And what a vision it was! What a reality it's turned out to be!
Tomgram: The Mother Ship Lands in Iraq
Who
can forget the grandiose architecture of pre-Bush-administration
Baghdad: Saddam Hussein's mighty vision of kitsch Orientalism melting
into terror, based on which, in those last years of his rule, he
reconstructed parts of the Iraqi capital? He ensured that what was soon
to become the Green Zone would be dotted with overheated, Disneyesque,
Arabian-Nights palaces by the score, filled with every luxury
imaginable in a country whose population was growing increasingly
desperate under the weight of UN sanctions. Who can forget those vast,
sculpted hands, "The Hands of Victory," supposedly modeled on Saddam's
own, holding 12-story-high giant crossed swords (over piles of Iranian
helmets) on a vast Baghdad parade ground? Meant to commemorate a
triumph over Iran that the despot never actually achieved, they still
sit there, partially dismantled and a monument to folly; while, as Jane
Arraf has written, Saddam's actual hands,"the hands that wrote the
orders for the war against Iran and the destruction of Iraqi villages,
the hands handcuffed behind his back as he went to trial and then was
led to his execution are moldering under ground."
It is worth
remembering that, when the American commanders whose troops had just
taken Baghdad, wanted their victory photo snapped, they memorably
seated themselves, grinning happily, behind a marble table in one of
those captured palaces; that American soldiers and newly arrived
officials marveled at the former tyrant's exotic symbols of power; that
they swam in Saddam's pools, fed rare antelopes from his son Uday's
private zoo to its lions (and elsewhere shot his herd of gazelles and
ate them themselves); and, when in need of someplace to set up an
American embassy, the newly arrived occupation officials chose -- are
you surprised? -- one of his former dream palaces. They found nothing
strange in the symbolism of this (though it was carefully noted by
Baghdadis), even as they swore they were bringing liberation and
democracy to Saddam's benighted land.
And then, as the Iraqi
capital's landscape became ever more dangerous, as an insurgency gained
traction while the administration's dreams of a redesigned American
Middle East remained as strong as ever, its officials evidently
concluded that even one of Saddam's palaces, roomy enough for a
dictator interested in the control of a single country (or the odd
neighboring state), wasn't faintly big enough, or safe enough, or
modern enough for the representatives of the planet's New Rome.
Hence,
Missouri's BDY. That midwestern firm's designers can now be classified
as architects to the wildest imperial dreamers and schemers of our
time. And the company seems proud of it. You can go to its website and
take a little tour in sketch form, a blast-resistant spin, through its
Bush-inspired wonder, its particular colossus of the modern world.
Imagine this: At $592 million, its proudest boast is that, unlike
almost any other American construction project in that country, it is
coming in on budget and on time. Of course, with a 30% increase in
staffing size since Congress approved the project two years ago, it is
now estimated that being "represented" in Baghdad will cost a
staggering $1.2 billion per year. No wonder, with a crew of perhaps
1,000 officials assigned to it and a supporting staff (from food
service workers to Marine guards and private security contractors) of
several thousand more.
When the BDY-designed embassy opens in
September (undoubtedly to the sound of mortar fire), its facilities
will lack the gold-plated faucets installed in some of Saddam's palaces
and villas (and those of his sons), but they won't lack for the
amenities that Americans consider part and parcel of the good life,
even in a "hardship" post. Take a look, for instance, at the embassy's
"pool house," as imagined by BDY. (There's a lovely sketch of it at
their site.) Note the palm trees dotted around it, the expansive lawns,
and those tennis courts discretely in the background. For an American
official not likely to leave the constricted, heavily fortified,
four-mile square Green Zone during a year's tour of duty, practicing
his or her serve (on the taxpayer's dollar) is undoubtedly no small
thing.
