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Mission: Pakistan Executive Summary

Mission: Pakistan

Starting in August, torrential rains kicked off the 2010 monsoon season in Northern Pakistan. With record rain fall, rivers quickly swelled and began flooding towns and villages throughout the region. Unfortunately, this was only the beginning of a large scale, slow moving disaster of epic proportion. As the rains continued, the water moved south due to Pakistan’s topography. At its peak, roughly one-fifth of Pakistan’s land area was covered with water and over 20 million people were displaced from their homes.

Team Rubicon began assessing the disaster from the beginning. TR did not initially deploy because of the low number of traumatic injuries caused by the flood. However, Dr Eduardo Dolhun, an expert on Oral Rehydration Therapy, saw an emergent need for oral rehydration solution (ORS) to combat cholera, dehydration and diarrhea. Dr. Dolhun, who has pioneered an advanced ORS called Drip Drop, offered to donate 8,000 units if Team Rubicon would provide the medical, logistical, and security support for a Pakistan operation.

Utilizing TR’s network of resources and contacts, the team started developing a plan and evaluating risk. After the first two weeks of the disaster, and many conflicting reports about the current situation on the ground, the following concerns were evident:

  • Poor Security. On August 27th, the Taliban issued a threat that foreign aid workers were a target for Taliban fighters.
  • Lack of coordination between the Pakistani government, the Pakistani Army, and NGO’s operating in Pakistan.
  • The need for a trusted local partner/liaison who had access to the most affected regions, where aid had not yet arrived.

The state of security in Pakistan underscored the need for vetted sources. After securing visas from the Pakistan Embassy in Washington DC, and assessing invitations from multiple Pakistani NGOs, Team Rubicon decided that they would partner with Dr. Yasmin Rashid and the Pakistan Medical Association (PMA).

On August 28th TR deployed a two-man advance team to conduct a pre-deployment site survey of the southern Punjab region. On arrival the team met with the PMA, secured transportation and lodging, and identified safe routes of travel for the arriving team. Once the main body arrived three days later, TR set out to flood affected areas near the town of Muzzafargarh. Along with a well-trained and motivated group of Pakistani doctors, TR was able to set up daily clinics and treat more than 1,000 people per day. Some of the significant accomplishments achieved by Team Rubicon include:

  • Treated and assessed over 3,500 patients, providing life saving interventions in some cases.
  • Established relations with trusted sources in Pakistan, paving the way for future operations and assistance
  • Worked together with CNN to increase world awareness of Pakistan’s current situation as well as demonstrate TR’s capabilities.
  • Acted as good will ambassadors for the U.S. TR was the first group of Americans some of our Pakistani friends had ever met.
  • Exercised the TR response system and refined SOP’s

Ultimately, the situation in Pakistan was unique. For obvious reasons, many NGOs were weary of responding to the dire situation as it unfolded; the security situation posed serious problems to aid workers and caused many well-meaning Americans to keep their wallets closed. However, Team Rubicon felt that it could effectively operate because of its veterans’ vast experience working in similarly uncertain environments. TR’s presence in these afflicted areas changed many locals’ opinions of Americans; a benefit that cannot be quantified but should not be overlooked. In closing, while this mission was not a traditional ‘react’ operation, TR still found a niche that needed to be filled, and filled it effectively.

William McNulty, VP, Pakistan Team Leader
Jake Wood, President
Matt Pelak, East Coast Regional Coordinator

Photos From Mission: Pakistan

TR Pakistan

Click on the link above to view our photos from Pakistan.

TR on Madison.com: Ex-Badger Jake Wood’s Team Rubicon draws praise from Michelle Obama


Ex-Badger Jake Wood’s Team Rubicon draws praise from Michelle Obama
Madison.com Sports
Posted: Friday, September 24, 2010 10:31 am

Count Michelle Obama among the fans of Team Rubicon, the self-described “renegade medical rescue team” headed by former University of Wisconsin football player Jake Wood.

The First Lady praised the work of Wood’s organization in a speech Thursday at the sixth annual Clinton Global Initiative in New York that focused on the contributions and plight of former military personnel.

Wood, who lettered for the Badgers in 2003-04 as an offensive lineman, is a former Marine whose Team Rubicon sprung into action following the massive earthquake in Haiti in January.

Obama recounted that Wood “watched the devastation unfold on TV and he said to himself … ‘Jake, you’re not in the Marines any more, but you have a special set of skills. You would be ashamed of yourself if you didn’t try and use them to help people.’”

“So it’s clear that our veterans and military spouses have the skills and the will to serve and succeed in any environment,” Obama continued.

