Agosto 26, 2018

"Cafes, clubs and bars are proliferating. There are shopping malls with cinemas showing the latest releases, including a glitzy glass enormity..."

"... with a Dubai-style helicopter pad on the roof. There are restaurants on the river and plays at the theater and comedy nights at the coffeehouses. On Fridays, poets recite their works and artists show off their paintings in the Ottoman-era gardens surrounding Mutanabbi Street, named for a 10th-century Iraqi poet who lived when Baghdad was at the epicenter of the civilized world.... [T]here’s a widespread consensus that at no time in the past 40 years, since Saddam Hussein acquired absolute power and led Iraq into a series of ruinous wars, has Baghdad been as free and as fun as it is now. 'Every Iraqi has reached the conclusion that it is important to have as much fun as you can before you die,' said Alaa Kahtan, a theater director who had come to Coffee and Books, one of Baghdad’s hip new cafes that attracts a mostly literary crowd."

From "Baghdad gets its groove back/Violence is receding and Iraq’s capital is partying again" (WaPo). I love the photographs.

37 komento:

hstad ayon kay ...

"Cafes, clubs and bars are proliferating..." Leaving aside the irony that alcohol is still illegal in a Muslim country, I'm trying to understand what value these businesses offer to Iraq's economy? In fact, once the USA stops spending money in this country, wonder what these businesses will do - probably go bankrupt and close.

Birkel ayon kay ...

Good.
I hope the influence of Iran diminishes further.

rhhardin ayon kay ...

Whiskey.

madAsHell ayon kay ...

The goofy looking guy under the brown baseball cap is seriously eye-balling the woman in the black chiffon.

Hmmm.....and suddenly this jumped to mind!!

The quick red fox jumped over the lazy brown dog.

mockturtle ayon kay ...

named for a 10th-century Iraqi poet who lived when Baghdad was at the epicenter of the civilized world

'Epicenter' would imply that there was greater civilization below the surface.

madAsHell ayon kay ...

She seems to be intent on ignoring him. How long can you stare at your iPhone??

LA_Bob ayon kay ...

"How long can you stare at your iPhone??"

Haven't been paying attention for the last ten years, have you?

Seeing Red ayon kay ...

Democracy, whiskey, sexy!

Patrick Henry ayon kay ...

This makes me happy.

No the Iraq war probably shouldn't have been started, but that this is part of the outcome, it is good. Now, the Iraqis have freedom... let's see if they can keep it.

Achilles ayon kay ...

‘Every Iraqi has reached the conclusion that it is important to have as much fun as you can before you die,'

Probably not every Iraqi.

But most feel this way.

It is how sheep think.

They will serve their masters well.

Rigelsen ayon kay ...

Hstad wrote: Leaving aside the irony that alcohol is still illegal in a Muslim country...

As one of the photo captions said, a ban on alcohol was voted down last year. That and the woman staring at her iPhone in western dresss suggests a measure of freedom.

buwaya ayon kay ...

My guesstimate is that foreign-sourced (mostly US) military spending plus foreign aid make up less than 10% of Iraqi GDP, and more likely 5%.

This has been bloated up from 2013-14 due to assistance due to the ISIS war and spending by all parties in the Syrian wars. But oil is a much larger factor.

Consider also that one of the more economically significant regions of Iraq, Mosul, was thoroughly trashed and in a state of war into 2017. Its recovery also is likely to be more significant than military spending.

The quibble I have is the Baghdad-centric nature of this mainly-lifestyle report. There are many circumstances in which an "Imperial City" such as Baghdad gets rich at the expense of the hinterland.

gilbar ayon kay ...
Naalis ng may-ari ang komentong ito.
gilbar ayon kay ...

iraqi man to Ben Franklin: Well, Doctor, what have we got?
a Whiskey Bar, if you can keep it

Seeing Red ayon kay ...

As long as Baghdad doesn’t turn off electricity to the hinterlands in punishment like Saddam did, they’ll function.

Sebastian ayon kay ...

Wait, I thought our intervention failed miserably and Iraqis are now worse off than under Saddam.

Ralph L ayon kay ...

I saw a few women without slave collars, so that's good, though the sight of female hair was a major reason for the mullahs taking over Iran.

Critter ayon kay ...

Interesting signs of moderation away from the chains of radical Islam. I wonder if such pictures make their way to Iran. They would be very influential on the Iranian people in their struggles against the Mad Mullahs.

Bunkypotatohead ayon kay ...

So all those US soldiers didn't die in vain after all.

Kirby Olson ayon kay ...

Getting ISIS out has been the best thing that happened. Trump pulled it off by letting his military guys do what was needed without first consulting him. That consultation was necessary according to the Obama method ruined the speed of the war, and resulted in stagnation. I have gotten requests from Iraqi scholars and poets for my books to be sent to them. They have a problem with currency exchange, or something.

