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Jolie sees benefit in US surge in Iraq
Lindsay Holmwood
NEW YORK—Actress and humanitarian activist Angelina Jolie said Thursday
that the reinforcement of U.S. troops in Iraq has created an opportunity
for humanitarian programs to boost assistance for Iraqi refugees. In an
op-ed piece published by the Washington Post, titled “A Reason to Stay
in Iraq,” Jolie details the plight of refugees and says their conditions
have not improved since she visited the country last August to urge
governments to provide more support.
Jolie, who has been a U.N. goodwill ambassador since 2001, was in
Baghdad earlier this month to again highlight the refugee problem. She
talked with Gen. David Petraeus, the American military commander in
Iraq, and Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, the U.S. Embassy said.
Petraeus “told me he would support new efforts to address the
humanitarian crisis” as much as possible, “which leaves me hopeful that
more progress can be made,” the actress wrote.
She said she stressed to Iraqi officials there must be a coherent plan
for helping some 2 million Iraqis who are taking advantage of the
downturn in violence to begin trickling back to abandoned homes from
havens elsewhere in the country. A similar number fled Iraq to escape
the bloodshed. “It will be quite a while before Iraq is ready to absorb
more than 4 million refugees and displaced people,” Jolie wrote. “But it
is not too early to start working on solutions.”
The actress, who works on behalf of the U.N. High Commissioner for
Refugees, urged America’s presidential candidates and congressional
leaders to step up financing for aid to displaced Iraqis. UNHCR has
asked for $261 million this year — “less than the U.S. spends each day
to fight the war in Iraq,” she wrote. Addressing the question of whether
the “troop surge” has worked, Jolie said that “I can only state what I
witnessed.”
“When I asked the troops if they wanted to go home as soon as possible,
they said that they miss home but feel invested in Iraq,” she wrote.
“They have lost many friends and want to be a part of the humanitarian
progress they now feel is possible”.
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