In a promotional video, Team Rubicon — which was profiled earlier this year by Tom Mulhern of Madison.com sports — says that it raised more than $250,000 in donations and treated thousands of Haitians following the quake before stepping aside when larger aid agencies arrived.

“The goal isn’t to take the place of any of these organizations,” Wood said recently in a profile on the cable network VH1. “The goal is to bridge that gap … until they can get that huge logistics machine up and running.”

TR’s Jake Wood Talks About the First Lady’s Message

Team Rubicon is honored and humbled to have been mentioned by the First Lady of the United States, Michelle Obama, this afternoon.  Her speech, given at the closing ceremony of the Clinton Global Initiative, focused on one thing– engaging our veterans to continue their service.  This is something that strikes at the heart of Team Rubicon.  TR was founded in the wake of the Haiti disaster by myself and two close friends, Jeff Lang and William McNulty; the spark that lit the fire happened when our efforts to volunteer were stonewalled by bureaucracy and red tape.  I realized that as a veteran, with deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, I had a special set of skills that could be utilized in the chaos that enshrouded Port au Prince–I simply needed a way to employ them.

Since Haiti, Team Rubicon has forged onward to ensure that veterans and the best medical professionals in the world can unite to help those in need.  Our goal has been to ensure that veterans are not left on the sidelines; that their skills will not be wasted, and their desire to serve not left unheard.  We have subsequently deployed to Chile, the Thai-Burma border, and now Pakistan; utilizing our operational experience every step of the way.

Knowing that the White House has taken notice of our sincere, albeit meager, effort is humbling.  We realize that we are still a small fish in a very large pond; however, if we can convince the larger players in the game, the legacy NGOs, that veterans and firefighters and nurses and doctors are worth employing, than we have succeeded; than we have changed the landscape for the better.  I hope that President Obama, former President Clinton, former First Lady Laura Bush, and Microsoft's Bill Gates, who were all in attendance, heard the First Lady's message: Veterans are returning, it is time to give them the opportunity to serve once again.

To our donors:  Without you none of this would be possible.  I thank you again, from the bottom of my heart, for believing in our cause.

Jake Wood
President, Team Rubicon

Michelle Obama talks about TR at the 2010 Clinton Global Initiative

Michelle Obama To Quote Team Rubicon’s Jake Wood in Speech Given Today!

First Lady Michelle Obama will be mentioning Team Rubicon in a speech to be given to the Clinton Global Initiative today.  The speech is set to begin at 3:50 pm EST.

Mrs. Obama will be talking about veterans taking initiative in today's economy, and how they are using their unique skills to tackle challenges in an uncertain world.  The First Lady will be using a quote by TR President Jake Wood that was given in an interview with MTVu last May, where Jake discusses having the appropriate skills, as well as the desire, to respond effectively to the Haiti disaster.

You can watch the speech streamed live at: http://www.whitehouse.gov/live

TR thanks donors for Pakistan mission

Pakistan’s humanitarian hot zone

How U.S. Marines help flood victims

Team Rubicon’s Kaj Larsen reports for CNN on Pakistani Hearts and Minds

September 13, 2010
Pakistani Hearts and Minds
Posted: 09:22 PM ET
American Morning – amFIX blog
Filed under: Pakistan •amFIX

By Kaj Larsen, Correspondent

Editor’s note: Kaj is covering the aftermath of the flooding in Pakistan for American Morning. Watch his reports on AMERICAN MORNING at 6:00AM Eastern.

One way of describing the flood crisis in Pakistan is as two separate catastrophes: one in the north and one in the south.

The north’s crisis can be described as destruction of infrastructure, including roads, bridges and homes. The crisis in the south can be described as desperation as a large portion of the country remains under water without access to food, shelter, clean water or the agriculture that provides daily sustenance for much of the population.

The water destruction is not the only thing that differentiates the northern and southern half of Pakistan. Complicated tribal, cultural, ethnic, religious and even geographical differences also separate the country.

Though neither region can be described as homogenous, many scholars and national security experts feel that the U.S. faces an uphill battle in winning support in the northern and tribal parts of Pakistan, while the more moderate middle and southern parts of the country could be fertile ground for finding Pakistanis who are friendly towards U.S. policy. Some have gone as far as to argue that we should target the flood aid towards the moderate middle and southern parts of the country, like the Sindh province and the Punjab region where the U.S. has the greatest chance of influencing people.

As I drove around the country covering the aftermath of the floods, I spoke to Pakistanis about their feelings on Americans and U.S. policy. Here is what they had to say.

http://amfix.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/13/pakistani-hearts-and-minds/

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