Simon_Jester wrote:Ziggy Stardust wrote:As much as the destruction of such a site is a shame, in all honesty it sounds like it had more or less been defiled by Hussein as a vanity project. Replacing ancient Babylonian bricks with ones inscribed with an ode to himself?
That is an interesting example of values dissonance: today, we agree that Saddam Hussein should not have done that, but the ancient Babylonians who built the city in the first place would probably have
expected such behavior from a ruler. Weird.
This does not excuse Hussein's behavior, let alone the behavior of the people who set up the military base there during the occupation. I'm confident that everyone, including the ancient Babylonians, would disagree with making a parking lot for Humvees out of the ruins.
Well, honestly, the ancient Babylons, giving humvees, would have happily made a parking lot out of Ashur, so let's not be too hasty. On the other hand nothing excuses even half of what this report says was done. Though we're not the first in the modern era to do it, either; the British heavily shelled the ancient walls of Ctesiphon in 1915 which the Ottomans were using as positions for their advanced pickets of their main defensive entrenchments which they themselves had built through the old city, with their command headquarters in the ruins of the old Parthian palace coming under abortive attack from British river gunboats. For that matter if we move further afield, the Chinese themselves deployed troops along the Great Wall to fend off the Japanese in the 1930s, leading to its being heavily shelled.
One might decry it, but if the ruins of Babylon (and ancient cities were ALWAYS carefully sited for the defensive--remember the sheer scale of Babylon's walls) offered a good defensive position, and indeed they did, it makes perfect sense to turn it into a fortified encampment. Ultimately, that's what cities initially were--fortified encampments. They were therefore built on the
ideal ground for a fortified encampment... And most of the factors which go into making a region ideal ground for fortifications don't change over even thousands of years. Another example is how for example the Japanese fortified the ancient Citadel of Mandalay in Burma in WW2. The British, when on the counter-offensive to drive them out of Burma, proceeded to bring up very heavy guns to direct-fire at nearly point blank range into the citadel, but it proved such a strong defensive position against even modern fire that it succeeded in resisting that and only fell when, in a feat worthy of a medieval siege that it had been built for, the British managed to send parties through the drainage system.
Which brings us to the point that though we may condemn this, if I was actually commanding a unit deployed in that area which needed a fortified position, I would invariably order my troops to dig in along the citadel of Babylon because it maximizes the defensive firepower and positional advantage of the unit (and thus the chance to save the lives of one's soldiers) under my command... This is doubtless exactly the thought process that led to the camp. The inexcusable part was the lack of care taken with the ruins once they were turned into a fortress; the fort as it was should have been respected and ideally the commanders should have made their homes in restored ruins as a symbol of that.
I blame this primarily on the fact that history and a sense of appreciation for past military epochs, that the sense of erudition and culture which was instilled in military officers in the curriculum of older periods, is no longer replicated today, in favour of a more businesslike approach to the art of war. Almost universally, officers were once also historians and had respect for the places around them even as they used them out of necessity in their operations, and many, many historical works were published by military officers. These days we have none of that and I think the lack of attention in the modern military academy to the historical dimension is in part to blame with the relatively callous handling of the American fortification of Babylon.