Archive for May, 2009

Iraq, Part of our Heritage – Contrary to Popular Belief

Weam Namou asked:


The words China and Egypt, Athens and Rome, bring to most people’s mind a mysterious history and a respected culture. Rarely will the word Mesopotamia, ancient Iraq, do the same. You’ll probably receive confused or weird expressions from children, even most adults, at the mention of Mesopotamia. In regards to Iraq, images of Saddam, violence, terrorists, Islamic fundamentalists and war pop up all over. And that’s where the images usually end.

As for Iraq’s attributes, they are buried alive beneath lack of recognition. For whatever reason, history school books and TV programs fail to discuss the importance of ancient Iraq, even though it’s the mother of our current lifestyle and therefore, should not only be discussed but emphasized.

I stopped writing here, walked away from my computer and asked my niece, who was studying for a college course at the kitchen table, to call a couple of her friends, tell them she was doing a survey for her aunt and could they answer one question: “What is Mesopotamia?”

The people surveyed were in their mid-twenties to late thirties, and are either currently in college or have a college degree.

1st response is a first generation American, the daughter of Chaldean (Christian Iraqi) immigrants: “What the f_ _ _ is this for? I don’t know. I’m not good in geography. Are you kidding me right now? I can’t explain it like this. You caught me off guard. I don’t know. I have to think about it. You can’t do this. I wasn’t able to brain storm so go get your information from someplace else.”

Click. My niece laughed, knowing her friend overreacted having been put on the spot. She dialed the next number, this time putting a little twist in the question. “If an alien comes down from out of space and asks you what is Mesopotamia, what would you say?”

2nd response is also by the daughter of Chaldean immigrants: “Oh, my God! Well…. Long ago – long ago – okay, it’s an area of land in the Middle East. It’s our culture, where our people are from. Didn’t your aunt write a book on this? It’s a big spot and a war broke out there and everyone was separated to different areas.”

3rd response is by a Greek-American man: “I don’t know. Never heard of it. It’s a region. In Biblical times. That’s all I know.”

4th response is by an American woman: “It’s a country – an area – providence – an area in the Middle East. In an Arabic land. Where there’s King Tut and Egypt.”

5th response is by an Iranian woman: “It was an Eastern civilization that has something to do with the Ottoman Empire or Egypt.”

6th response is by a Jewish woman: “It’s a country or city.”

7th response is by an Irish-American woman: “Cancer.”

She must have mistaken the word for mesothelioma, I’m assuming?

The results of the survey did not surprise me. I knew from prior experience that people knew little if anything about the history of Iraq even though America has had political and media contact with that region for nearly two decades. I remember how after the Gulf War many people called Iraq Iran and after I corrected them, they explained, “Oh, I always get these two countries mixed up.”

Unless the person is highly or self educated, he or she will not likely know that civilization was born in Mesopotamia over 5,000 years ago. That is where writing, astronomy and science were invented. The first school, law, literature, map of the world, and the idea of dividing time and space into a multiple of 60’s started in this historic land.

The first writer in recorded history was Enheduanna, a woman from ancient Iraq. She lived, composed, and taught roughly 2,000 years before Aristotle and 1,700 years prior to Sappho. Before the “golden age” of Greece. Man’s most important invention, the wheel, was devised in Mesopotamia, as was plumbing, the plow and the sailboat.

If people were commonly aware of these facts, their image of Iraq will change and so will their opinion and behavior towards it. For instance, maybe Baghdad’s museum would have been better protected from looters after the American/British invasion. Instead, 300-400 looters were permitted to come and go as they please taking such antiques as the Varca vase, which goes back to 3,200 B.C. Found in a temple, it shows the philosophy of the Sumerians and the development and stages of life. Also missing was a headless statue for a Sumerian king, Antemena, and the famous Barzeki bronze statue, which dates back to early dynastic Sumerian periods and is more than 160 kilograms. It’s one of the earliest large examples of casting that was made by the “lost wax technique,” which is used until now.

Why didn’t the American Army help when Iraqis pleaded for one of its nearby tanks to help save the museum, by simply moving in front of it? Why was the Army’s response, “I’m sorry, it’s not our duty” when a list issued by the American Central Command stated which places the Army should protect during the 2003 war – and the museum was at Number 2, while the Ministry of Oil, which was urgently and efficiently protected, was at Number 16?

