Thursday, January 4, 2007

going for a dip


despite the title of this post i have not jumped in the pool here at the palace yet; and doubt i will before i head out in march. when i took this job i remember my boss saying something along the lines of "hell freezes over," so i knew it would get colder here than my western mind could imagine the desert to be like. this morning i learned that iraq is having one of the colder winters of recent history.


now colder to someone in iraq is a high around 50 degrees and lows in the 30s so those of you in the northern u.s. may see that as resort temperatures but it really is cold i swear. for example our trailers have shared bathrooms and when the rooms are heated (by a noisy window unit) the common space or bathrooms are not. you can move pretty quickly in the morning when you are shivering! of course it beats having to leave the trailer and walk to the shower.


just monday about 50 or so people (mostly military who had not been out partying the night before) took the polar plunge in the palace pool. brave souls. yes it looks inviting and refreshing but when we put the pool in context with the weather things change.


while this post is fairly meaningless the one thing we should take away from it is that iraq is not hot year round and winter nights and mornings can be pretty cold. so when planning travel to iraq i suggest mid spring...

Sunday, December 31, 2006

a new year, a new day in iraq


i doubt i will ever again wake up in a country that has just executed it's former leader. but that is in fact what happened yesterday. as you know (since you couldn't avoid the news) saddam hussein's death sentence was carried out early saturday morning here in baghdad and now we are left to determine how iraq will move forward with the dictator a distant memory.

i wish i could tell you that the execution was not one of those items that would further drive the shia and sunni populations against each other but as more video of the execution becomes available we are learning that the executioners were in fact chanting praise to shia leaders while shouting that the dictator was going to hell. not that i disagree with their assessment of the final destination, but i wonder if it would have been better to leave religion out of the execution chamber and allow for it to be a government act, which it was.

this culture though is not likely to easily divorce their religious passions with the governmental process so this will be another mountain for the iraqi democracy to climb.

despite news reports though the reaction to the execution was not nearly as violent as reporter early. on arab television we have seen more celebration than devastation.

tomorrow iraq will wake up in a new year and it will be a new day for the nation absent its former dictator.