Cover image for Bad Days in Basra : My Turbulent Time as Britain's Man in Southern Iraq.
Bad Days in Basra : My Turbulent Time as Britain's Man in Southern Iraq.
Title:
Bad Days in Basra : My Turbulent Time as Britain's Man in Southern Iraq.
Author:
Synnott, Hilary.
ISBN:
9780857710697
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (312 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- List of Plates -- Acronyms -- Prologue -- Map of Iraq -- Part One: The Assignment -- 1. 'It's a Bloddy Mess' -- 2. How it all Started -- 3. Arrival -- 4. Baghdad: The Green Zone -- 5. Adapting to Ground Reality -- Part Two: Facts on the Ground -- 6. Life in the Provinces: Basra, Al Muthanna, Dhi Qar, Maysan -- 7. Bugs and Bodyguards -- 8. A Tower of Babel? The Challenges and Delights of Multinational Operations -- 9. Civvies and Soldiers: A 'Ticket Out'? -- Part Three: Efforts and Failures -- 10. Plans are Nothing -- 11. Promoting Security and the Rule of Law -- 12. Repairing the Wreckage: The Realities of Reconstruction -- 13. Big-Picture Politics -- Epilogue -- Appendix One -- Appendix Two -- Appendix Three -- Selected Bibliography -- Index.
Abstract:
The phonecall came from out of the blue, just when Sir Hilary Synnott was looking forward to retirement after helping steer India and Pakistan back from the verge of nuclear war. "It's about Iraq. We need a King of the South…." Bad Days in Basra is the story of Synnott's time as Britain's most senior representative in Southern Iraq, trying to keep the region together as the rest of the country descended in to murderous violence. By turns wryly comic, revealing and heart-breaking, it offers a never seen before glimpse in to the high politics of the occupation. Shuttling between the gilded palaces of the Green Zone and the leaky outhouses which constituted Coalition HQ in Basra, Synnott had to negotiate his boss, Paul Bremer's brash indifference to what was going outside Baghdad, the indecisiveness of his London masters, and the brutal political realities of a country under occupation. Bearing witness for the first time to the chaotic fashion in which the coalition was run at the highest levels, Synnott's unique insider account is the most important primary source we yet have on how the South was lost. It offers new insights in to the style and motivations of key characters such as Bremer himself, US commander General David Petraeus and the then UK Foreign Minister Jack Straw. It provides an entertaining and witty portrait of the absurdities of life inside the the occupying coalition, a devastating critique of CPA policies and controversial revelations about the real relationship between the two occupying powers, Britain and America. "Authoritative and devastating" - Toby Dodge "Compelling...shrewd, balanced and authentic" - Sir Jeremy Greenstock.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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