U.S. drops
Baghdad electricity reports
The daily length of time that residents have power has
dropped. The figure is considered a key indicator of quality
of life.
By Noam N. Levey and Alexandra Zavis
Times Staff Writers
07/30/07 "LA
Times" --
July 27, 2007 --- WASHINGTON — As the Bush
administration struggles to convince lawmakers that its Iraq
war strategy is working, it has stopped reporting to
Congress a key quality-of-life indicator in Baghdad: how
long the power stays on.
Ryan Crocker, the U.S. ambassador to Iraq, told the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee last week that Baghdad residents
could count on only "an hour or two a day" of electricity.
That's down from an average of five to six hours a day
earlier this year.
But that piece of data has not been sent to lawmakers for
months because the State Department, which prepares a weekly
"status report" for Congress on conditions in Iraq, stopped
estimating in May how many hours of electricity Baghdad
residents typically receive each day.
Instead, the department now reports on the electricity
generated nationwide, a measurement that does not indicate
how much power Iraqis in Baghdad or elsewhere actually
receive.
The change, a State Department spokesman said, reflects a
technical decision by reconstruction officials in Baghdad
who are scaling back efforts to estimate electricity
consumption as they wind down U.S. involvement in rebuilding
Iraq's power grid.
Department officials said the new approach was more accurate
than the previous estimates, which they said had been very
rough and had failed to reflect wide variations across
Baghdad and the country.
"Nothing is being hidden. There is no ulterior motive," said
David Foley, the department's Middle East spokesman. "We are
continuing to provide detailed information and have been
completely transparent."
The State Department's new method shows that the national
electricity supply is 4% lower than a year ago, according to
the July 11 report.
The reporting change has triggered criticism that the
administration is disclosing less information at the same
time President Bush is facing off against Congress over how
much progress is being made in Iraq. Bush has been working
for months to show that the troop buildup he announced in
January is stabilizing the country.
"It's unfortunate," said Jason H. Campbell, a senior
research assistant at the Brookings Institution who has been
tracking quality-of-life measurements in Iraq since 2003.
"What makes this metric even worth tracking is you want to
see what's happening to the average Iraqi."
Campbell said the new reporting method made it impossible to
know what the power situation was in Baghdad and elsewhere
in Iraq.
Col. Mike Moon, who oversees the Army Corps of Engineers'
electricity reconstruction efforts in Iraq, said he thought
the change was a mistake. The total amount of electricity
being generated in Iraq makes no difference to the
individual who has no electricity for his air conditioner,
Moon said.
Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), who sharply questioned
Crocker about electricity during a recent Senate Foreign
Relations Committee hearing, sent a letter to the State
Department last week complaining about the new measurement.
She said she was concerned the White House was trying to
obscure the deteriorating situation in Baghdad, the focus of
Bush's "surge" of 30,000 additional troops.
"The president continues to keep information away from the
American people and the Congress," said Boxer, who advocates
withdrawing troops. "It's obvious that he wants to paint a
rosy picture."
State Department officials in Baghdad and Washington said
the new method was not an attempt to hide information. They
noted that Crocker was candid about the electricity
situation when he testified to lawmakers last week.
Iraq's electricity supply has received less attention than
other national indicators as debate over the president's
surge has intensified in Washington.
The administration's July progress report focused on 18
benchmarks of Iraqi government progress toward political
reconciliation among ethnic and religious communities.
However, the reliability of the electricity supply has long
been seen by Iraqis as a key indicator of the success of the
U.S. enterprise.
Crocker told CBS News this month that electricity was "more
important to the average Iraqi than all 18 benchmarks rolled
up into one."
In the spring, the State Department reported that Baghdad
residents were typically receiving up to six hours of
electricity a day. In the rest of the country, Iraqis could
count on 10 or 11 hours.
But the situation has deteriorated substantially as stifling
heat has set in. Temperatures in Baghdad are now reaching
above 110.
U.S. officials say that they have made progress and that the
persistent electricity shortages partly reflect growing
demand as Iraqis buy more air conditioners, refrigerators
and other appliances.
Continuing instability is also a factor, U.S. officials
acknowledge.
"The main reasons have to do with continued attacks by
insurgents against electrical transmission lines and against
fuel pipelines that provide the energy source that you need
to generate electricity," Crocker told the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee.
Those problems have been compounded by the slow pace of
rebuilding a power system that had been deteriorating for
years before the U.S. invasion, said Moon of the Army Corps
of Engineers.
For many on Capitol Hill, the pace of progress is
increasingly frustrating. "Here we are in the fifth year,
and we simply have not greatly improved the quality of
life," said Sen. John W. Warner (R-Va.), who has called on
the president to draw up a plan for a withdrawal. "It's very
troubling."
noam.levey@latimes.com - alexandra.zavis@latimes.com
Levey reported from Washington and Zavis from Baghdad. A
Times special correspondent in Baghdad contributed to this
report.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times
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