” Dr.
Muhammed Ismail Ahmed, a liaison for more than 50 villages in the
province, agreed with Fleming. A general practitioner with a medical
degree from the University of Mosul, Ahmed sees the issue of
water-policy enforcement as a challenge to the legitimacy of local
Iraqi government. “The people are asking how
their leaders will deal with this,” said Ahmed during an interview two
days after the meeting. “There must be follow-through on the decisions
made during the meeting.”
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