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Date: Sun, 04 Jan 2004 11:43:44 -0600  

Subject: Howdy from Prometheus Towers/Nick in Mosul  



1935

4 Jan 2004

"Raya Net" internet services; Shara Ejammual

Mosul, Iraq



Hello Folks.  I hope everyone is well and enjoyed an excellent holiday 

season.  For those who celebrated – happy whatever...  I apologize  in 

advance for sending one message only – the e-mail is very slow and this will 

take several hours to send.  It's just too much of a time drag to send 

several.  Please alert me if you would like to be removed from my list.



I am well here in Iraq – for the last two days I have been in and around 

Mosul (Northern Iraq, on the outskirts of Kurdistan) which is a welcome 

break from the smog and crowds of Baghdad.  Of course Mosul, Iraq's second 

largest city, is crowded and smoggy too, but at least we're only 20 

kilometers from some bonafide hills and open space.  I think this country is 

as crowded as California, and very similar in some ways.  There are large 

parts of California which are un-populated, just as here – but along the 

rivers and in the north Iraq is chock full of people.  There is also a great 

diversity of land type here – from the border in Jordan it is very arid 

desert, sand and rock and this.  But along the Tigris, it's sort of half 

tropical (still not very humid) with palm trees and plenty of agriculture.  

Up here, it's more mountainous and even to the east, on the border with 

Iran, there are some good size hills and more temperate, even cold, 

steppe-type lands.  Enough geography, I guess everybody wants to hear about 

the towers and the people.  For those of you who don't care about the 

business side of things – the tower stuff is first, followed by the people 

stuff.



In the last two days I have inspected two surviving towers for the IMN 

(state run broadcast media).  IMN is now being "managed" or overseen

by the 

CPA, through a contract with an American consulting company who does not 

specialize in broadcast, telecommunications or anything nearly so specific.  

They are possessed of some excellent, very experienced staff, though, and 

they seem to have recruited some excellent engineers.  I finally made my way 

to the head broadcast engineer on this project (Lou Brown, a former VOA guy, 

for you radio engineers) and gave him the hard sell.  He has a huge number 

of damaged and down sites, most of them victims of the looting following the 

fall of the regime.  Anyhow, since I was planning to go to Mosul, I offered 

to inspect a few tower's of his choice so that I could show him what sort of 

experience and knowledge we have.  Saturday I got onto a really 

over-engineered 328  meter tower just on the edge of Mosul, currently 

supporting Channel 7, a 20 kW VHF television station around here.  The tower 

was fabricated in Iraq and has more steel per vertical foot than any tower 

I've ever been on, the 2000' kings down in Texas included.  It's a 

four-legged guyed tower (with three guy alleys – do the math on that one) 

and has legs made of four 4"X4"X1/2" angles.  Everything is

bolted – 

everything.  It probably took a crew a week to assemble one twenty foot 

section – I stopped counting bolts at 100 per vertical foot!  So anyhow, 

this massive tower is home to a cantilevered, on-air VHF antenna and a 

6-1/8" flexible transmission line.  That's it.  No lights, no lightning 

arrester, no grounding, nothing else.  WARNING TO CASUAL READERS, TECHNICAL 

STUFF AHEAD: Of course the antenna matching unit (it's a 48 panel - 12X4 - 

C&S manufacture antenna) is all shot up and has four kinked feed lines, no 

weatherproofing, and a VSWR of around 1.4.  Plus, Uncle Sam now overseas an 

1100' lightning rod about two miles from a very active airfield and ten 

miles from a civilian airport – no lights.  So I hope we can get involved in 

this work.



Sunday we went out to a site called Al Khayzer, which used to house an AM 

broadcast site on 607 kHz or so.  What's left is the 150 meter tower, guyed, 

with 1" guy wires, sitting on the biggest base insulator I've ever seen – 

probably 4 feet high and three feet in diameter.  The whole tower was 

looted, including some of the diagonals on the first 50' and the lighting 

system.  These have been replaced, but it was kind of un-nerving to inspect 

this thing with so many incongruities.  Monster guy wires, with monster 

Johnny-ball insulators, but little 1/2" stainless hardware at the guy 

takeoff points.  And there were fox-holes dug all around the tower, which 

was right on the edge of Kurdish-controlled territory.  Still, it was 

beautiful, a really superb piece of engineering nestled on a beautiful 

riverside.  It was much more peaceful there and I would have taken a good 

long hike in the hills if I had not hopped a ride with the ultra gung ho 

contract security guys.  Tomorrow (Monday) I'll inspect a site in Sinjar 

(west of Mosul, towards the Syrian frontier and as close as I'll ever come 

to Syria).  Then I'm back to Baghdad to hire our local business manager and 

hopefully get on two 1000' towers outside of Baghdad at Abu Ghreb (the site 

of a notorious prison for Army and political prisoners).  So I am reasonably 

confident we can score some work out of this.  It's treacherous, though – 

there are so many parties involved in this work and they all sub-contract to 

people and none of them are specialists like us.  It's unheard of for a 

company to actually have skilled specialists here – I think this gives us an 

advantage, but we have to get past the "I have a friend" stage.  I'm

hoping 

a good business manager will move this along.



