Book Read Free

The Assassins' Gate

Page 57

by George Packer


  Pletka, Danielle

  Plumley, Matt

  PNAC (Project for the New American Century)

  Podhoretz, Norman

  Polish troops

  postwar planning for Iraq War

  Powell, Colin; Chalabi and; on Iraq as priority; last meeting of Bush and; on troop strength in Iraq

  Powell Doctrine

  preemptive war

  Prior, John

  prisoners and arrests; of Kurds; scandal of; see also Abu Ghraib prison

  private security contractors, killing of

  privatization

  psychiatric patients

  al-Qaddafi, Muammar

  Qais (driver)

  Qutb, Sayyid

  Raghda

  Rahim, Nabil

  Rahim, Rend

  Ramadan, Taha Yassin

  Ramadi

  Ravich, Samantha

  Reagan, Ronald; neoconservatives and

  Republican Palace

  Rhode, Harold

  Rice, Condoleezza; background of; on Iraq and postwar Germany; in Iraq War planning; National Security Strategy of; as secretary of state; on WMD

  Richmond, Alan

  Rida, Mohamed

  Roosevelt, Franklin

  Roosevelt, Theodore

  Rove, Karl

  Rozbayani, Hasib

  Rubin, Michael

  Rudd, Gordon W.

  rumors

  Rumsfeld, Donald; background of; Bremer’s policy approved by; insurgency and; military transformation plans of; postwar planning for Iraq by; Saddam’s meeting with; soldiers’ bitterness toward; and troop strength for Iraq

  Saad

  al-Sabti, Qasim

  Saddam. See Hussein, Saddam

  Sadiq, Abdulrahman

  Sadiq, Mohamed

  Sadiq, Othman Ali

  al-Sadr, Ayatollah Mohamed Baqr

  al-Sadr, Ayatollah Mohamed Sadiq

  al-Sadr, Moqtada; Chalabi and; uprising by

  Safar, Jamila

  Said, Edward

  Salamé, Ghassan

  Salih, Barham

  Salman Pak

  Salvadoran troops

  Sanchez, Ricardo

  Sarbanes, Paul

  al-Sarraf, Sermid

  al-Sarraf, Wallada

  al-Sary, Majid

  Scheuneman, Randy

  Schwarzkopf, Norman

  Scowcroft, Brent

  Senor, Dan

  Sepp, Kalev

  September 11, 2001 (9/11); as cause of Iraq War; Commission; Jews supposedly warned before; Kamal’s play about; neoconservatives’ answer to

  Serwan (translator)

  al-Shahbander, Ammar

  Shaker, Ali

  Shaker, Ayob

  Shaker, Bashir

  Shaker, Samir

  Sharifpour-Hicks, Elahe

  Sharon, Ariel

  Shaways, Rowsch

  Shekhany, Azad

  Shia (Shiites): alliance of Sunni and; American Jewish support of; Ashura bombings of (2004); as chosen U.S. instrument; in Gulf War; INC and; insurgency of; after liberation; origin of; parties of; pleasure marriage in; restoration of monarchy and; retaliation against Sunnis; theocracy in Iraq and

  Shinseki, Eric K.

  Shulsky, Abram

  Shultz, George

  Silverman, Jerry

  al-Sistani, Ayatollah Ali; election coalition of

  Sky, Emma

  Slocombe, Walter

  Soane, E. B.

  Solzhenitsyn, Alexander

  South African mercenaries

  Spanish troops

  Special Plans, Office of

  Stalin, Joseph

  Stewart, Rory

  Strauss, Leo

  Strosky, E. A.

  suicide bombers

  Suleimaniya

  Sullivan, Andrew

  Sumaidaie, Samir Shakir

  Sunnis: alliance of Shia and; election boycott by; in elections; insurgency of; as modernizers; origin of; traditional rule of Iraq by; United Nations and

  Sunni Triangle

  Suskind, Ron

  Swanson, Brad

  Swope, Robert

  Sykes-Picot agreement (1916)

