Click the image to download the book [4.8 MB, PDF].
I remember reading about A Short Guide to Iraq [4.8 MB, PDF] in SPY magazine during the
first Gulf War — a guide for U.S. soldier stationed in Iraq during
WWII. Here’s the intr, which aside from the bit about defeating Hitler, is still applicable today:
YOU HAVE been order to Iraq (i – RAHK) as part of the world-wide offensive to beat Hitler.
You will enter Iraq both as a soldier and as an individual, because on
our side a man can be both a soldier and an individual. That is our
strength — if we are smart enough to use it. It can be our weakness if
we aren’t. As a soldier your duties are laid out for you. As an
individual, it is what you do on your own that counts — and it may
count for a lot more than you think.
American success or failure in Iraq may well depend on whether the
Iraqis (as the people are called) like American soldiers or not. It may
not be that simple. But then again it could.
In its 44 pages, the book provides the U.S. soldier enough
cultural and background information to function as a simple goodwill
ambassador in Iraq. Some of this information may be fairly obvious to
the cosmopolitan modern reader, but you have to remember that this was
a time before CNN, the internet, relatively inexpensive air travel and
several wars that taught us all about mideast geography.
The book looks like a pretty thorough introduction to Iraqi culture and
it seems as though the War Department (since renamed to the Department
of Defense) was taking great pains to win hearts and minds.
(Perhaps it was an era of better-behaved U.S. soldiers, the sort of whom Joi Ito wrote about in his piece on the anniversary of the atom bombing of Hiroshima.)
The illustrations included in the book are rather amusing. Here’s
“Bargaining takes time”, a fact that would’ve been unknown to many
Americans back then, but now familair thanks to cheap trips to Asia and
the bargaining scene in Monty Python’s Life of Brian:
“How ’bout 30 dinars and I don’t electrocute your balls?”
This bit of advice is obvious today, but it wasn’t back then:
As is this:
My favourite tip in the “Do’s and Don’ts” section:
If you should see grown men walking hand in hand, ignore it. They are not “queer”.
3 replies on “World War II Guidebook: "A Short Guide to Iraq"”
“…you have to remember that this was a time before CNN, the internet, relatively inexpensive air travel and several wars that taught us all about mideast geography.”
So, you think those things have helped?
Will they?
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/9897607/
What do you think Joey?
You piss me off, Accordion Guy. No mp3 clips?