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US Inaugurates New $700 Million Embassy In Baghdad

CHELSEA J. CARTER   01/ 5/09 01:39 PM ET   AP

Iraq Us Embassy

BAGHDAD — The United States inaugurated its largest embassy ever on Monday, a fortress-like compound in the heart of the Green Zone _ and the most visible sign of what U.S. officials call a new chapter in relations between America and a more sovereign Iraq.

U.S. Marines raised the American flag over the adobe-colored buildings, which sit on a 104-acre site and has space for 1,000 employees _ more than 10 times the size of any other American Embassy in the world.

"Iraq is in a new era and so is the Iraqi-U.S. relationship," Ambassador Ryan Crocker proclaimed.

In perhaps an unintended sign of the new relationship, Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki did not attend Monday's ceremony because he was traveling in Iran, a country the U.S. has accused of aiding and arming Iraqi militants.

Explaining the opening of such a large embassy three years before the U.S. must finish withdrawing its 146,000 troops from Iraq, Crocker told The Associated Press that it is vital for the U.S. to remain involved in nonmilitary ways.

"I think we have seen a tremendous amount of progress," Crocker said before the ceremony, "but the development of this new Iraq is going to be a very long time in the making, and we need to be engaged here."

Crocker said Baghdad was looking to the West for the first time since the Army's 1958 revolution that toppled Iraq's monarchy and set the stage for the ascendance of the Baath party, which dominated Iraq until the 2003 invasion.

"Iraq has defined itself in general hostility to the West and the United States. You now have a fundamentally different state and society taking shape that values those relations, that values those contacts, that wants its children educated in American and other Western universities. And we need to be there as a partner to ensure that those relationships are solidly built and well maintained," he said.

"We will be engaged in different ways as security continues to improve and as Iraqi security forces are more and more in the lead. But that engagement over the long term is key," he added.

The veteran diplomat has served many years in the Middle East, where a lack of U.S. resolve in Lebanon 20 years ago opened that country to meddling from Iran and Syria.

The inauguration of the $700 million embassy came just days after a security agreement between Iraq and the United States took effect, replacing a U.N. mandate that gave legal authority to the U.S. and other foreign troops to operate in Iraq.

Under the new security agreement, U.S. troops will no longer conduct unilateral operations and will act only in concert with Iraqi forces. They must also leave major Iraqi cities by June and the entire country by the end of 2011. Another accord mapped out the bilateral relations.

Crocker said that since 2003 invasion, "perhaps no single week has been more important than this past week. On Dec. 31 we left the Republican Palace."

U.S. diplomats and military officials moved into the embassy on Dec. 31 after vacating Saddam Hussein's Republican Palace, which they occupied when they captured Baghdad in April 2003. The palace will now seat the Iraqi government and al-Maliki's office.

For nearly six years, the grandiose and gaudy palace, with its gold-plated bathroom fixtures, wall paintings of Scud missiles and enormous chandeliers, served as both headquarters for occupying forces and the hub for the Green Zone _ the walled-off swath of central Baghdad that was formally turned over to the Iraqi government on New Year's Day.

The new embassy's exact dimensions are classified, but it is said to be six times larger than the U.N. complex in New York and more than 10 times the size of the new U.S. Embassy in Beijing, which at 10 acres is America's second-largest mission.

Reinforced concrete surrounds the new compound, which provides housing for hundreds of staff who had been living in makeshift quarters with aluminum walls that provided little protection from mortar rounds that were fired daily into the Green Zone a year ago. "It is from the embassy that you see before you that we will continue the tradition of friendship, cooperation and support begun by the many dedicated Americans who have worked in Iraq since 2003," U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte told guests at the ceremony in the complex's courtyard.

Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, a longtime Washington ally, praised President George W. Bush's decision to invade Iraq in 2003 and topple the regime of Saddam Hussein, who was executed two years ago.

"The building of this site would not be possible without the courageous decision by President Bush to liberate Iraq," said Talabani, a Kurd. "This building is not only a compound for the embassy but a symbol of the deep friendship between the two peoples of Iraq and America."

But as U.S. and Iraqi officials lauded progress in the country, Baghdad was rocked by a second day of violence that saw four car bombs explode in various parts of the city, killing four people and wounding 19.

Though violence has plummeted around Iraq in the past year, with attacks dropping from an average 180 a day to just 10, horrific bombings still plague the capital. Many recent attacks have targeted pilgrims during ceremonies commemorating the death of a much revered Shiite saint.

On Sunday, a suicide bomber killed at least 38 people at a Shiite shrine just four miles north of the new embassy.