  Talabani, Hawry

  Talabani, Jalal

  Tal Afar

  Talib, Ali

  Talib, Tariq

  Taylor, Glade

  Tenet, George

  al-Tikriti, Barzan

  torture: hunger as protection against; Washington’s responsibility for

  Trotsky, Leon

  Truman, Harry

  Turkomans

  Ukrainian troops

  United Nations; asked to return to Iraq; in Baghdad, and its bombing; CPA endorsed by; DPG’s failure to mention; Human Rights Commission; inspectors in Iraq from; sanctions on Iraq by

  United States Armed Forces; alcohol use in Iraq by; Commanders Fund of; redeployment of; strength needed for Iraq War

  United States Marines

  universities: debaathification in; Iraqi presidents elected by

  Van Buren, Matt

  Vidal, Gore

  Vieira de Mello, Sergio

  Vietnam War; Bush on; neoconservative attitude to

  Vilsack, Tom

  Wahhabis

  Wallace, William

  Walzer, Michael

  Ward, George

  Warrick, Thomas

  Weinberger, Caspar

  Wershow, Jeffrey

  Westmoreland, William

  Wetherington, Karl

  Weydemuller, Patrick

  White, Thomas E.

  Wieseltier, Leon

  Wilson, Sir Arnold

  Wilson, Isaiah, III

  Wittington-Jones, Brendan

  WMD (weapons of mass destruction); “loose,” in Russia

  Wohlstetter, Albert

  Wolfowitz, Paul; background of; Bush and; Chalabi and; DPG and; foreign companies barred by; Makiya and; military deferment of; on 9/11 and Iraq; postwar Iraq and; in rocket attack in Green Zone; self-delusion by; on Strauss and Iraq War; on troop strength needed; and unfinished Gulf War

  women, Iraqi; dress code of; Kurdish; pleasure marriage and; reprisal killings of; virginity exams on; Wolfowitz on

  Woodward, Bob

  Woolsey, R. James

  Wurmser, David

  al-Yaqoubi, Ayatollah Mohamed

  Yaqoubi, Mustafa

  al-Yawer, Ghazi

  al-Zarqawi, Abu Musab

  Zebari, Hoshyar

  Zelikow, Philip

  Zinni, Anthony

  READING GROUP GUIDE

  About This Guide

  The questions and discussion topics that follow are designed to enhance your reading of George Packer’s The Assassins’ Gate: America in Iraq. We hope they will enrich your experience of the history and frontline reporting presented in this unsettling portrait of war.

  Introduction

  Providing unprecedented insight into America’s most controversial foreign-policy decision since Vietnam, The Assassins’ Gate recounts how the Bush administration set about changing the history of the Middle East and became mired in brutal guerrilla warfare in Iraq. During four tours on assignment for The New Yorker, award-winning reporter George Packer observed firsthand the complex struggles of soldiers and civilians from myriad backgrounds. Bringing to life the people, ideas, and history that led America to the Assassins’ Gate—the main point of entry into the American zone in Baghdad—Packer reveals the gritty realities of nation-building and insurgency in a war that followed none of the preconceived scripts. The result is a masterwork of journalism, providing answers on a subject seldom addressed with clarity while raising important new questions about the future.

  Questions for Discussion

  1. What wisdom is revealed in the book’s epigraph, written by a Syrian diplomat and poet?

  2. The book’s prologue describes the crowds that gather at the Assassins’ Gate and gives the history of the gate itself (built by Saddam Hussein as an imitation of a
ntiquity). In what way is the gate a metaphor for the current situation in Iraq, and America’s role in the world?

  3. George Packer offers a history of not only the creation of Iraq but also of American foreign policy in the twentieth century, including portraits of the original neoconservatives. Which aspects of this history were most surprising to you? What should world leaders have learned from this history?

  4. Discuss the men who advocated invading Iraq early on, such as Robert Kagan and Paul Wolfowitz. Is there a common denominator (idealism about democracy, flexing a military muscle) in their rationales? According to Packer’s account, why was George W. Bush so determined to topple Saddam’s regime?

  5. Chapter three begins with Kanan Makiya’s decision not to participate in the State Department’s Future of Iraq Project. Were his views about the war misguided? What does his story say about the opinions of exiles?

  6. What did you discover about the Coalition Provisional Authority by reading about administrators such as Drew Erdmann, whose story opens chapter four? What drives Drew, Meghan O’Sullivan, and the numerous other men and women like them who hoped to build representative government in Iraq?

