Rajiv Chandrasekaran
Imperial Life in the
Emerald City:
Inside Iraq’s Green Zone
Alfred A.
Knopf About
the Book
An unprecedented
account of life in Baghdad’s Green Zone,
a posh, walled-off enclave where a vital aspect
of our government’s Iraq operations played
out.
About the Author
Rajiv
Chandrasekaran is an assistant managing editor
of The Washington Post, where he has
worked since 1994. He previously served the Post
as bureau chief in Baghdad, Cairo, and Southeast
Asia, and as a correspondent covering the war
in Afghanistan. He recently completed a term as
journalist-in-residence at the International Reporting
Project at the Johns Hopkins School for Advanced
International Studies, and was a public policy
scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center.
He lives in Washington, D.C. This is his first
book.
Suggested Links
http://www.rajivc.com/
American Journalism
Review article featuring Chandrasekaran.
Back from the Rajiv Palace
http://www.ajr.org/article_printable.asp?id=3785
Excerpt from Imperial
Life in the Emerald City:
Inside Iraq’s Green Zone by Rajiv Chandrasekaran
Chapter 1
Versailles on the Tigris
UNLIKE ALMOST ANYWHERE
else in Baghdad, you could dine at the cafeteria
in the Republican Palace for six months and never
eat hummus, flatbread, or a lamb kebab. The fare
was always American, often with a Southern flavor.
A buffet featured grits, cornbread, and a bottomless
barrel of pork: sausage for breakfast, hot dogs
for lunch, pork chops for dinner. There were bacon
cheeseburgers, grilled-cheese-and-bacon sandwiches,
and bacon omelets. Hundreds of Iraqi secretaries
and translators who worked for the occupation
authority had to eat in the dining hall. Most
of them were Muslims, and many were offended by
the presence of pork. But the American contractors
running the kitchen kept serving it. The cafeteria
was all about meeting American needs for high-calorie,
high-fat comfort food.
None of the succulent
tomatoes or the crisp cucumbers grown in Iraq
made it into the salad bar. U.S. government regulations
dictated that everything, even the water in which
hot dogs were boiled, be shipped in from approved
suppliers in other nations. Milk and bread were
trucked in from Kuwait, as were tinned peas and
carrots. The breakfast cereal was flown in from
the United States–made-in-the-USA. Froot
Loops and Frosted Flakes at the breakfast table
helped boost morale.
When the Americans had
arrived, there was no cafeteria in the palace.
Saddam Hussein had feasted in an ornate private
dining room and his servants had eaten in small
kitchenettes. The engineers assigned to transform
the palace into the seat of the American occupation
chose a marble-floored conference room the size
of a gymnasium to serve as the mess hall. Through
its gilded doors, Halliburton, the defense contractor
hired to run the palace, brought in dozens of
tables, hundreds of stacking chairs, and a score
of glass-covered buffets. Seven days a week, the
Americans ate under Saddam's crystal chandeliers.
Red and white linens
covered the tables. Diners sat on chairs with
maroon cushions. A pleated skirt decorated the
salad bar and the dessert table, which was piled
high with cakes and cookies. The floor was polished
after every meal.
A mural of the World
Trade Center adorned one of the entrances. The
Twin Towers were framed within the outstretched
wings of a bald eagle. Each branch of the U.S.
military–the army, air force, marines, and
navy–had its seal on a different corner
of the mural. In the middle were the logos of
the New York City Police and Fire departments,
and atop the towers were the words thank god for
the coalition forces & freedom fighters at
home and abroad.
At another of the three
entrances was a bulletin board with posted notices,
including those that read
BIBLE STUDY–WEDNESDAYS
AT 7 P.M.
GO RUNNING WITH THE HASH
HOUSE HARRIERS!
FEELING STRESSED? COME
VISIT US AT THE COMBAT STRESS CLINIC.
FOR SALE: LIKE-NEW HUNTING
KNIFE.
LOST CAMERA. REWARD OFFERED.
The kitchen, which had
once prepared gourmet meals for Saddam, had been
converted into an institutional food—processing
center, with a giant deep fryer and bathtub-size
mixing bowls. Halliburton had hired dozens of
Pakistanis and Indians to cook and serve and clean,
but no Iraqis. Nobody ever explained why, but
everyone knew. They could poison the food.
The Pakistanis and the
Indians wore white button-down shirts with black
vests, black bow ties, and white paper hats. The
Kuwaiti subcontractor who kept their passports
and exacted a meaty profit margin off each worker
also dinned into them American lingo. When I asked
one of the Indians for French fries, he snapped:
"We have no French fries here, sir. Only
freedom fries."
The seating was as tribal
as that at a high school cafeteria. The Iraqi
support staffers kept to themselves. They loaded
their lunch trays with enough calories for three
meals. Between mouthfuls, they mocked their American
bosses with impunity. So few Americans in the
palace spoke Arabic fluently that those who did
could have fit around one table, with room to
spare.
