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OVERSEAS INTEL

Professional Overseas Contractors
Water is essential for survival, and in southern Afghanistan, survival hinges on the 250-mile-long Arghandab River and its reservoir. The reservoir was created with the 1952 completion of the United States-funded, earthen Dahla Dam. Built by the Afghans, it originally held 83 billion gallons of water, just under 1/100th the volume of Lake Mead along the U.S.’s Colorado River.

Three decades of war and neglect left the dam, and its network of irrigating canals across Kandahar province, silted and in ruins. “Water is life. This water will help everyone in the region,” said U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Project Engineer Danielle Lovellette, about the project she is overseeing to increase reservoir capacity. The project is estimated to affect up to two million people, most in Kandahar province.

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Fact 1: It is not the case that all US troops will be removed from Afghanistan at the end of 2014.

In June 2011, President Obama announced his plan to begin the withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan. But the president did not say that all US troops would leave Afghanistan by the end of 2014. What he did say was 10,000 troops would be removed by the end of the summer 2011, with 23,000 additional troops leaving at the end of the summer of 2012. After that, according to the President:

"our troops will continue coming home at a steady pace as Afghan security forces move into the lead. Our mission will change from combat to support. By 2014, this process of transition will be complete, and the Afghan people will be responsible for their own security."

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Professional Overseas Contractors
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) and Congressman David Price (D-N.C.) renewed their partnership on bicameral legislation to provide accountability for American contractors and government employees working abroad.

The Civilian Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Act (CEJA), which the lawmakers introduced Monday, would close a gap in current law and ensure that government employees and contractors working overseas can be prosecuted for criminal acts they commit abroad.  The two lawmakers have worked together on the legislation for years.

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