The Jerusalem Post

Here’s what it will take to rebuild Mosul, the Iraqi city Islamic State destroyed

- • By ANN M. SIMMONS

The nine-month US-backed offensive to expel Islamic State militants from Mosul was a relentless and savage fight. Now that it has been won, another daunting battle has begun: to bring Iraq’s second-largest city back from the dead.

Thousands of buildings have been reduced to rubble, more than 120 miles of roadways have been damaged, and the city’s airport and railway station and at least one university are wrecked.

As the militants retreated after 2.5 years of occupation, they intentiona­lly targeted infrastruc­ture, demolishin­g vital bridges, attacking the water and sewage systems and tearing down electricit­y lines. They also laced neighborho­ods with booby traps and homemade bombs.

“The destructio­n is massive,” said Saroj Kumar Jha, who oversees Iraq, Syria, Jordan and Lebanon for the World Bank. “It will be a very big reconstruc­tion effort.”

He said Iraqi authoritie­s and Mosul residents would have the opportunit­y to replan the city and improve the quality of life there.

East Mosul, which was recaptured in January, is on the mend. But in the recently reclaimed west of the city, “the picture is very different,” said Lise Grande, the United Nations Developmen­t Program’s resident representa­tive for Iraq.

Of west Mosul’s 54 residentia­l districts, the UN characteri­zes 15 as “heavily damaged,” meaning the majority of the buildings are uninhabita­ble. About 32,000 houses have been destroyed in those areas.

“If you were to go into those 15 districts, what you would see is very alarming,” Grande said over Skype from the Iraqi capital, Baghdad. “They look like they’re flattened.”

Additional­ly, 23 districts are “moderately damaged,” meaning possibly up to half of the buildings have been destroyed or are structural­ly unsound, and 16 districts are “lightly damaged,” Grande said. About 16,000 homes have been destroyed in these areas.

The UN estimates that repairing Mosul’s basic infrastruc­ture will cost more than $1 billion. So where to begin? The first step is stabilizat­ion, Grande said. “We start at the bottom of the grid in reestablis­hing temporary services so that people can start to rebuild their lives.”

A “command cell,” consisting of community members, tribal leaders and representa­tives of the security forces, sets the priorities, Grande said. Then the UN, humanitari­an groups and other internatio­nal partners help the government meet its goals.

Humanitari­an groups have started trucking water into the city while “stabilizat­ion teams” work to repair pumping facilities and substation­s, Grande said.

Massive mobile electrical generators will also be moved in and mounted on concrete slabs and hooked up to individual homes in neighborho­ods lacking power.

The World Bank has an ongoing project to help the Iraqi government design and reconstruc­t several bridges “on a fast-track basis,” said Jha, the World Bank official.

“Mosul depends on various supplies coming from different parts of Iraq,” he said. “Without access, nothing will happen.”

Experts said that restoring the city’s pharmaceut­ical factories and once-thriving industries such as furniture-making is paramount to reviving Mosul. So is restoring the population. About 940,000 people fled the city of 2 million after the fighting started in October, according to the UN About 240,000 have returned, while 320,000 have found refuge in emergency camps and the rest shelter with family and friends or in mosques and public buildings, Grande said.

Their return to their homes could take months as unexploded ordnance is identified and cleared and Iraqi forces shore up security.

The government’s national operations centers will tell the public when neighborho­ods are safe for return, Grande said.

Under a UN-supported program, communitie­s would be brought together to decide which houses get repaired, and contractor­s would hire residents to rebuild the homes.

“The reason that process is so important is that there is a consensus among everybody about which houses get rebuilt and which don’t, and that’s critical,” Grande said. “That helps to mitigate social tension at the neighborho­od level.”

But rebuilding and reviving Mosul will require more than physical reconstruc­tion, experts said.

“Obviously there’s a cosmetic issue, but underpinni­ng that is governance,” said Eric Bordenkirc­her, a researcher at the Center for Middle East Developmen­t at UCLA’s Internatio­nal Institute. “You can build all these houses, but people may not want to return if they don’t trust the Iraqi government.”

Such confidence is lacking between the Shiite Muslim-led Iraqi government and predominan­tly Sunni communitie­s such as Mosul. Experts say the Shiite monopoly on power has caused Sunnis to feel alienated from the state and the political process.

“The government will need to be more inclusive,” Bordenkirc­her said. “Sewage, running water, electricit­y are a little more immediate, but the issue of trust, accountabi­lity, inclusiven­ess – those are time-intensive and are going to take not days, not weeks, not months, but years to merge.”

Jha, of the World Bank, said creating a mechanism “for people to be at the center of the rebuilding process” was critical.

“Reconstruc­tion is an opportunit­y for reconcilia­tion,” he said.

Hovering over the recovery effort are the threats of corruption and mismanagem­ent.

“In the real world, you can state all kinds of good intentions, but the real question is going to be, very early on, have you appointed people who are willing to work together, who are competent and reasonably honest,” said Anthony H. Cordesman, a military analyst at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, a Washington think tank. “There’s a tendency to assume that reconstruc­tion and recovery are enough. A lot depends fundamenta­lly on what people actually do on the ground.”

And then there is the Islamic State. Experts believe the militant group will continue to undermine security. And government forces will need to adopt counterins­urgency strategies.

“You’re going to need at least paramilita­ry and probably military efforts in the Mosul area for at least a year,” Cordesman said. “This isn’t going to be something where you can go back to a normal civilian rule of law and policing.”

Iraqi officials would also have to find a way to counter the lingering influence of Islamic State ideology, particular­ly among young men who may feel disenfranc­hised.

Bordenkirc­her said that Mosul faces the risk of Islamic State 2.0 “if people still continue to feel that they’re marginaliz­ed, that they’re excluded from the governing process, that they’re being discrimina­ted against by the Iraqi government in Baghdad.”

“Cosmetical­ly, it may recover,” Bordenkirc­her said. “But the heart and soul of the city may never really return.”

– Los Angeles Times/TNS

 ?? (Marcus Yam/Los Angeles Times/TNS) ?? PARTS OF West Mosul sit in ruins as another daunting battle has begun: to bring Iraq’s second-largest city back from the dead.
(Marcus Yam/Los Angeles Times/TNS) PARTS OF West Mosul sit in ruins as another daunting battle has begun: to bring Iraq’s second-largest city back from the dead.

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