Reports from the Ground at the Disaster

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From Diplomad’s Blog:

Day 9 of the tsunami crisis.

I know I had promised to lay off the UN for a bit . . . but I can’t. As one reader commented on a previous Diplomad posting on the UN, “it’s like watching a train wreck” – you know it’s horrible, but you’ve just got to look at it.

In this part of the tsunami-wrecked Far Abroad, the UN is still nowhere to be seen where it counts, i.e., feeding and helping victims. The relief effort continues to be a US-Australia effort, with Singapore now in and coordinating closely with the US and Australia. Other countries are also signing up to be part of the US-Australia effort. Nobody wants to be “coordinated” by the UN. The local UN reps are getting desperate. They’re calling for yet another meeting this afternoon; they’ve flown in more UN big shots to lecture us all on “coordination” and the need to work together, i.e., let the UN take credit. With Kofi about to arrive for a big conference, the UNocrats are scrambling to show something, anything as a UN accomplishment. Don’t be surprised if they claim that the USS Abraham Lincoln is under UN control and that President Lincoln was a strong supporter of the UN.

Maybe watching the UN flounder is not like watching a train wreck; perhaps it’s more akin to watching an Ed Wood movie or reading Maureen Dowd or Margo Kingston – so horrible, so pathetic, that it transforms into a thing of perverse beauty. The only problem, of course, is that real people are dying.

I hope soon to return to my habitual corner of the Far Abroad . . . far, far away from the UN.

UPDATE: More on “The UNcredibles”: WFP (World Food Program) has “arrived” in the capital with an “assessment and coordination team.” The following is no joke; no Diplomad attempt to be funny or clever: The team has spent the day and will likely spend a few more setting up their “coordination and opcenter” at a local five-star hotel. And their number one concern, even before phones, fax and copy machines? Arranging for the hotel to provide 24hr catering service. USAID folks already are cracking jokes about “The UN Sheraton.” Meanwhile, our military and civilians, working with the super Aussies, continue to keep the C-130 air bridge of supplies flowing and the choppers flying, and keep on saving lives – and without 24hr catering services from any five-star hotel . . . . The contrast grows more stark every minute.

haloscan.com/comments/diplomad/110472292201968902/
 
meanwhile:

The U.S. military response in the region continues and grows, Bush said. “American military assets in the region are now aiding recovery efforts,” he said. “Patrol and cargo aircraft have been surveying damage and delivering supplies for several days. Air Force C-130s are flying aid missions 24 hours a day.”

The U.S. Navy’s Abraham Lincoln Carrier Battle Group is off the coast of Sumatra and transporting relief supplies by helicopter. “Other naval and Marine assets will arrive shortly to generate clean water and provide further logistical help,” Bush said.

In addition to the Abraham Lincoln group, the Bonhomme Richard Expeditionary Strike Group will be arriving in the region Jan. 4, said Marine Brig. Gen. John Allen, DoD’s coordinator for tsunami-relief efforts.

Allen stressed that military forces are working very closely with host nations. “These operations are operations for the countries themselves,” Allen said during a State Department briefing today. “We work very closely with Thailand; we’re working very closely with Indonesia; we’re working very closely with Sri Lanka and the Maldives, because it will be in those areas in which the relief process will occur, and it is their relief.”

When the Bonhomme Richard group reaches the area, its 24 helicopters will join the 19 of the Lincoln group delivering humanitarian supplies to isolated areas. Another organization, Maritime Prepositioning Ship Squadron 3, is also headed to the theater, Allen said.

The six ships in the prepositioning squadron, from Guam and Japan, are very large container ships. They can store up to 90,000 gallons of fresh water and can produce tens of thousands of gallons of fresh water a day, and helicopters can operate from aboard these vessels.

Air Force planes are providing much of the lift capacity, Allen said. “The Air Force has delivered, at this juncture, 430,000 pounds of supplies into the region,” he said. “C-130s are converging on the region; there are about 17 on the ground now.”

Larger aircraft – C-17 Globemaster IIIs and C-5 Galaxys – also are bringing in needed supplies and other relief equipment.

Related Sites:
USS Abraham Lincoln
USS Bonhomme Richard
Maritime Prepositioning Ship Squadron 3
Related Articles:
Officials Say Tsunami Disaster Will Change in Size, Shape
Navy ‘Angels’ Delivering Relief Supplies to Indonesia
U.S. Pledges $350M to Relief as Indonesia Missions Begin
Ships, Aircraft, Personnel Converge on Disaster Zone
Pacific Command Rallies Tsunami Relief Resources
Bush Pledges U.S. Assistance to Tsunami Survivors
U.S. Responding to Tsunami Catastrophe
 
meanwhile:

January 03, 2005

http://instapundit.com/archives/IMAGES/acehcopterssm.jpg

PHOTOS OF THE TSUNAMI RELIEF EFFORT, released by the U.S. Navy, are available here. Such efforts are, as U.N. representative Jan Egeland noted this weekend, worth their weight in gold. More or less literally.

http://instapundit.com/archives/images/acehcopters2sm.jpg

UPDATE: Reader Phil Beckman notes that Dan Rather is on the scene, which is surely a tremendous relief to the victims. And he’s wearing a flightsuit!

http://www.navy.mil/management/photodb/webphoto/web_050103-N-1229B-073.jpg

A lot more photos of the great work our men and women are doing is here.

Hat tip: Instapundent
 
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gilliam:
From Diplomad’s Blog:

Day 9 of the tsunami crisis.

I know I had promised to lay off the UN for a bit . . . but I can’t. As one reader commented on a previous Diplomad posting on the UN, “it’s like watching a train wreck” – you know it’s horrible, but you’ve just got to look at it.
article is here:
diplomadic.blogspot.com/2005/01/almost-funnny.html
 
Bill O’Reilly had a great line in today’s column about the UN. I may not have it exactly, but it’s to the effect that “The UN is impotent, and there’s not enough Viagra in the whole world to cure that problem.”

DaveBj
 
Just my opinion after reading the stories:

It seems like as the UN is jockeying into position to figure out what to do. The US-Austraililan forces already have ideas on how to impliment the aid. I see this that the UN is more worried about ‘their’ image around the world (with their ‘meetings’ and ‘hotel living’ than getting their hands dirty and really ‘get to work.’

If and when other nations side with the US-Aussie efforts, these other countries will start to see how ineffective the UN actually is. Add this to the Oil For Food Scandal and could we see the beginning of the end of the UN?
 
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