  7. Chapter six describes the transition of authority from Jay Garner to Paul Bremer, who soon issued the uncompromising Debaathification Order. Do you believe that the flourishing insurgency is the result of Paul Bremer’s inexperience, or would the situation have decayed just as much under Jay Garner?

  8. How does the rebuilding of Iraq compare to the rebuilding of Japan, Germany, Bosnia, and other postwar scenarios in history? To what degree should the current turmoil in Iraq be attributed to the era of T. E. Lawrence (“Lawrence of Arabia”) and British colonialism? What did you make of the Iraqis who told George Packer they thought the British were better than Americans at being occupiers?

  9. Packer observes the problem of unproven accusations, paired with a thirst for vengeance, permeating many of Iraq’s factions. What does it take to overcome such deep-seated cultural attitudes?

  10. Are looting, sabotage, and the general chaos of Iraq purely a result of too few American troops being sent to move the country from Phase III to Phase IV (combat to stability operations)?

  11. Chapter eight introduces Aseel, a progressive Iraqi woman who asks, “Do you think my dreams will come true?” How would you respond to her question?

  12. The Assassins’ Gate provides considerable insight into Iraqi attitudes toward sexuality. What accounts for the obsession with the virginity tests for women? In what way do these attitudes exemplify other aspects of Iraqi culture? Will these attitudes ultimately undermine any hope for peace or human rights in the region?

  13. Discuss the experience of journalists as described in The Assassins’ Gate. What did you discover about the process by which Packer gathered his facts, and the variety of backgrounds among his translators? How has the prevalence of journalists from around the globe, combined with technologies that allow soldiers and civilians to e-mail personal observations to their friends back home, changed the face of war? How has coverage of this war, in which journalists have become targets, compared to the Gulf War, and to Vietnam?

  14. In what way does the story of Private Kurt Frosheiser speak to the schism between those who support and those who decry the war? What did you make of the vast differences between the way Kurt’s mother and father reacted to his death?

  15. In the long run, what will the social repercussions of the invasion be, for both Americans and Iraqis? What might the various figures mentioned in the book say if Packer were to interview them again in twenty years?

  16. Do you think American troops will ever leave Iraq altogether? If so, when and how?

  Further Reading

  A Pretext for War: 9/11, Iraq, and the Abuse of America’s Intelligence Agencies, by James Bamford; My Year in Iraq: The Struggle to Build a Future of Hope, by L. Paul Bremer III; Squandered Victory: The American Occupation and the Bungled Effort to Bring Democracy to Iraq, by Larry Diamond; Cobra II: The Inside Story of the Invasion and Occupation of Iraq, by Michael R. Gordon and General Bernard E. Trainor; Cruelty and Silence: War, Tyranny, Uprising, and the Arab World, by Kanan Makiya; Republic of Fear: The Politics of Modern Iraq, by Kanan Makiya; American Theocracy: The Peril and Politics of Radical Religion, Oil, and Borrowed Money in the 21st Century, by Kevin Phillips; Understanding Iraq: The Whole Sweep of Iraqi History, from Genghis Khan’s Mongols to the Ottoman Turks to the British Mandate to the American Occupation, by William R. Polk; The Prince of the Marshes: And Other Occupational Hazards of a Year in Iraq, by Rory Stewart

  ALSO BY GEORGE PACKER

  NONFICTION

  The Village of Waiting

  Blood of the Liberals

  FICTION

  The Half Man

  Central Square

  AS EDITOR

  The Fight Is for Democracy:

  Winning the War of Ideas in America and the World

  Praise for

  THE ASSASSINS’ GATE

  “Absorbing … Packer provides page after page of vivid description of the haphazard, poorly planned and almost criminally executed occupation of Iraq. In reading him we see the staggering gap between abstract ideas and concrete reality.”

  —Fareed Zakaria, The New York Times Book Review (cover review)

  “Packer is a rare combination: an excellent reporter, a sophisticated analyst and a fine writer … He has given us a remarkable history of the Iraq war, a work of keen analysis, superb reporting and deep compassion.”

  —Gary Kamiya, Salon.com

  “A deftly constructed and eloquently told account of the war’s origins and aftermath … Deeply human and maddeningly vivid.”