Soldiers, private contractors,
and mercenaries also segregated themselves. So
did the representatives of the "coalition
of the willing"– the Brits, the Aussies,
the Poles, the Spaniards, and the Italians. The
American civilians who worked for the occupation
government had their own cliques: the big-shot
political appointees, the twentysomethings fresh
out of college, the old hands who had arrived
in Baghdad in the first weeks of occupation. In
conversation at their tables, they observed an
unspoken protocol. It was always appropriate to
praise "the mission"–the Bush
administration's campaign to transform Iraq into
a peaceful, modern, secular democracy where everyone,
regardless of sect or ethnicity, would get along.
Tirades about how Saddam had ruined the country
and descriptions of how you were going to resuscitate
it were also fine. But unless you knew someone
really, really well, you didn't question American
policy over a meal.
If you had a complaint
about the cafeteria, Michael Cole was the man
to see. He was Halliburton's "customer-service
liaison," and he could explain why the salad
bar didn't have Iraqi produce or why pork kept
appearing on the menu. If you wanted to request
a different type of breakfast cereal, he'd listen.
Cole didn't have the weathered look of a war-zone
concierge. He was a rail-thin twenty-two-year-old
whose forehead was dotted with pimples.
He had been out of college
for less than a year and was working as a junior
aide to a Republican congressman from Virginia
when a Halliburton vice president overheard him
talking to friends in an Arlington bar about his
dealings with irate constituents. She was so impressed
that she introduced herself. If she needed someone
to work as a valet in Baghdad, he joked, he'd
be happy to volunteer. Three weeks later, Halliburton
offered him a job. Then they asked for his résumé.
Cole never ate pork products
in the mess hall. He knew many of the servers
were Pakistani Muslims and he felt terrible that
they had to handle food they deemed offensive.
He was rewarded for his expression of respect
with invitations to the Dickensian trailer park
where the kitchen staff lived. They didn't have
to abide by American rules governing food procurement.
Their kitchens were filled with local produce,
and they cooked spicy curries that were better
than anything Cole found in the cafeteria. He
thought of proposing an Indian- Pakistani food
night at the mess hall, but then remembered that
the palace didn't do ethnic fare. "The cooking
had to make people feel like they were back at
home," he said. And home, in this case, was
presumed to be somewhere south of the Mason-Dixon
Line.
Cole's mission was to
keep the air in the bubble, to ensure that the
Americans who had left home to work for the occupation
administration felt comfortable. Food was part
of it. But so were movies, mattresses, and laundry
service. If he was asked for something, Cole tried
to get it, whether he thought it important or
not. "Yes, sir. We'll look into that,"
he'd say. Or, "I'm sorry you're so upset.
We'll try to fix it as soon as possible."
The palace was the headquarters
of the Coalition Provisional Authority, the American
occupation administration in Iraq. From April
2003 to June 2004, the CPA ran Iraq's government–it
enacted laws, printed currency, collected taxes,
deployed police, and spent oil revenue. At its
height, the CPA had more than 1,500 employees
in Baghdad, most of them American. They were a
motley bunch: businessmen who were active in the
Republican Party, retirees who wanted one last
taste of adventure, diplomats who had studied
Iraq for years, recent college graduates who had
never had a full-time job, government employees
who wanted the 25 percent salary bonus paid for
working in a war zone. The CPA was headed by America's
viceroy in Iraq, Lewis Paul Bremer III, who always
wore a blue suit and tan combat boots, even on
those summer days when Iraqis drooped in the heat.
He was surrounded by burly, machine gun—toting
bodyguards everywhere he went, even to the bathroom
in the palace.
The palace was Versailles
on the Tigris. Constructed of sandstone and marble,
it had wide hallways, soaring columns, and spiral
staircases. Massive bronze busts of Saddam in
an Arab warrior's headdress looked down from the
four corners of the roof. The cafeteria was on
the south side, next to a chapel with a billboard-size
mural of a Scud missile arcing into the sky. In
the northern wing was an enormous ballroom with
a balcony overlooking the dance floor. The heart
of the palace was a giant marble rotunda with
a turquoise dome. After the Americans arrived,
the entire place took on the slapdash appearance
of a start-up company. Dell computers sat atop
ornate wooden desks partitioned by fabric-covered
cubicle dividers. Data cables snaked along the
gilded moldings. Erasable whiteboards hung from
the mirrored walls.
A row of portable toilets
lined the rear driveway. The palace, designed
as a showplace for Saddam to meet visiting dignitaries,
lacked enough commodes for hundreds of occupants.
Dormitory space was also in short supply. Most
new arrivals had to sleep on bunk beds in the
chapel, a room that came to resemble a World War
II field hospital.
Appearances aside, the
same rules applied in the palace as in any government
building in Washington. Everyone wore an identification
badge. Decorum was enforced in the high-ceilinged
halls. I remember hearing a soldier admonish a
staffer hustling to a meeting: "Ma'am, you
must not run in the corridor."