William ayon kay ...

I suppose it's theoretically possible for there to be a change for the better in Iraq......It was the Mongols who destroyed Baghdad and the Abbasid Caliphate. They killed every male person in the city, razed the city to the ground, and took particular care to burn the library and its contents. This happened after the Crusades. At one time, the Mongol invasion of Persia and Mesopotamia was considered the greatest calamity to ever befall the Muslim world. But, of course, the Mongols weren't westerners and thought about this has since been revised. It's interesting that after the sack of Baghdad, the good citizens of Damascus rethought their views on conquest by non believers and opened the city gates to the Mongols. There wasn't much of an inssurgency to Mongol rule.......The Abbasid Dynasty was an advanced civilization. People should not judge it by the somewhat simpleminded music of the Abbas. There was more to it than just a few catchy numbers.

hstad ayon kay ...

Rigelsen said...As one of the photo captions said, a ban on alcohol was voted down last year. That and the woman staring at her iPhone in western dresss suggests a measure of freedom.

Yes, of course I'm aware that "a ban on alcohol was voted down last year." Yet, you pointed out the irony of the "western dress". I would bet that Western Iraq has none of this, plus the photographer who took this was in the Bagdad. Did he also ask the same questions in Sadr City (part of Baghdad? LOL, I'm amazed how bloggers automatically transfer Western Culture and Beliefs immediately to a culture going back to the "Stone Ages". Just because a law was passed and 1 picture of a woman in western dress - does not make it so in the majority of this country. Ask the Mullahs what they think? Listen to Friday prayer sessions!

Jim at ayon kay ...

I still think the price we paid was too heavy, but it's gratifying to see they may finally have a chance.

It's certainly better than the alternative.

tcrosse ayon kay ...

Next it will be Baghdad Bob hosting Iraqi Price is Right. Come on down !

Jaq ayon kay ...

Epicenter’ would imply that there was greater civilization below the surface.

Yes, it was the penultimate civization.

Jaq ayon kay ...

I am thinking that this leaks into Iran. Unless China teaches Iran how to put the serious clamps down, like only communists can.

Mr. Groovington ayon kay ...

That Iraqi guy by the pool must’ve shaved his back. Or is a tourist.

Bill Peschel ayon kay ...

So when do we steal their oil?

That is why we were there, right? At least so I've been told by the Smart People(tm).

Mark ayon kay ...

Westernization. That's how radical Islam is defeated.

tim maguire ayon kay ...

I know what liberals think of the Iraq war. What do Iraqis think of it?

The Crack Emcee ayon kay ...

"In Reel Power: Hollywood Cinema and American Supremacy Matthew Alford calls Three Kings "an unusual ideological product on Hollywood terms, which begins to break down the official history of the Gulf War [...but nevertheless...] suggests that the problems of Iraq can be solved, and only solved, by the application of US force." He observes that Russell "sheepishly indicated Three Kings' ideological consistency with the 2003 Iraq War" when Russell met George W. Bush in 1999 and said he was making a film that would question his father's legacy in Iraq. Alford quotes Bush as responding to Russell: "Then I guess I'm going to have to finish the job, aren't I?"

Unless somebody can produce the oil all that blood was spilled for, I'd say we've been lied to - by the Left.

Bay Area Guy ayon kay ...

Nation building!

mockturtle ayon kay ...

Mark asserts: Westernization. That's how radical Islam is defeated.

Radical Islam may wax and wane but, unlike communism, it won't be defeated by political or economic means.

Pookie Number 2 ayon kay ...

Radical Islam may wax and wane but, unlike communism, it won't be defeated by political or economic means.

I’ve always thought (or hoped) that economic means stood the best chance of defeating radical Islam, since free-ish market capitalism provides a healthier outlet for aggressiveness.

Tina Trent ayon kay ...

I don't love the photographs. It is still a place where women cannot move freely without risking being treated like a whore or worse. The doctor puts it well. The only women involved in the "vibrant nightlife" are prostitutes.

Anthony Bourdain used to get off on these all-male Middle Eastern scenes. It had to be explained to him that what he was seeing wasn't male comradery but oppression of women at the threat of violence to the point of exclusion from merely walking down a street, or by a lake, or in a coffeeshop. Just imagine that. And then he whinges with the metooers, a group who couldn't care less about real injustice or real justice.

stlcdr ayon kay ...

No the Iraq war probably shouldn't have been started, but that this is part of the outcome, it is good. Now, the Iraqis have freedom... let's see if they can keep it.

Right up to the point where someone in power says ‘if you like your freedom, you can keep your freedom’.

NotWhoIUsedtoBe ayon kay ...

Epicurus comes to the land of Islam.

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