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Sunday, December 14, 2008

No, I did not see the shoes thrown at President Bush.

I arrived in Baghdad today and went directly to a neighborhood that I had followed for three years, where horrific sectarian killings had gone on and many families fled, but are now coming back. I wanted a quick reality check on whether the violence was down, and how long the improvements would last (I will write about this in my Wednesday column.)

The Bush trip was so secret that journalists weren't notified until he was already in the country. They then had to turn up at the press conference four hours early. By the time I finished my interviews and learned of the conference key bridges and roads were blocked around the city, and remained so for hours.  I finally made it by foot it into the Green Zone - the supposedly safe area - but security was so tight there that no one was being allowed anywhere near the prime minister's residence.

Guess that says something about the security situation five years on in Baghdad.

And then came the shoes. 

What's so interesting here is that the shoe-throwing - a huge insult in the Arab world - is being taken as a huge insult to Prime Minister Maliki as well as President Bush.  In Iraqi culture the failure to protect a guest is shameful.

But the shoe-thrower, an Iraqi journalist, may still become a hero (although Iraqi TV has given very little coverage to the incident.)  What he did reflects the anger many Iraqis feel about Bush's handling of this war, even among Iraqis who wanted Saddam overthrown. In a grocery store near my hotel, where men were discussing the event, one elderly man said: "Imagine this happened in a press conference. Imagine if Bush walked through the streets." 

 

Posted by Trudy Rubin @ 4:15 PM  Permalink | 7 comments
Comments   
  • Comment removed.
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:03 PM, 12/14/2008
    I heard Trudy hired the shoe throwing "journalist" on the spot as a contributing editor for the Inquirer and Daily News. He will fit right in with the rest of those suffering from BDS (Bush Derangement Syndrome) at the papers.
    fafafooey
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:40 PM, 12/14/2008
    Mike, Bush gave up nothing...he lied to the people of the U.S. and managed to get tens of thousands of Iraqi people killed and 4200 hundred U.S. soldiers killed. It is so disheartening that you know so little of what is really going on in the world that you think that the Iraqi Journalist has no reason to be angry at Bush... Turn off your television and start reading.
    Tharn
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 10:38 AM, 12/15/2008
    I am sick and tired of these M!@#$% F!@#$% disrespecting our president!!!! If our reporters did that they would be Shot!
    ttamb
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 11:15 AM, 12/15/2008
    I am sick and tired of People disrespecting President Bush; no less these crumbs!!!! If our reporters did that to their leaders, they would be Shot!!!!! I am a Democrat and lost respect for the Democratic Party; along with the media, they played a little Tooo Dirty toward “Our President” for my tast. What do you mean “He could have been a great President?”.. I respect this man more now after seeing what the Media and the Democratic Party put him through…
    ttamb
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:09 PM, 12/15/2008
    If all Bush got was a couple of shoes thrown at him he should consider himself lucky. What he has done to these people (with plenty of help from idiot Muslim terorists) I'm not allowed to post here. Thousands apon thousands killed and injured not to mention how many people were forced to flee. This is Bush'es legacy: A failed invasion of a country that did not attack us, thousands of US soldiers killed and maimed for no good reason and a terrible economy (which the Democrats also had a hand in). What a failure! Glad it's almost over! Lame.......DUCK!!!
    James TL
  • 0 like this / 0 don't   •   Posted 12:24 PM, 12/16/2008
    z
    James TL


7 comments
About Trudy Rubin
Trudy Rubin’s Worldview column runs on Thursdays and Sundays. In 2009-2011 she has made four lengthy trips to Afghanistan and Pakistan. Over the past seven years, she visited Iraq eleven times, and also wrote from Iran, Israel, the West Bank, Gaza, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Turkey, China, and South Korea. She is the author of Willful Blindness: the Bush Administration and Iraq, a book of her columns from 2002-2004. In 2001 she was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in commentary and in 2008 she was awarded the Edward Weintal prize for international reporting. In 2010 she won the Arthur Ross award for international commentary from the Academy of American Diplomacy.