Much of the violence against US troops is triggered by the troops’ failure to understand culture-specific manners and practices in Iraq. It is beneficial for everyone to aid in cultures becoming better acquainted and as a result, lead individuals to stop the destructive acts that have terrorized both the East and the West. To do this one needs only encourage mainstream Western media to recognize the rewards and not just the conflicts regarding Arabs’ tribal ways, which operate on a foundation of honor, respect and a sense of community.

In California today there is a program for the military where Iraqi people are brought in to show how Iraqis think and behave, how they operate in their tribal system. It is a wonderful idea which really aught to have been implemented before the war so that the sons and daughters, fathers and mothers and sisters and brothers serving in Iraq would be equipped with understanding, not just weapons.

Through replacing stereotypes with accurate information, we are also able to transform America’s image which too has suffered in the world due to myths and misconceptions attained through media and some of our politicians’ bad decisions. For instance, when I was in Baghdad almost six years ago, many Iraqis assumed that in America all women had one night stands, using drugs was the cultural norm, and everyone walked around with guns.



Bertha
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What can we do to thank Australians of all their support in the Iraq war?

godblessgwb asked:


Hello,
I am thinking of going to Australia. What is the best way to thank the Australians when I go there for all their support of the USA in the Iraq War, fighting for Democracy and against terrorism?

Thanks!

Samuel

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Peace in Iraq

Dr. Susan Corso asked:


The long-awaited report from General David Petraeus on the ground in Iraq is due in the U.S. capital this week. Does anyone else hear his name as Betray Us?

I don’t think that’s his intent. I think General Petraeus wants to tell the world the truth about the surge strategy in Iraq. He may not be allowed to do so. In recent weeks, much has been made of White House speechwriters tackling the General’s report to make it fit for public consumption. The truth doesn’t need spin-doctors.

Confucius inspires me. “When purpose is directed, one becomes calm. When one is calm, then peace can be found.” Track them through Iraq with me.

Has purpose been directed? It has, but at incorrect intelligence leading to incorrect assumptions. Anyone else noticed how incorrect premises lead to less-than-productive actions which produce unhappy results?

What is our genuine purpose in Iraq? I can’t answer this question. The whole matter has been so spun, so doctored I can’t find the truth any more.

We need a new genuine purpose. The point Confucius makes is that when purpose is genuine, there is a natural result we may expect. Calm. There’s nothing calm about Iraq any more. Not in Washington, D.C. Not in the American populace. Maybe not even in the rest of the world. And certainly not in Iraq itself.

Is there calm to be found anywhere? Right now, I don’t think there is. It’s unfortunate because if our purpose were named Peace In Iraq, there would be a natural genuineness to it. Peace is a bottomline purpose for all people. It’s the one thing we can agree on that humans most universally want.

What we have trouble agreeing on is how to get there. Thomas Mann wrote, “War is a cowardly escape from the problems of peace.”

Peace does cause problems. Peace takes time. Peace requires commitment. Peace means we don’t always know how to proceed. Peace means we get to listen and really work to hear. Peace means there are insurmountable differences that we get to figure out how to surmount. Peace requires courage. Peace asks for a long-range view rather than short-term gain. There are all sorts of inconveniences peace puts us through.

I agree with Thomas Mann. War is a cowardly escape. Let’s take a page out of the book of one of the best-loved cowards of all time, the Cowardly Lion. When he goes off to see The Wizard (of Oz), all he wants is “the noive.”

Find your noive this week and hold the idea of Peace In Iraq as a new genuine purpose. Sit in the calm you generate and help the U.S. find its new mission. Operation Iraqi Peace.



Lewis
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Can you explain this cause of the Iraq war in different ways?

serena asked:


For a school project I had to pick a primary cause of the Iraq war. My reason was :

The creation, research and destruction of weapons of mass destruction played a primary role in causing the Iraq war.

Could you explain or evaluate this cause in one of the following ways and tell me which one?

oGeographic, political, economic, cultural, psychological

I’ve done all the other ways and I can’t figure any of these out.
I will select a best answer so please try your best if you’d like the points.

