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US Army begins relief missions in Swat Valley .Chinook in action

US aid winning friends in flood-ravaged Pakistan
By CHRIS BRUMMITT (AP) – 5 hours ago


KALAM, Pakistan — U.S. Army choppers carrying emergency food and water buzzed over the swollen river and washed-out bridges, landing in the valley once controlled by the Taliban. They returned laden with grateful Pakistani flood survivors — newly won friends in a country where many regard America as the No. 1 enemy.

With Pakistan reeling from two weeks of flooding that has killed 1,500 and affected nearly 14 million people, the aid and rescue mission by the U.S. military gives Washington a chance to strengthen a sometimes troubled alliance that is crucial to fighting militancy in the region and ensuring a stable Afghanistan.
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Besides helping those trapped by the high water, the U.S. assistance already is having another effect: The Pakistani Taliban denounced it and urged a boycott of Western aid.

Other U.S. relief missions to disasters in the Muslim world — including the 2005 earthquake in Pakistan-controlled Kashmir and the 2004 tsunami in Indonesia — were credited with improving the image of the United States, at least in the short term.

Now, as U.S. troops work side by side with Pakistani forces, the mission may relieve some pressure on the civilian government in Islamabad. President Asif Ali Zardari, who returned Tuesday to Pakistan, has been criticized for being abroad since Aug. 1, amid one of the worst natural disasters in his country's history.

The United Nations said hundreds of millions of dollars in international assistance would be needed. In Washington, the State Department announced an additional $20 million in flood relief, bringing the total U.S. aid in the crisis to $55 million.
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A spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban, which has attacked international aid workers in the past and has long opposed foreign assistance, said it would fund relief efforts.

The foreign aid "is deceiving the nation. It will not reach the affected people, but will be pocketed by corrupt rulers," Azam Tariq told The Associated Press by telephone, adding the disaster was God's punishment to Pakistanis for accepting secular leaders.

Highlighting the stakes for Pakistan and the United States is the quick work in badly affected areas by hard-line Islamist charities, including one with alleged militant links. With civilian authorities overwhelmed, concerns are rising the disaster will build support for the extremists, and perhaps even undo recent security gains.

The U.S. assistance is focused on the Swat Valley, which was under Taliban control until a Pakistani army offensive last year. Since then, it has been trying to rebuild with the help of the international community, which does not want the militants to return.

On Tuesday, four Chinooks — which can carry 100 people or 12,000 pounds (5,440 kilograms) of relief supplies — and two Blackhawks flew in from Bagram air base in Afghanistan, where nearly 100,000 U.S. troops are battling a related Taliban insurgency.

The U.S. also deployed 84 troops needed to fly and maintain the aircraft, and the soldiers huddled on the tarmac shortly before the flights resumed Monday after being grounded for three days by bad weather.

"Pakistanis are trapped by the floods. You will do whatever it takes to bring them back to safety. That is your mission now," Col. Don Galli told them.

The helicopters soared over the Malakand Pass and into the Swat River valley, where they followed the waterway and passed over a dozen destroyed bridges and washed out roads. Mountains quickly rose up on either side of the aircraft.

They landed at Kalam, a town in the upper reaches of the Swat Valley that had been cut off for nearly two weeks. The floods destroyed dozens of buildings, including tourist hotels, and there was no food in the market and no electricity.

Pakistani soldiers supervised the unloading of the supplies and helped those who wanted to flee onto the U.S. helicopters.

"We have been waiting for this day for so long," said Habib-ur-Rehman. "The Americans are God-fearing people, too."

Another man who was named Saddam Hussein in honor of the Iraqi dictator later ousted by U.S. troops, said simply: "Thank you, America."

The passengers raised their hands up in prayer as the chopper took off and the Americans handed out muffins to the children and the elderly.

Because of the general hostility in Pakistan to the United States, the mission was potentially sensitive for both countries. But so far, there has been no media or public backlash against the U.S. mission. In the past, any reported increase in U.S. Embassy personnel or army trainers has caused an outcry.

While it is still early in the mission, the American effort has yet to generate much coverage in the local media. The U.S. Embassy invited local and foreign journalists onto the aircraft to report on the aid effort.

Hamid Gul, a former Pakistani spy chief who is normally virulently anti-American and a vocal supporter of the Taliban in Afghanistan, welcomed the U.S. assistance.

"If they are operating in flood-hit areas, let them do this rescue work," he said. "These Americans are not fighting."

The Americans are the guests of the Pakistani army on an air base in northwest Pakistan. Pleased to be out of a battle zone, all said they were being treated well. Their hosts have even installed Western-style toilets and air conditioners in their sleeping quarters.

Three Pakistani soldiers from the U.S.-trained and equipped Special Services Group travel in each chopper, along with an assistant pilot. The U.S. servicemen carry only side arms and most stayed on or near the aircraft during the short stay in Kalam.

Pakistani Maj. Waheed Zaman said the United States "performed wonders" after the Kashmir quake.

"As far as the army is concerned, we are very thankful," he said.

The U.S. Army staged a much larger aid operation in Indonesia after the tsunami, contributing to positive views of America. One village even named its main street after then-President George W. Bush.

The floods come at a delicate time in relations between U.S. and Pakistani forces. Ties had been improving, but were dented somewhat by the leak of classified military documents that showed past contacts between Pakistan's spy agency and the Afghan Taliban.

Teresita Schaffer, director of the South Asia program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the relief mission was "just the kind of thing the United States ought to be doing" because it show Pakistanis that America cared.

