Subscribe via RSS

Archives by Date
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008

See all Archives
Archives by Category
'Canes
Afghan Update
Ammo and Munitions
Armor
Around the Globe
Av Week Extra
Axe in Iraq (and Elsewhere)
Bizarro
Blimps
Blog Bidness
Body Armor Blues
Bomb Squad
Brownshoes in Action
Bubbleheads, etc.
Cammo Green
Catch the "Buzz"
Chem-Bio
Civilian Apps
Cloak and Dagger
Commandos
Comms
Contingency Ops
Cops and Robbers
Cyber-warfare
Data Diving
Defense Tech Poll
Dissent Tech
Door Kickers
Drones
DT Administrivia
Eat DT's Dust
Extra! Extra!
Eye on China
Fast Movers
FCS Watch
Fire for Effect
FOS Files
Friday Funnies
Gadgets and Gear
Going Green
Grand Ole Osprey
Ground Vehicles
Guns
Homeland Security
In the Weeds with Eric
Info War
Iraq Diary
Jarhead Jazz
JSF Watch
Just War Theories
Lasers and Ray Guns
Less-lethal
Logistics
Los Alamos and Labs
M4 Monopoly
Medic!
Mercs
Missiles
Money Money Money
Most Wanted
MRAP Edge
Net-Centric
Nukes
Old Skool
Our Shrinking Planet
Planes, Copters, Blimps
Politricks
Polmar's Perspective
Popular Mechanics
Rapid Fire
Raptor Watch
Red Team
Retro-Futuro
Robots
Roll Your Own
Sabra Tech
Ships and Subs
Snipertech
Space
Special Ops
Star Wars
Strategery
Stray Trons
Tactical Development
Terror Tech
The Deadlies
The Defense Biz
The Peoples' Site
The Sunday Paper
The Tanker Tango
The View from Av Week
Those Nutty Norks
Training and Sims
Trimble on the Case
Video Lounge
War Update
Ward'z Wonderz
You can run...

See all Archives
Newsletters

Edited by Christian Lowe | Contact

Merry Christmas, Iraq

At the Erbil Ministry of Culture's media hall, the Iraqi-Kurdistan Symphony Orchestra has just struck the final chord of the Kurdish national anthem, and the audience -- Kurdish Christians and Muslims, Arabs and Turkomens, maybe even an Iraqi Jew or two, all in black ties and gowns -- bursts into loud applause, foot-stomping and cheers. It's Christmas Eve in the oldest city in the world, and the city's million-and-some residents are in a pretty good mood. Maybe it's the successful election they had just two weeks ago. symph.jpg
Maybe it's the Christmas cheer of the city's sizeable Christian minority rubbing off on everyone else. Or maybe it's just that Kurdistanis love being Kurdistanis.

Sure, Iraqi Kurdistan's got troubles. Corruption hamstrings the economy. Intense security limits civil rights. A dearth of natural resources has ministers begging for foreign investment. But despite all this, and against the backdrop of a country descending into an Arab civil war, Kurdistan is prospering. People are making money, raising their kids, going to school, travelling abroad, making plans, dreaming and enjoying life.

This is it folks, this is what a peaceful, democratic, multi-ethnic and religiously-tolerant Iraq looks like. The Western media's myopic focus on Baghdad and Arab Iraq means it's missed a quarter of the story, the northern quarter, where five million people are building the Middle East's first indigenous democracy from scratch. Every day Kurds thank me, believing I represent all Americans. They thank me for freeing them from a murderous tyrant. They thank me for saving their lives and their families' lives. They tell me that they understand we went to war for many reasons, some quite bad. Still, they say, no American has died in vain here, for even if there were no weapons of mass destruction, even if Iraq had nothing to do with Sept. 11, there is at least one good reason to fight and die in Iraq.

In fact, there are five million.

Merry Christmas, America. Merry Christmas, Iraq.

--David Axe

Comments

nice to meet you

Posted by: wowpowerleveling at April 14, 2008 11:58 PM


wow gold
wow gold
wow gold
wow gold
wow power leveling
wow powerleveling
wow power leveling
wow power leveling
wow powerleveling
wow powerleveling
wow power leveling
wow power leveling
wow powerleveling
wow powerleveling
翻译公司
rolex
翻译公司
rolex replica
wow gold
wow gold
World of Warcraft Gold
World of Warcraft Gold
wow powerleveling
wow powerleveling
wow power leveling
wow power leveling

powerleveling
powerleveling
powerleveling
powerleveling
power leveling
power leveling
powerleveling
powerleveling
power leveling
power leveling
wow powerleveling
wow powerleveling
wow power leveling
wow power leveling
rs Gold
rs Gold
Runescape Gold
Runescape Gold
rs powerleveling
rs powerleveling
Runescape powerleveling
Runescape powerleveling

lotro gold
lotro gold
LOTRO US Gold
LOTRO US Gold
LOTRO EU Gold
LOTRO EU Gold
buy lotro gold
buy lotro gold
cheap lotro gold
cheap lotro gold
LOTRO Powerleveling
LOTRO Powerleveling
LOTRO Power leveling
LOTRO Power leveling
SilkRoad Gold
SilkRoad Gold
SilkRoad Powerleveling
SilkRoad Powerleveling
SilkRoad Power leveling
SilkRoad Power leveling
SR Gold
SR Gold
SR Powerleveling
SR Powerleveling
SR Power leveling
SR Power leveling

Posted by: 121 at November 6, 2007 02:34 AM


There weren't any there to begin the war with. The Iraq Survey Group found that Iraq had neither produced nor stockpiled WMDs since UN sanctions were imposed in 1991, nor did Iraq have any stocks of WMDs in 2003. Nor did Hans Blix's teams find any evidence of WMDs in Iraq before the US invaded. Bush lied to you again and again about the case for war.

