January 13, 2006

TAKING RESPONSIBILITY IS SO YESTERDAY

Saddam’s palaces looted after handover (Ellen Knickmeyer, Washington Post, January 13th, 2006)

The top U.S. military and civilian leaders in Iraq handed over Saddam Hussein's most lavish palace compound to the safekeeping and control of the new Iraqi army and government, in a ceremony whose intended symbolism was as impossible to ignore as the military brass band.

"The passing of this facility is a simple ceremony that vividly demonstrates the continuing progress being made by the Iraqi government and their people," said Col. Mark McKnight, commander of 1st Brigade Combat Team, 3rd Infantry Division, who handed the keys to the palaces to the governor of Salahuddin province.

But in the days after American forces and the Iraqi brass band pulled out of the circular palace drive on a bluff overlooking the Tigris River, local officials now say, looters moved in, ripping out doors, air conditioners, ceiling fans and light-switch plates from some of the compound's 136 palaces, leaving little more than plaster and dangling electric wires.

The culprits are some of the same Iraqi security forces and officials to whom Americans transferred control, police and the governor say.

"Thank God we were able to save the walls from the looters, because everything else was stolen," Gov. Hamed Hamood Shekti said by telephone.

Shekti, like police officials, blamed Iraqi soldiers at the palaces and his own deputy. "The palace was turned over to the Iraqi army units in the presence of Deputy Governor Abdullah Naji Jabara," he said. "Two weeks later I heard the place was looted. Now who can I accuse of the looting?"

Governor Sekti obviously has a lot to learn about modern democracy. Didn't anyone tell him he is supposed to blame George W. Bush?

Posted by Peter Burnet at January 13, 2006 11:59 AM
Comments

While the palace was being looted, the media was too busy at the time blaming Bush for the looting of a dozen or so items from the Iraqi national museum; itms which at first numbered in the thousands and suddenly became some of the most important pieces of art and artifacts that the world had ever known.

If they can figure out a way to make the palace's looted air conditioners and ceiling fans to be among the most important artifacts of late 20th Century cooling technology the world has ever seen, the big media outlets may find a reason to return to the story for a new round of Bush-bashing.

Posted by: John at January 13, 2006 2:04 PM

This latest looting was only in the last few months, and wasn't during the initial invasion.

What it shows is that third-world mindsets and habits are hard to break. But having the reaction at the start and at the top to be "this is not acceptible" is a start on changing that.

Posted by: Raoul Ortega at January 13, 2006 2:44 PM
« IT WAS DOING SO WELL UP UNTIL THEN: | Main | BECAUSE LIFE DOESN'T TAKE PLACE IN A VACCUUM: »