Admittedly, it may be hard to take that refreshing dip
or catch a few sets of tennis in Baghdad's heat if the present order
for all U.S. personnel in the Green Zone to wear flak jackets and
helmets at all times remains in effect -- or if, as in the present
palace/embassy, the pool (and ping-pong tables) are declared, thanks to
increasing mortar and missile attacks, temporarily "off limits." In
that case, more time will probably be spent in the massive, largely
windowless-looking Recreation Center, one of over 20 blast-resistant
buildings BDY has planned. Perhaps this will house the promised embassy
cinema. (Pirates of the Middle East, anyone?) Perhaps hours will be
wiled away in the no less massive-looking, low-slung Post
Exchange/Community Center, or in the promised commissary, the "retail
and shopping areas," the restaurants, or even, so the BDY website
assures us, the "schools" (though it's a difficult to imagine the State
Department allowing children at this particular post).
And
don't forget the "fire station" (mentioned but not shown by BDY),
surely so handy once the first rockets hit. Small warning: If you are
among the officials about to staff this post, keep in mind that the PX
and commissary might be slightly understocked. The Washington Post
recently reported that "virtually every bite and sip consumed [in the
embassy] is imported from the United States, entering Iraq via Kuwait
in huge truck convoys that bring fresh and processed food, including a
full range of Baskin-Robbins ice cream flavors, every seven to 10
days." Recently, there has been a "Theater-Wide Delay in Food
Deliveries," due to unexplained convoy problems. Even the yogurt
supplies have been running low.
But those of you visiting our
new embassy via BDY's website have no such worries. So get that
container of Baskin-Robbins from the freezer and take another moment to
consider this new wonder of our world with its own self-contained
electricity-generation, water-purification, and sewage systems in a
city lacking most of the above. When you look at the plans for it, you
have to wonder: Can it, in any meaningful sense, be considered an
embassy? And if so, an embassy to whom?
The Guardian's
Jonathan Freedland in the most recent issue of the New York Review of
Books terms it a "base" like our other vast, multibillion dollar
permanent bases in Iraq. It is also a headquarters. But what a head!
What quarters! It is neither town, nor quite city-state, but it could
be considered a citadel, with its own anti-missile defenses, inside the
increasingly breachable citadel of the Green Zone. It may already be
the last piece of ground (excepting those other bases) that the United
States, surge or no, can actually claim to fully occupy and control in
Iraq -- and yet it already has something of the look of the Alamo (with
amenities). Someday, perhaps, it will turn out to be the "White House"
(though, in BDY's sketches, its buildings look more like those
prison-style schools being built in embattled American urban
neighborhoods) for Moqtada al-Sadr, or some future Shiite Party, or a
Sunni strongman, or a home for squatters. Who knows?
What we
know is that such an embassy is remarkably outsized for Iraq. Even as a
headquarters for a vast, secret set of operations in that chaotic land,
it doesn't quite add up. After all, our military headquarters in Iraq
is already at Camp Victory on the outskirts of Baghdad. We can
certainly assume -- though no one in our mainstream media world would
think to say such a thing -- that this new embassy will house a rousing
set of CIA (and probably Pentagon) intelligence operations for the
country and region, and will be a massive hive for American spooks of
all sorts. But whatever its specific functions, it might best be
described as the imperial Mother Ship dropping into Baghdad.
Amazingly,
despite complaints from Congress, the present U.S. ambassador is
stumped when it comes to cutting down on that planned staff of his --
every one more essential than the last -- and the State Department is
actually lobbying Congress for an extra $50 million to construct yet
more "blast-resistant housing" on the vast site. Maybe this is what the
"build and hold" strategy, pushed by many counterinsurgency types,
really means. We'll simply plan in Washington, design in Kansas City,
build through a Kuwaiti construction firm using cheap imported labor,
and try to keep building out forever from our "embassy" in Baghad.
As
an outpost, this vast compound reeks of one thing: imperial impunity.
It was never meant to be an embassy from a democracy that had liberated
an oppressed land. From the first thought, the first sketch, it was to
be the sort of imperial control center suitable for the planet's sole
"hyperpower," dropped into the middle of the oil heartlands of the
globe. It was to be Washington's dream and Kansas City's idea of a
palace fit for an embattled American proconsul -- or a khan.