Iraqi officials said the bomber was a man disguised as a woman. Initial reports said the attacker was a woman concealing a bomb under her black cloak. At least 17 of the dead were Iranian pilgrims.

In response to that attack, Iraqi authorities banned female pilgrims from entering the district for ceremonies on Tuesday and Wednesday.

___

Associated Press reporter Patrick Quinn contributed to this report.

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BAGHDAD — The United States inaugurated its largest embassy ever on Monday, a fortress-like compound in the heart of the Green Zone _ and the most visible sign of what U.S. officials call a new ...
BAGHDAD — The United States inaugurated its largest embassy ever on Monday, a fortress-like compound in the heart of the Green Zone _ and the most visible sign of what U.S. officials call a new ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cyndeewi
Important sometimes
05:32 AM on 01/06/2009
We in American could have used this money.
06:23 PM on 01/06/2009
in my humble opinion, the money used for the embassy will better serve the american people than, say, the bailout packages.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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05:16 AM on 01/06/2009
Quote "Crocker said Baghdad was looking to the West for the first time since the Army's 1958 revolution that toppled Iraq's monarchy and set the stage for the ascendance of the Baath party, which dominated Iraq until the 2003 invasion."

Beautiful irony. The revolution was dreamed up and executed by the CIA who, by the way, gave Saddam Hussein the only weapons of mass destructio­n he ever had. Some young guy called Rumsfeld was involved if I recall.
01:59 AM on 01/06/2009
Cost Plus is a beautiful thing isn't it?
12:44 AM on 01/06/2009
"U.S. embassy has Important Work in the national interest"
Response:
If by work iyou mean controllin­g Middle Eastern Oil
(ask Dick.."So What".. Cheney )
and you consider national interest to include killing & robbing.
What another U.S. client state regional military power? We all can see how well Israel is working, check the Gaza hospitals on the BBC news.

. One U.S. soldier said it reminded her of a maximum-se­curity prison.
Former U.S.-insta­lled Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi has denounced the policies of President George W. Bush as an "utter failure".

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki was absent on a two-day visit to the U.S.'s adversary, Iran, where he met with Supreme Leader Ayatullah Khamenei who told al-Maliki on Sunday that the U.S. presence in Iraq was the root cause of terrorism, and that the
U.S. seeks to establish a permanent base there to dominate the region.

A testament to Bush's ignorance, Cheney's greed, and the triumph of the 2 Business parties whose media lie to its citizens.
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Wide Stance
Occupy micro-bio.
11:55 PM on 01/05/2009
$700 million for an embassy in Iraq....an­d the hits just keep coming. Disgusting­.
10:48 PM on 01/05/2009
"al-Maliki did not attend Monday's ceremony because he was traveling in Iran, a country the U.S. has accused of aiding and arming Iraqi militants"

Don't you just love it?

Also absent from the ceremony were the millions of Iraqi refugees and the million dead Iraqis.
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10:06 PM on 01/05/2009
We can now say it, the United States' newest Iraq Puppet Regime is officially recognized­. For what it's worth, Saddam was our last puppet. Let's hope it doesn't end with the same results.
10:15 PM on 01/05/2009
how does a large embassy signify that iraq is a puppet regime?
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BeasleysMom
Liberal Elitist
11:45 PM on 01/05/2009
I have been reading your posts here tonight and I have noticed many of your other posts. Most are well thought out, many supported by facts and usually well written. But, there always is an argumentat­ive quality about them. Most tro//s come right out with their disdain for Obama and our country. I can't help but think you feel that way, too. You seem to want to change our minds about most everything­, but not in a threatenin­g manner. I am not even certain you are an American.
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05:20 AM on 01/06/2009
Partly, I think, because the size of the embassy is necessary to house the vast number of troops that aren't allowed to stay on Iraqi soil. Embassies are considered to be special territorie­s where the rules of the guest country are in force.

Can't billet your combat brigade and CIA dirty tricks squad in town? Not to worry, plenty of room at the embassy.
08:12 PM on 01/05/2009
U.S. has Important Work: controllin­g Middle Eastern Oil. Only if you consider national interest to include killing & robbing.
(Dick Cheney "So What") ....
What another U.S. client state regional military power? We all can see how well Israel is working, check the Gaza hospitals on the BBC news.
. One U.S. soldier said it reminded her of a maximum-se­curity prison.
Former U.S.-insta­lled Iraqi Prime Minister Iyad Allawi has denounced the policies of President George W. Bush as an "utter failure".
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki was absent on a two-day visit to the U.S.'s adversary, Iran, where he met with Supreme Leader Ayatullah Khamenei who told al-Maliki on Sunday that the U.S. presence in Iraq was the root cause of terrorism, and that the
U.S. seeks to establish a permanent base there to dominate the region.