  —David Kurtz-Phelan, Los Angeles Times Book Review

  “[Packer] has succeeded in creating a book that is not only relevant but discerning and provocative. Using on-the-ground reporting and a talent for storytelling, he offers the vivid detail and balanced analysis that have made him one of the leading chroniclers of the Iraq war.”

  —Yonatan Lupu, San Francisco Chronicle

  “[Packer] deftly moves among the originators and the victims of the war … Essential reading for anyone interested in how the United States stumbled into Mideast quicksand.”

  —The Boston Globe

  “[This book] is much more than an investigation of failure. It is an engrossing account of war and chaos, and it provides rich portraits of ordinary Iraqis, about whom we know so little from daily news reports.”

  —Patrick Coolican, The Seattle Times

  “The most complete, sweeping, and powerful account of the Iraq War yet written … The portrait he paints of Iraq in the year and a half after the invasion is full and vivid and utterly, utterly damning … Packer has done something more valuable than write the tale of his own disillusionment. He has depicted in stark colors the disillusionment of an entire nation.”

  —Keith Gessen, New York

  “Packer is a storyteller, and an artful one.”

  —Chris Toensing, The Nation

  “The great strength of George Packer’s The Assassins’ Gate is that it gives a fair hearing to both views. Free of cant—but not, crucially, of anger—Mr. Packer has written an account of the Iraq War that will stand alongside such narrative histories as A Bright Shining Lie, Fire in the Lake and Hell in a Very Small Place. As a meditation on the limits of American power, it’s sobering. As a pocket history of Iraq and the United States’ tangled history, it’s indispensable. As an examination of the collision between arrogance and good intentions, it could scarcely be improved upon.”

  —Tom Bissell, The New York Observer

  “Bravura frontline reporting and laser-targeted analysis.”

  —Men’s Journal

  “Packer’s book is written with great clarity and draws on his experience as one of The New Yorker’s more perceptive reporters … The people he writes about—Washington neoconservatives, CPA bureaucrats, and ordinary Iraqis whose lives were tur
ned upside down by decisions made elsewhere—speak to the reader in their own voices.”

  —Peter Galbraith, The New York Review of Books

  “To describe [Packer’s] new book as smart and well-written (which it is) would not be saying very much … Snippets of the book won’t convey the range of its coverage, the variety of portraiture and incident it records. Nor can it more than hint at the remarkable precision and control of the prose.”

  —Scott McLemee, Newsday

  “The best book yet written on the Iraq war.”

  —Adam Kirsch, The New York Sun

  “Mr. Packer brilliantly describes the evolving mindset of the neoconservatives who took hold of policy towards Iraq in the run-up to the war, as well as the hopes and arguments of their assorted Iraqi allies in exile … Where he scores most is in portraying the psychology of Iraqis, their ambivalence to the liberation/occupation … Mr. Packer empathizes with them in all their diversity, drawing a remarkable cast of sharply defined characters.”

  —The Economist

  “Read George Packer’s book, The Assassins’ Gate, if you haven’t already … [Packer] has got it right.”

  —Col. Lawrence Wilkerson, former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell

  “Packer’s account is suspenseful, heartbreaking and infuriating, like watching a slow-motion bus accident … The Assassins’ Gate is simply indispensable.”

  —Jerome Weeks, The Miami Herald

  “As memorable as Michael Herr’s Dispatches, and of surpassing immediacy.”

  —Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

  “It is a pleasure to find a work that strives for balance, fairness, and understanding in surveying the causes and course of the ongoing Iraqi war … This is a troubling but deeply moving examination of a struggle that seems far from resolution.”

  —Jay Freeman, Booklist

  “The best book I read in 2005 … [Packer’s] writing combines a nuanced understanding of the most obscure foreign-policy journals along with heart-racing narratives based on his own experiences in country.”

  —Stephen Elliott, LA Weekly

  “A brilliantly reported analysis of the war in Iraq.”

  —GQ

  “The richest, most unsettling synthesis of reporting and careful thinking to come out of either Washington or Baghdad about the conflict … A rigorous, sustained inquiry into the clashing expectations for Iraq, how the war was planned, and the staggering wreckage of Iraqi society.”

 

‹ Prev