Power still out in Baghdad?

Before the war (or start of hostilities) there was much touting of clever missles that spewed tendrils of metal wires which would short out power plants for a while. Yet it’d be as easy as removing TP from a house the day after Halloween.

Two questions: Some retired general said if the Iraqi’s blew out the transformers - it’d take years to restore power. Why? Can an electrical power grid be so utterly destroyed?

Why aren’t the lights back on in Baghdad?

My understanding from news reports over the last three weeks was that the Coalition was deliberately not targeting power plants, in the interests of avoiding as much chaos as possible, but that inevitably there was a certain amount of collateral damage from bombs exploding and knocking out power lines and other electrical grid infrastructure.

And fixing power lines in Baghdad today offers considerably more challenges than the Wichita Lineman faces when he goes out after an ice storm.

http://www.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/meast/04/12/nyt.gordon/index.html

So they’re working on it.

Baghdad’s a big place, too. Getting power restored to a city of 5,000,000 is considerably different from getting the lights back on in, say, Decatur.

I found this nifty “city comparison” page.
http://www.cockeyed.com/citysize/baghdad_la.html

Imagine trying to get the power back on in Los Angeles, say after the Big One hits, but with people shooting at you.

I (dimly) remember hearing the folks on the local radio news station saying that wholesale looting of the equipment in the power plants was a major factor as well.