This op-ed may be OBE: Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri Kamal al-Maliki said Sunday he was ordering a halt to construction of the wall around the Adhamiya neighborhood. And American officials, who did not immediately concur, indicated today they would go along with Mr. Maliki.
I had flagged this news in my Sunday NYT sampler. This is an op-ed in today's Washington Post; he's lamenting the short attention span theater that is the contemporary news media. Meanwhile, back in Baghdad, we're building a wall. Actually, quite a few walls. ... Basically, we're turning Baghdad into Belfast.
Mr. Robinson may favor the IRA analogy. Meanwhile, Iraqis are comparing themselves to Native Americans: A doctor in Adhamiya, Abu Hassan, said the wall would transform the residents into caged animals. “It’s unbelievable that they treat us in such an inhumane manner,” he said in a telephone interview. “They’re trying to isolate us from other parts of Baghdad. The hatred will be much greater between the two sects.” “The Native Americans were treated better than us,” he added.
I don't know about that ... at least the Iraqi population isn't dying of "germs" ... (which is actually surprising, since most of them don't have regular access to clean water.) For their part, the soldiers are comparing it to China: The wall is one of the centerpieces of a new strategy by coalition and Iraqi forces to break the cycle of sectarian violence. ... The soldiers jokingly call it "The Great Wall of Adhamiya."
Residents are comparing themselves to Palestinians: Some Adhamiya residents have compared the wall to barriers erected by Israel in the occupied West Bank.
The reaction on the street was pretty clear: Eighteen years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, history seems to be moving backwards here in the Middle East. More than a single wall of separation and suppression are now in demand for each country, once in the name of sects, and another time in the name of extremism and moderation, but always with the aim of redrawing maps.
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