ISLAMABAD, Pakistan--From the air, the town of Balakot, at the lip of the Kaghan Valley in Pakistan's mountainous North-West Frontier Province, resembles pictures of Hiroshima circa late summer 1945: All but a few buildings have been reduced absolutely to rubble. There were some 50,000 people in this town on the morning of Oct. 8; a six-second earthquake that day killed an estimated 16,000 outright. Now survivors live mainly in scattered tent villages, not all of them properly winterized. And winter has begun.Read the whole thing to find out about another good thing the U.S. does to help those in need.
The people of Balakot and dozens of other devastated towns are much on the mind of Rear Adm. Michael A. LeFever, 51, the man in charge of the U.S. military's 1,000-man, $110 million-and-counting relief effort here. "I'll never forget landing and smelling gangrene and smelling death," he says of his first trip to the disaster zone where 73,000 died. "The first couple of days were overwhelming."
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Helping Your Fellow Man By Helicopter
There are those who think that
military expenditures are a zero sum game--whatever is spent on the
military subtracts from what can be spent on humanitarian needs. The
Wall Street Journal has a story on Chinook
Diplomacy that illustrates the opposite proposition in relation to
the earthquake relief provided by the U.S. military to Pakistan.
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