"The main reason is to help a friend in need, but that does not mean you should not be aware of the potential good side effects," she said.
 
No body seem to know here that being WOT partner, all personal money transfer to Pakistan are free of charge from American financial institution. (western union, telemoney, Moneygram)
 
U.S. triples helicopters for Pakistan flood relief
MACDILL AIR FORCE BASE, Florida — The United States announced on Wednesday more helicopters and aid to beef up relief efforts in Pakistan, which is grappling with its worst floods in 80 years.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the U.S. military was tripling the number of helicopters in Pakistan from 6 to 19 and was sending in a landing platform to be used off the coast of Karachi, Pakistan's biggest city.
 
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Six U.S. Army aircraft consisting of four CH-47 Chinook helicopters and two UH-60 Blackhawk utility helicopters arrived at Ghazi Airbase in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa on August 4, 2010. Now total helis are 19
 
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US Airmen, handing relief goods to Pakistani Authorities
 
US Chinook participating in Relief activities

regards!
 
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More U.S. helicopters join Pakistan flood-relief effort
Estimate of homeless tops 20 million; U.N. chief to visit


SUKKUR, Pakistan — More American helicopters arrived in Pakistan to help ferry aid to flood victims as U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon was expected to visit Sunday in areas affected by the disaster the government estimates has made 20 million people homeless.

Cholera has surfaced among survivors and aid workers warn that the waterborne disease could add to the death toll of about 1,500 people if allowed to spread.

A fresh surge of floodwater swelled the Indus River on Saturday, threatening previously spared cities and towns in the south.

The crisis has battered Pakistan's economy and undermined its political stability at a time when the United States needs its steadfast cooperation against Islamist extremism. The U.N. has appealed for an initial $460 million to provide relief to Pakistan but has said the country will need billions to rebuild once the floodwaters recede.

U.N. chief Ban was expected to visit flood-devastated areas Sunday, though his schedule was not clear.

U.S. tops in aid
The United States has so far donated the most to the relief effort, at least $70 million, and has sent military helicopters to rescue stranded people and drop off food and water. Washington hopes the assistance will help improve its image in the country — however marginally — as it seeks its support in the battle against the Taliban in neighboring Afghanistan.

"So far, if anyone has practically given us maximum help, it is America," Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani said Saturday when a Pakistani reporter suggested the U.S. has done little since the crisis started.
 
Yet while the U.S. may do much, the demands of twenty million displaced people make that puny by comparison. Pakistanis themselves have to participate in relief, to an extent unheard-of in previous disasters. One hundred thousand tons of aid a week for four weeks can't be distributed by even the combined helicopter fleets of the U.S. and Pakistan. There must be truck, train, and riverboat convoys and distribution systems to deliver such a large quantity. Only Pakistanis can do that.
 
Yet while the U.S. may do much, the demands of twenty million displaced people make that puny by comparison. Pakistanis themselves have to participate in relief, to an extent unheard-of in previous disasters. One hundred thousand tons of aid a week for four weeks can't be distributed by even the combined helicopter fleets of the U.S. and Pakistan. There must be truck, train, and riverboat convoys and distribution systems to deliver such a large quantity. Only Pakistanis can do that.

C130 can also be used to drop aid at different locations where there is no road link.

We have more than 600 MNA's and MPA's hopefully they will distribute aid to effected areas.
 
Still not enough. This is no ordinary disaster. According to the Defence Department:

Since the floods began on July 29, the United States has contributed:

-- A month’s ration of food to about 181,000 people through the partnership with the World Food Program;

-- Humanitarian contributions that include $11.25 million for the U.N. High Commissioner of Refugees and $5 million for International Committee of the Red Cross, bringing the total U.S. commitment to about $76 million to expand existing emergency programs in all flood-affected parts of Pakistan;

-- $3 million to the World Health Organization for the expansion of Pakistan’s disease early warning system (and to establish the first 15 treatment centers for water-borne illness in high-risk flood-affected areas;

-- $4.1 million to Save the Children for food vouchers that enable flood victims to purchase food in their local markets;

-- Through yesterday, U.S. helicopters assigned to the Pakistani interior ministry’s 50th Squadron rescued 1,019 people, airlifted 78,473 pounds of supplies and engaged in other support missions;

-- More than 1,100 rolls of plastic sheeting and 14,000 blankets, which arrived in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad on Aug. 10 and will benefit about 11,100 families or 66,000 people once they’re transported to Punjab province for distribution;

-- A total of 436,944 meals delivered via U.S. Air Force airlift to civilian and military officials in Pakistan, a contribution of about $3.7 million;

-- Emergency relief items delivered to the National Disaster Management Authority in Peshawar, including 18 rescue boats, six water filtration units, 10 water storage bladders and 30 concrete-cutting saws valued at $746,000; and

-- Twelve prefabricated steel bridges, valued at $3.2 million, made available as temporary replacements for highway bridges damaged by flooding and a 25-kilowatt generator costing about $30,000.
For the week August 5-12, the U.S. airlifted 181 tons. link
It seems like a lot, until you realize that this isn't even two percent of the amount of aid required to comfort twenty million people!

I doubt the U.S. can do more. What will you do today? What will you do a month from now, when those dead from starvation and exposure will be numbered in the hundreds of thousands?
 
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inside US cargo helicopter bringing relief goods

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US airmen drop relif goods from the Cargo plane that flew in from Afghanistan
 
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