Posted by: Howard Sux at December 27, 2005 09:08 PM


With all do respect; along with the murderous conventional weaponry used by Saddaam's gangster forces against the Kurds as well as against the Shiites in the south, what do you suppose the "strange mystery gas" was that he had used on the mass of innocent people in these areas...saved up toxic flatulence? If poisonous gases are not weapons of indiscriminate mass destruction, what is?
It must be well remembered that he regularly used these lethal WMDs against Iranians during his territorial war with them. He must have quite a manufacturing arm and continual stockpile in order to conduct such extensive operations...at any rate it should be something to think about before we keep casting "Michael Moorish" fantasms that there weren't any there to begin with.

Posted by: RockyB. at December 27, 2005 04:34 PM


Barry, those chunks aren't just in chaos, they are under attack by your friends the terrorists. And yes they, like you, are anti-freedom.

ahahah. oh my. Are you all the same guy, or what?

Posted by: perianwyr at December 27, 2005 11:23 AM


Kurdistan was already free of Saddam since 1991. I don't see why a second war was necessary for Iraqi Kurds to be "free," if you call being under the thumbs of the Barzani or Talabani clans is true freedom.

I also don't see why 2,100+ Americans had to die so that the Kurds could grab Kirkuk and or be more prosperous. A lot easier ways to accomplish that than what we did and are doing.

Posted by: Tequila at December 27, 2005 10:11 AM


Is this the new line, then? "We're here for the Kurds"?

I don't buy it. When Hussein was killing Kurds, the US didn't seem interested in "freeing them from a murderous tyrant." Quite the contrary: the US was then supplying Hussein with arms and biological agents and propping him up with loans. The US moved in only when Hussein threatened the US's access to Persian Gulf oil. "We're here for the Kurds" is a pretext to try to make the US look good in the face of heavy doubts.

It restores my faith in public sanity to know that belief in the old pretexts has eroded so much that journalists are forced to forge new ones. I think this one will be just a flicker compared to the bonfire of lies about WMDs and Iraqi involvement in 9/11. You can fool only some of the people all the time.

Merry Christmas!

Posted by: Howard Sux at December 26, 2005 05:19 PM


Who is that man up front "terrorizing" all those Iraqi musicians with that thin white stick? Quick, someone call John Kerry!!

Posted by: Brian at December 26, 2005 02:36 PM


"Myopic focus on the large chunks of the country which are in chaos? Must be because they're anti-freedom or something"

Barry, those chunks aren't just in chaos, they are under attack by your friends the terrorists. And yes they, like you, are anti-freedom.

Posted by: rwc at December 26, 2005 01:47 PM


Wait a minute! Are you telling us that this nation that can't be trusted to make democracy work is capable of actual culture?

Next you'll be telling us that people there love their children and want a better life, too! Or that we're winning!

Praise be to God! Peace on Earth and Good Will to Men Everywhere! [For the atheists, in the interests of multiculturalism, Praise be to Nothing!]


Posted by: AST at December 26, 2005 02:53 AM


Considering that the Jewish population of Iraq is in the three-digit range, it is highly unlikely any were at that concert.

Nice thought, but the Jewish populations of Arab lands were pretty much driven out post 1948. 124,000 fled Iraq alone between 1949 and 1951.

Half of Israel's population today are Sephardic Jews--Jews who came from Arab lands, or their children and grandchildren. It's a fact the world likes to ignore.

Posted by: Meryl Yourish at December 25, 2005 11:04 PM


What do you give a Democrat for Christmas?

A bottle of vintage whine.

Posted by: JimboNC at December 25, 2005 11:03 PM


Barry: Myopic focus on the large chunks of the country which are in chaos?

Nyah, nyah! My myopia is better than your myopia!

Barry, thanks for the laugh. ;-)

Posted by: sbw at December 25, 2005 10:22 PM


"...The Western media's myopic focus on Baghdad and Arab Iraq means it's missed a quarter of the story, the northern quarter, where five million people are building the Middle East's first indigenous democracy from scratch."

Myopic focus on the large chunks of the country which are in chaos? Must be because they're anti-freedom or something.

David, aren't you smarter than this?

Posted by: Barry at December 25, 2005 10:17 PM


Thank you for the this fantastic story, it just
makes the heart sing, to think of what America,
the troops and the leaders have done is sometimes
just really is hard to get your mind around.
I hope the president sees this, he will glow
with joy.
Indeed, there is much more work to do, but it is
shown so clearly this is the result of people
believing in themselves and their countrymen.
Now, that they have the opportunity to do so
by the American their allies and the people of
the countries that are now free and with perseverence and caring, they too will become
a beacon of light in the Arab world. They have shown great courage to date and will, I am sure,
continue to do so.


Wonderful!

Posted by: cjg at December 25, 2005 10:16 PM


And EVERY ONE of them worth it.

Posted by: Jason Newcomb at December 25, 2005 10:04 PM


Amen.

Posted by: rutty at December 25, 2005 05:27 PM


Post a comment




Remember Me?


Please enter the code as seen in the image below to post your comment.