On the Ground: Day 10

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From Powerline:

For a realistic, on the ground account of what’s happening in Sumatra, check out The Diplomad, a blog written by American foreign service officers. Their comments on the U.N.'s contributions are amusing:
Well, dear friends, we’re now into the tenth day of the tsunami crisis and in this battered corner of Asia, the UN is nowhere to be seen – unless you count at meetings, in five-star hotels, and holding press conferences. Aussies and Yanks continue to carry the overwhelming bulk of the burden, but some other fine folks also have jumped in: e.g., the New Zealanders have provided C-130 lift and an excellent and much-needed potable water distribution system; the Singaporeans have provided great helo support; the Indians have a hospital ship taking position off Sumatra. Spain and Netherlands have sent aircraft with supplies.

The UN continues to send its best product, bureaucrats.

Most interesting to me was this memo written by Dutch diplomats and circulated at an EU meeting in Indonesia:

The US military has arrived and is clearly establishing its presence everywhere in Banda Aceh. They completely have taken over the military hospital, which was a mess until yesterday but is now completely up and running. They brought big stocks of medicines, materials for the operation room, teams of doctors, water and food. Most of the patients who were lying in the hospital untreated for a week have undergone medical treatment by the US teams by this afternoon. US military have unloaded lots of heavy vehicles and organize the logistics with Indonesian military near the airport. A big camp is being set up at a major square in the town. Huge generators are ready to provide electricity. US helicopters fly to places which haven’t been reached for the whole week and drop food. The impression it makes on the people is also highly positive; finally something happens in the city of Banda Aceh and finally it seems some people are in control and are doing something. No talking but action. European countries are until now invisible on the ground. IOM staff (note: this is a USAID-funded organization) is very busy briefing the incoming Americans and Australians about the situation.
 
meanwhile:

U.S. Forces Aid Tsunami Relief Efforts in South East Asia

*U.S. Provides Medical Care in Sumatra *http://www.dod.mil/home/images/spac...p://www.dod.mil/home/images/spacer.gifSailors and corpmen assigned to the USS Abraham Lincoln 72 and Carrier Air Wing 2, carry a refugee off an SH-60B helicopter enroute to the U.S. medical tent for treatment in Banda Ache, Sumatra, Indonesia, Jan. 3, 2005. The Lincoln and Carrier Air Wing 2 are providing medical assistance throughout Sumatra, Indonesia, to help the victims of the tsunami that hit South East Asia on Dec. 26, 2004. Abraham Lincoln Carrier Strike Group is currently operating in the Indian Ocean off the waters of Indonesia and Thailand. U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Seth C. Petersonhttp://www.dod.mil/home/images/photos/2005-01/photoessays/pi20050103a2.jpghttp://www.dod.mil/home/images/spacer.gifSailors and corpmen assigned to the USS Abraham Lincoln 72 and Carrier Air Wing 2 carry a refugee off an SH-60B helicopter enroute to the U.S. medical tent for treatment in Banda Ache, Sumatra, Indonesia, Jan. 3, 2005. U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Seth C. Petersonhttp://www.dod.mil/home/images/photos/2005-01/photoessays/pi20050103a3.jpghttp://www.dod.mil/home/images/spacer.gifU.S. Navy Lt. Banks from the USS Abraham Lincoln Medical Corps helps carry an Indonesian man Jan. 3, 2005. The man was injured during the tsunami in Banda Ache, Sumatra, Indonesia. U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Seth C. Petersonhttp://www.dod.mil/home/images/photos/2005-01/photoessays/pi20050103a5a.jpghttp://www.dod.mil/home/images/spacer.gifMedical teams from the USS Abraham Lincoln and the International Organization for Migration tend to patients Jan. 3, 2005, medically evacuated by U.S. Navy helicopters to a temporary triage sight located on Sultan Iskandar Muda Air Force Base, in Banda Aceh, Sumatra. The two teams worked together with members of the Australian Air Force to provide initial medical care to victims of the Tsunami-stricken coastal regions. U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Elizabeth A. Edwards

Much more here:
U.S. Forces Aid Tsunami Relief Efforts in South East Asia
 
STINGINESS UPDATE: Mark Steyn observes:

If America were to emulate Ireland and Norway, there’d be a lot more dead Indonesians and Sri Lankans. Mr Eddison may not have noticed, but the actual relief effort going on right now is being done by the Yanks: it’s the USAF and a couple of diverted naval groups shuttling in food and medicine, with solid help from the Aussies, Singapore and a couple of others. The Irish can’t fly in relief supplies, because they don’t have any C-130s. All they can do is wait for the UN to swing by and pick up their cheque.

The Americans send the UN the occasional postal order, too. In fact, 40 per cent of Egeland’s budget comes from Washington, which suggests the Europeans aren’t being quite as “proportionate” as Mr Eddison thinks. But, when disaster strikes, what matters is not whether your cheque is “prompt”, but whether you are. For all the money lavished on them, the UN is hard to rouse to action. Egeland’s full-time round-the-clock 24/7 Big Humanitarians are conspicuous by their all but total absence on the ground.

So I hear.
 
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US: Two naval battle groups, 45 helicopters, 17 C-130 cargo planes, 13,000 personnel

Other Nato states: French helicopter carrier, German navy supply ship, 14 C-130s from various member-states

India: Has 16,000 personnel with 32 ships deployed both in own disaster area and Sri Lanka, Maldives and Indonesia

Other states: Three Russian Il-76 transport aircraft, Japanese naval craft
 
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http://i.a.cnn.net/cnn/2005/WORLD/asiapcf/01/04/asia.quake/top.galle.aid.ap.jpg U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, touring nations devastated by the tsunami disaster which claimed an estimated 155,000 lives, said the United States is throwing its weight behind relief efforts because it is what Americans do. U.S. Marines have arrived in Sri Lanka – one of the worst-hit countries – where they will concentrate on getting medical supplies and clean water to survivors.

FULL STORY
 
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