Robert

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How does Bush plan to regain the $2 trillion that has been burned on the Iraq war?

Diogenes asked:


Okay, we all know that America is facing an “entitlements crisis” with social security and medicare/caid growing to gigantic proportions in only a few years. We need all the money we can get.

And yet, Bush used $2 TRILLION on Iraq.

Please explain how he plans to fill the budget hole left by the war. Increased taxes? Decreased services? The gap won’t fill itself.

How will this work out? Also, how come Bush lied about protecting the strength of the dollar, when his policies are clearly causing its value to fall?

Michele

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Why do people who are not American oppose the Iraq war?

PAUL L asked:


The biggest drawback I see to the Iraq war is the fact that it’s dangerous to the troops. This doesn’t really affect the other nations so much so why is there such a negative bias against it?

Nathaniel
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Are you aware that Mccian wants to keep the iraq war going and pay for the bailout without raising taxes on pe?

Paul asked:


Are you aware that Mccian wants to keep the iraq war going and pay for the bailout without raising taxes on people making more then 250,000$$??

That is impossible. Mccain will bankrupt this country.

Lorraine

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Why are All the War Jobs Being Outsourced?

Bobby W Miller asked:


After the thoughtless campaign in Iraq, the deaths of over 4,000 brave US troops, and countless Iraqi civilians and militants, there was some hope that the reconstruction effort might attract employment to the US economy. After all, we made the mess, so we should help clean up, right? A reconstruction effort is underway, but very few of those contracts to rebuild Iraq have fallen to US contractors, and very few have resulted in new employment opportunities for American citizens.

At a time when the American economy is patchy at best, the fact that jobs continue to be outsourced by the American government as a cost saving device, rather than helping the US economy, is yet another tragedy for the millions of unemployed Americans feeling the pinch in the current economic climate. So who’s to blame?

Controversial writer and gospel singer Bob Miller is in no doubt as to who the main culprits are, and as a fervent opponent of the Bush/Cheney administration, he sees this as the latest in a long line of catastrophic mistakes and betrayals by the powers that be.

“I believe it is important for our youth to know that when these Nixon through Bush Republicans talk about being conservative, they are talking about others being conservative.”

“Can we also risk having to cope with [Bush’s] uncontrollable ego? The leadership of this father and son team can be critiqued using a term that epitomizes their presidencies: Collateral Damage. Clearly, America’s integrity and economy fall into this category when they clash with the prosperity of Bush and his accomplices.”

Whether or not you agree with Miller’s strong viewpoints, there is at least some undeniable truth in his words – jobs from the Iraq war are not filtering through to American citizens. Perhaps that’s because it’s more cost effective to outsource jobs for the government.  Perhaps NAFTA’s to blame. Or perhaps it’s even another dastardly deed by one of the worst US presidents in living memory.  But whatever the real reasons, the Iraq war has certainly not done the US economy any favors.

After collapses in the housing market and the mortgage sector, and the onset of a global credit crunch, the US economy has had to remain resilient to keep its head above the water. Recession is looming large, and unemployment figures are steadily rising. Sounds like a less than perfect time to be outsourcing jobs to foreign contractors, particularly given the potential value of some of these agreements. 

Of course, there are cost savings on outsourcing to cheaper providers which will help balance the books after the disastrous economic, social and moral decision to wage war unjustly against Iraq. But the impact this is having and will continue to have on American employment as the economy struggles on makes it yet another key mistake for the Bush administration and one further insult in the fiasco known as the Iraq campaign.



Clinton
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Do you think the Iraq war was worth the cost of the neglect here at home?

Sky asked:


Bush defiantly says that despite the high costs of lives and money, he says that we are winning the war in Iraq and removed a dangerous dictator–and has no intent on removing our troops from Iraq; while strongly objecting to the idea that future administrations will eventually draw down our forces.

Do you think that the cost of the war more than makes up for the years of neglect by our own government?

Or do you think we should’ve better spent that money taking care of our needs first before taking on a task that was clearly beyond our capabilities?

Robin

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How close is the Iraq war to the Vietnam War?

Martino78 asked:


I think Iraq is turning into another Vietnam, the only thing better about the Iraq war is the US is not treating the Military like crap. What are your thoughts?

Clara
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