Finalist for the National Book AwardThis is the startling portrait of an Oz-like place where a vital aspect of our government’s folly in Iraq played out.
The Washington Post’s former Baghdad bureau chief, Raviv Chandrasekaran, takes us with him into the Zone, into a bubble, cut off from wartime realities, where the task of reconstructing a devastated nation competed with the distractions of a Little America—-a half-dozen bars stocked with cold beer, a disco where women showed up in hot pants, and a parking lot filled with shiny new SUV’s-—much of it run by Halliburton. Most Iraqis were barred from entering the Emerald City for fear they would blow it up.
Drawing on hundreds of interviews and internal documents, Chandrasekaran tells the story of the people that inhabited the Green Zone during the occupation, from imperial viceroy L. Paul Bremer III to the fleet of "twentysomethings" hired to implement the idea that Americans could build a Jeffersonian democracy in the embattled Middle East.
The Green Zone is the American military's heavily fortified and painstakingly Americanized home in the Saddam Hussein palace complex area of Baghdad--picture food franchises, sports bars, lots of pork and beef. The area soon acquired the moniker "the Emerald City," which refers to the fantasy world it contains, the major fantasy being that U.S./Iraq policy is working. Narrator Ray Porter delivers the author's story of hubris, corruption, excess, and destruction (courtesy of the Bush Administration and Halliburton et al.) with the perfect degree of revulsion, outrage, and disdain. Author Chandrasekaran, former Baghdad bureau chief for the WASHINGTON POST, misses not a detail or nuance in this unintentional black comedyâ nor does the highly professional Porter. D.J.B. (c) AudioFile 2007, Portland, Maine
About the Author
Rajiv Chandrasekaran is an assistant managing editor of The Washington Post, where he has previously served as a bureau chief in Baghdad, Cairo, and Southeast Asia, and as a correspondent covering the war in Afghanistan. He lives in Washington, D.C.
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Imperial Life in the Emerald City
by Rajiv Chandrasekaran