Whatever could be outsourced
was. The job of setting up town and city councils
was performed by a North Carolina firm for $236
million. The job of guarding the viceroy was assigned
to private guards, each of whom made more than
$1,000 a day. For running the palace–cooking
the food, changing the lightbulbs, doing the laundry,
watering the plants– Halliburton had been
handed hundreds of millions of dollars.
Halliburton had been
hired to provide "living support" services
to the CPA. What that meant kept evolving. When
the first Americans arrived in Baghdad in the
weeks after Saddam's government was toppled, all
anyone wanted was food and water, laundry service,
and air-conditioning. By the time Cole arrived,
in August 2003, four months into the occupation,
the demands had grown. The viceroy's house had
to be outfitted with furniture and art suitable
for a head of state. The Halliburton-run sports
bar at the al-Rasheed Hotel needed a Foosball
table. The press conference room required large-screen
televisions.
The Green Zone quickly
became Baghdad's Little America. Everyone who
worked in the palace lived there, either in white
metal trailers or in the towering al-Rasheed.
Hundreds of private contractors working for firms
including Bechtel, General Electric, and Halliburton
set up trailer parks there, as did legions of
private security guards hired to protect the contractors.
The only Iraqis allowed inside the Green Zone
were those who worked for the Americans or those
who could prove that they had lived there before
the war.
It was Saddam who first
decided to turn Baghdad's prime riverfront real
estate into a gated city within a city, with posh
villas, bungalows, government buildings, shops,
and even a hospital. He didn't want his aides
and bodyguards, who were given homes near his
palace, to mingle with the masses. And he didn't
want outsiders peering in. The homes were bigger,
the trees greener, the streets wider than in the
rest of Baghdad. There were more palms and fewer
people. There were no street vendors and no beggars.
No one other than members of Saddam's inner circle
or his trusted cadre of guards and housekeepers
had any idea what was inside. Those who loitered
near the entrances sometimes landed in jail. Iraqis
drove as fast as they could on roads near the
compound lest they be accused of gawking.
It was the ideal place
for the Americans to pitch their tents. Saddam
had surrounded the area with a tall brick wall.
There were only three points of entry. All the
military had to do was park tanks at the gates.
The Americans expanded
Saddam's neighborhood by a few blocks to encompass
the gargantuan Convention Center and the al-Rasheed,
a once- luxurious establishment made famous by
CNN's live broadcasts during the 1991 Persian
Gulf War. They fortified the walls with seventeen-
foot-high blast barriers made of foot-thick concrete
topped with coils of razor wire.
Open spaces became trailer
parks with grandiose names. CPA staffers unable
to snag a room at the al-Rasheed lived in Poolside
Estates. Cole and his fellow Halliburton employees
were in Camp Hope. The Brits dubbed their accommodations
Ocean Cliffs. At first, the Americans felt sorry
for the Brits, whose trailers were in a covered
parking garage, which seemed dark and miserable.
But when the insurgents began firing mortars into
the Green Zone, everyone wished they were in Ocean
Cliffs. The envy increased when Americans discovered
that the Brits didn't have the same leaky trailers
with plastic furniture supplied by Halliburton;
theirs had been outfitted by Ikea.
Americans drove around
in new GMC Suburbans, dutifully obeying the thirty-five-mile-an-hour
speed limit signs posted by the CPA on the flat,
wide streets. There were so many identical Suburbans
parked in front of the palace that drivers had
to use their electronic door openers as homing
devices. (One contractor affixed Texas license
plates to his vehicle to set it apart.) When they
cruised around, they kept the air-conditioning
on high and the radio tuned to 107.7 FM, Freedom
Radio, an American-run station that played classic
rock and rah-rah messages. Every two weeks, the
vehicles were cleaned at a Halliburton car wash.
Shuttle buses looped
around the Green Zone at twenty-minute intervals,
stopping at wooden shelters to transport those
who didn't have cars and didn't want to walk.
There was daily mail delivery. Generators ensured
that the lights were always on. If you didn't
like what was being served in the cafeteria–or
you were feeling peckish between meals–you
could get takeout from one of the Green Zone's
Chinese restaurants. Halliburton's dry cleaning
service would get the dust and sweat stains out
of your khakis in three days. A sign warned patrons
to remove ammunition from pockets before submitting
clothes.
Iraqi laws and customs
didn't apply inside the Green Zone. Women jogged
on the sidewalk in shorts and T-shirts. A liquor
store sold imported beer, wine, and spirits. One
of the Chinese restaurants offered massages as
well as noodles. The young boys selling DVDs near
the palace parking lot had a secret stash. "Mister,
you want porno?" they often whispered to
me.
Most Americans
sported suede combat boots, expensive sunglasses,
and nine-millimeter Berettas attached to the thigh
with a Velcro holster. They groused about the
heat and the mosquitoes and the slothful habits
of the natives. A contingent of Gurkhas stood
as sentries in front of the palace.
Excerpted from
Imperial Life in the Emerald City: Inside Iraq’s
Green Zone by Rajiv Chandrasekaran. Excerpted
by permission of Knopf, a division of Random House,
Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt
may be reproduced or reprinted without permission
in writing from the publisher.
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