END OF (MOST) OF THE TOWER STUFF



Otherwise, I came to Mosul to meet [a friend].  It was very easy to find his office (it took about 

one hour of broken Arabic and a few [...] sketches).  Unfortunately, I 

had missed him Saturday morning while I was on business, and he doesn't keep 

afternoon hours.  So today, after I got back from Al Khayzer, I went again 

and had missed him again.  This time I had the afternoon to devote to it, 

and through the much appreciated assistance of one of his colleagues and 

many hours of questing, we finally arrived at his home off of Sharaa Soma in 

Mosul.  Again, he wasn't home, although I did meet his son, [...] (about 20) 

and caught a glimpse of his wife (name unknown).  [His] brother 

doesn't live at the same house.  I still don't know where he is.  Back to 

the Ninaveh Palace (where I'm staying tonight) I went, and I see a man 

gesturing at the desk with one of my cards.  Ever the opportunist, I put on 

my best Arabic and introduced myself as "Bodgne Berg" (tower guy).  Of



course that was [him] and got along splendidly.  We spent a few hours and I 

helped him establish an e-mail account.  The bank account is still waiting 

as he claims none of the Mosul banks will do international wires – I'll 

probably have to open in Baghdad.  It was a very interesting time and I 

noticed again that there is a huge disconnect with relationships here.  My 

presence near [my friend] made him more concerned (about his own safety and 

probably mine too) than I've been the entire time I've been here.  Mosul is 

very calm – except for the Army convoys and check-points, you can't really 

tell there is an occupation.  Baghdad every night you here IEDs and such, 

but here I've yet to here or see anything except a few aged craters.  Still, 

there is obviously quite a difference to someone who lives here and will 

face the same people and situations day in and day out.

The funny thing about this experience is that it's very hard not to have 

opinions about the Arabs I meet.  Most of the Saharan and nomadic people 

I've met or worked with (like the Maasai) have some very culture-peculiar 

characteristics that can be un-seemly to Westerners.  Like the Arabs, they 

are very rude when waiting in lines, driving, buying things, etc...Same goes 

here – one thousand times.  There really is no line waiting, even when you 

are half-way into a transaction and have dinars waving and such.  Same with 

driving, although in their defense, a lot of the roads are strangely laid 

out or have been detoured due to checkpoints and such.  Another thing that's 

off-setting to the westerner is it's very hard to get details.  This is 

another characteristic for which I was somewhat prepared, but not to the 

extent I've found.  The Maasai will give directions like this – "  Go down



the road (there is only one road so no need to name it), pass the tree 

(same) and you'll find such and such near the wadi – creek."  At least in a



dry, almost desert-like place there are very few landmarks so when you find 

one it's obvious.  Here, the directions are something like: "Pass to Sharaa



Soma, the shop is near the University."  Of course there are thousands of 

shops along the Ejammual (University) street, all of them near the 

University.  So anywhere I'm looking, the guy did OK.  But to find the 

place? Anyhow, I find myself walking the usual fine line between the other 

Americans I meet who have next to know contact with the "average"

Arab, and 

still have very advanced opinions, and the local contacts I have, who are 

mostly Arab, a few Kurds, and exhibit these and more characteristics that 

can be frustrating to a Westerner.  Another thing that's tough for me is the 

language – in Bantu languages the accents  are easier to pick up and there 

are more vowels.  Arab is a very intricate language with very fine accents 

and tons of consonants.  So as much as I know the right words and can 

understand some of them being spoken, I can't say them worth a damn to the 

fellow who doesn't understand English (about 95% of the people I meet).  

It's actually quite a bit like Maa (the language of the Maasai) which is big 

on inflection and short on syllables).



So that's it for now.  One more day to play in the hills, then back to 

Baghdad and hopefully some contract signing.  I will not be returning on 8 

Jan, as originally scheduled.  The way I see it, we're this far in (time and 

money) – I've got to stay the course to see some of these opportunities to 

fruition.



Best Wishes to all!





Nick Berg

Prometheus Towers


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