Imperial Life in the Emerald City Inside Baghdads Green Zone
Imperial Life in the Emerald City Inside Baghdads Green Zone
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Publication Date:
Mar, 22 2008
Binding:
Paper Back
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From a walled-off enclave of towering
plants, smart villas and sparkling swimming pools - a surreal bubble of
pure Americana known as the Green Zone - the US-led Coalition
Provisional Authority, under imperial viceroy L. Paul Bremer III,
attempted to rule Iraq in the first twelve months after the fall of
Saddam Hussein's regime.
Drawing on
hundreds of interviews and internal documents, Rajiv Chandrasekaran
tells the memorable story of this ill-prepared attempt to build American
democracy in a war-torn Middle Eastern country, detailing not only the
risky disbanding of the Iraqi army and the ludicrous attempt to train
the new police force, but also bringing to light a host of lesser-known
yet typical travesties, among them:
* the aide who based Baghdad's new traffic laws on those of the state of Maryland, downloaded
* the contractor with no previous experience paid millions to guard a closed airport
* the people with prior experience in the Middle East who were excluded in favour of lesser-qualified Republican Party loyalists
* the case of the 24-year-old who had never worked in finance put in charge of revitalising Baghdad's stock exchange
Written with wit and urgency by a sharp-eyed observer, Imperial Life in the Emerald City provides
a hair-raising portrait of the gap between the Oz-like Green Zone and
the brutal reality of post-war Iraq. It is American reportage at its
best.
From a walled-off enclave of towering
plants, smart villas and sparkling swimming pools - a surreal bubble of
pure Americana known as the Green Zone - the US-led Coalition
Provisional Authority, under imperial viceroy L. Paul Bremer III,
attempted to rule Iraq in the first twelve months after the fall of
Saddam Hussein's regime.
Drawing on
hundreds of interviews and internal documents, Rajiv Chandrasekaran
tells the memorable story of this ill-prepared attempt to build American
democracy in a war-torn Middle Eastern country, detailing not only the
risky disbanding of the Iraqi army and the ludicrous attempt to train
the new police force, but also bringing to light a host of lesser-known
yet typical travesties, among them:
* the aide who based Baghdad's new traffic laws on those of the state of Maryland, downloaded
* the contractor with no previous experience paid millions to guard a closed airport
* the people with prior experience in the Middle East who were excluded in favour of lesser-qualified Republican Party loyalists
* the case of the 24-year-old who had never worked in finance put in charge of revitalising Baghdad's stock exchange
Written with wit and urgency by a sharp-eyed observer, Imperial Life in the Emerald City provides
a hair-raising portrait of the gap between the Oz-like Green Zone and
the brutal reality of post-war Iraq. It is American reportage at its
best.