Accessibility Tools

  • Content scaling 100%
  • Font size 100%
  • Line height 100%
  • Letter spacing 100%
Print this page

Just a racket

by
October 2008, no. 305

Bad Days in Basra: My turbulent times as Britain’s man in southern Iraq by Hilary Synnott

I.B. Tauris, £17.99 hb, 287 pp

Just a racket

by
October 2008, no. 305

In the beginning, says a much-repeated joke, was The Plan. Deemed excellent, at first, it passed through many reinterpretations at successive levels of bureaucracy, and ended up being derided as a crock of shit. Britain’s plan for reconstructing Iraq in 2003 might have met the same fate, only there wasn’t one. Don’t laugh: Australia had no plan either, excellent or crock.

The United States did have a plan, but it had been drawn up by the State Department before the invasion of Iraq, and the Pentagon ignored it. After the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) under Paul ‘Jerry’ Bremer took over the reconstruction of Iraq, it drew up another plan, but he ignored that too. Perhaps Bremer was guided by the aphorism of H.L. Mencken that the well-known solution to every human problem is neat, plausible and wrong.

Alison Broinowski reviews 'Bad Days in Basra: My turbulent times as Britain's man in southern Iraq' by Hilary Synnott

Bad Days in Basra: My turbulent times as Britain’s man in southern Iraq

by Hilary Synnott

I.B. Tauris, £17.99 hb, 287 pp

From the New Issue