A testament to Bush's ignorance, Cheney's greed, and the triumph of the 2 Business parties whose media lie to its citizens.
07:52 PM on 01/05/2009
Is there no end to the monstrous insults to this nation by Bush and Co.???
09:09 PM on 01/05/2009
how is the embassy in baghdad an insult to the ameican people?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Awakenedcitizen
09:45 PM on 01/05/2009
because money was supposed to go into rebuilding the infrastruc­ture we destroyed for the people of Iraq. the huge embassy and the control of Iraqi oil were on the drawing board of the bush admin before 9-11, to control the oil and profits.
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BeasleysMom
Liberal Elitist
11:26 PM on 01/05/2009
Seems not. This is yet another example of wasting our tax payer money. As soon as we withdraw our troops the embassy will be sacked. Once again Bush and the gops go for the image above the substance. Go away! Obama has the largest mess ever left to a new president.
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07:46 PM on 01/05/2009
Let me take a guess on who build it... Halliburto­n or one of their front company?
09:12 PM on 01/05/2009
incorrect.­.. it was a kuwaiti firm, First Kuwaiti Trading & Contractin­g
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BeasleysMom
Liberal Elitist
11:30 PM on 01/05/2009
Sounds like one of the Bush/Chene­y "front companies" to me.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
WorkingClass
08:40 AM on 01/06/2009
The Kuwaitis built the embassy with slave labor. The Bush Library should be housed there.
07:19 PM on 01/05/2009
Does W get to put his throne in there?
06:45 PM on 01/05/2009
Wait is the embassy hovering? made out of gold?
how about we give that money to the war widows/wid­owers and orphans?
07:35 PM on 01/05/2009
Just think... if they had used half of that for rehabilita­tion of returning War victims, who would not approve and be happy about That. Helping the Real Victims of Bush's w a r.
This would show some empathy though.

The Bush Legacy Train... rolls down the tracks. No 'light at the end of the tunnel'... yet.

All those book authors... another chapter for the History books.
08:56 AM on 01/06/2009
Empathy to the neocon is being WEAK.

Yes Jesus was weak,by these guys.
06:33 PM on 01/05/2009
Cross that one off the Bush Administra­tion to do list:
Get Americans to support an illegal war based on fear & false info X
Illegal occupation X
Give no bid contracts to cronies X
Increase extremist recruits X
Cripple infrastruc­ture of illegally occupied country X
Use illegal occupation for political gain & to attack US civil rights X
Build really big US embassy in a country where the people probably hate us X
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MESGAIN26
06:25 PM on 01/05/2009
THIS IS WHAT 4000 PLUS TROOPS DIED FOR AND YOU WONDER WHY OUR ECONMY IS IN THE TANK UGHHHH
06:27 PM on 01/05/2009
US$700 million is like bread crumbs compared to the bailout packages..­..
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
myfatherschild
06:33 PM on 01/05/2009
Maybe so, but it doesn't mean that either are justified.
06:54 PM on 01/05/2009
I have to agree on one note, it really isn't that much. Especially considerin­g few years ago 9 billion dollars simply went missing in iraq.
06:19 PM on 01/05/2009
everybody needs to calm down... the us diplomatic mission will be the most important (and the biggest) in the world for years to come (even under the Obama Administra­tion), housing FSO, economists­, military attaches, developmen­t cooperatio­n offices like USAID, etc... your talking about massive staff that needs the best of everythign to effectivel­y do their job on behalf of the american people and in accordance with its crucial ally Iraq. the $700 milllion figures seems gawdy, but remember all the extra-ordi­nary security requirment­s... this isn't the embassy in london, it needs blast resistant infrastruc­ture.
07:31 PM on 01/05/2009
There is no reason why we should have such a large "embassy" in a country that wants us to leave.
07:38 PM on 01/05/2009
"wanting us to leave" (a false conjecture­, they want US troops to leave their streets, not be without a diplomatic mission) and embassies are mutually exclusive.­.. every country with diplomatic relations has a right to an embassy... the baghdad embassy is large because it has extra-ordi­nary functions and a massive staff in accordance with its relations to the host country. You should travel to other countries.­.. usually the US has the largest embassy in each respective state
10:49 PM on 01/05/2009
But no Iraqi citizens.