When
completed, it will indeed be the perfect folly, as well as the perfect
embassy, for a country that finds it absolutely normal to build vast
base-worlds across the planet; that considers it just a regular day's
work to send its aircraft carrier "strike forces" and various
battleships through the Straits of Hormuz in daylight as a visible
warning to a "neighboring" regional power; whose Central Intelligence
Agency operatives feel free to organize and launch Baluchi tribal
warriors from Pakistan into the Baluchi areas of Iran to commit acts of
terror and mayhem; whose commander-in-chief President can sign a
"nonlethal presidential finding" that commits our nation to a "soft
power" version of the economic destabilization of Iran, involving,
according to ABC News, "a coordinated campaign of propaganda,
disinformation and manipulation of Iran's currency and international
financial transactions"; whose Vice President can appear on the deck of
the USS John C. Stennis to address a "rally for the troops," while that
aircraft carrier is on station in the Persian Gulf, readying itself to
pass through those Straits and can insist to the world: "With two
carrier strike groups in the Gulf, we're sending clear messages to
friends and adversaries alike. We'll keep the sea lanes open. We'll
stand with our friends in opposing extremism and strategic threats.
We'll disrupt attacks on our own forces.... And we'll stand with others
to prevent Iran from gaining nuclear weapons and dominating this
region"; whose military men can refer to Iraqi insurgents as
"anti-Iraqi forces"; members of whose Congressional opposition can
offer plans for the dismemberment of Iraq into three or more parts; and
all of whose movers and shakers, participating in the Washington
Consensus, can agree that one "benchmark" the Iraqi government, also
locked inside the Green Zone, must fulfill is signing off on an oil law
designed in Washington and meant to turn the energy clock in the Middle
East back several decades; but why go on.
To recognize such
imperial impunity and its symbols for what they are, all you really
need to do is try to reverse any of these examples. In most cases,
that's essentially inconceivable. Imagine any country building the
equivalent Mother Ship "embassy" on the equivalent of two-thirds of the
Washington Mall; or sailing its warships into the Gulf of Mexico and
putting its second-in-command aboard the flagship of the fleet to
insist on keeping the sea lanes "open"; or sending Caribbean terrorists
into Florida to blow up local buses and police stations; or signing a
"finding" to economically destabilize the American government; or
planning the future shape of our country from a foreign capital. But
you get the idea. Most of these actions, if aimed against the United
States, would be treated as tantamount to acts of war and dealt with
accordingly in this country, with unbelievable hue and cry.
When
it's a matter of other countries halfway across the planet, however,
Americans largely consider such things, even if revealed in the news,
at worst tactical errors or miscalculations. The imperial mindset goes
deep. It also thinks unbearably well of itself and so, naturally, wants
to memorialize itself, to give itself the surroundings that only the
great, the super, the hyper deserves.
Percy Bysshe Shelley's
poem "Ozymandias," inspired by the arrival in London in 1816 of an
enormous statue of the Pharaoh Ramesses II, comes to mind:
"I met a traveler from an antique land
Who said: "Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed.
And on the pedestal, these words appear:
‘My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings,
Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!'
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away."
In
Baghdad, Saddam's giant hands are already on the road to ruin. Still
going up in New York and Baghdad are two half-billion dollar-plus
monuments to the Bush imperial moment. A 9/11 memorial so grotesquely
expensive that, when completed, it will be a reminder only of a time,
already long past, when we could imagine ourselves as the Greatest
Victims on the planet; and in Baghdad's Green Zone, a monument to the
Bush administration's conviction that we were also destined to be the
Greatest Dominators this world, and history, had ever seen.
From
both these monuments, someday -- and in the case of the embassy in
Baghdad that day may not be so very distant -- those lone and level
sands will undoubtedly stretch far, far away.