Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Some Write to Remember, Some to Forget

As many of you know Potomac Books released my first book, a memoir entitled, Father of Money: Buying Peace in Baghdad, earlier this year.  Seeing Father of Money on the bookstore shelf was the culmination of nearly three years of work and an incredible amount of good fortune.  The feedback from both veterans and civilians has been overwhelmingly positive, and I take pride in knowing that I succeeded in telling not only my story, but also a story that many of my fellow veterans can use to help facilitate their own narrative.
If there is one thing that I can validate, after travelling around and talking to hundreds of veterans, it is that everyone does have a story to tell. So, over the next few weeks, I am going to post some of the tips that I used to write Father of Money, starting today.  So, lets get started:
First question: what are we writing? 
For now, we will stick to the basic division, Fact or Fiction? 
Fact
Writing a non-fiction novel based on your own experience is a great way to spend some serious time figuring out who you are. Almost everyone can identify an event or moment that rebounded and changed their life for the better or worse.  The challenge is drawing out a meaningful lesson that will appeal to people outside of your immediate family.  Stories of self-help and overcoming obstacles have become fairly clichéd, but there are infinite ways to tell an interesting story other than those overdone formulas.
Fiction
Fiction writing is different from non-fiction in one important way - you have no idea where the story will take you.  I am working on a fiction novel now, that I hope to finish by early next year, and I have changed my mind about the pacing and the characters too many times to count.  However, you can always use a fiction book to make the points that you do not feel comfortable with in your non-fiction world.  Most writers crib from their real lives when they write fiction. For example, If you or a family member struggled to adjust after returning from Iraq or Afghanistan, you may feel more comfortable working that into a fiction book - which is perfectly fine.
Summary
Writing can be a great way to contextualize a process after it comes to a close. As Iraq winds down, it is natural for those who have been affected by this conflict to ponder how it all began. A pencil can be a great tool for unlocking some of your best revelations.

Next week: Timing

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Fighting for Anonymity


Soldiers take pride in their commitment to service, even long after that service is complete.  Usually, veterans relish the opportunities to come together and tell their stories of youth and glory.  So, why do these same veterans forego opportunities to share their stories with a larger audience?  At a recent reception in Washington DC found myself surrounded by a cluster of military officers from Central Europe. Some of them were still active, and some were not, but all of them had a chest full of ribbons, medals and accolades attesting to their days of service since past.  It occurred to me that I had seen more deployments than some of them and more combat than all of them. So why was I the only one not wearing any military decorations?
It may seem strange that a soldier, who spent his years in service overachieving for as many medals possible, will bury those same medals deep in his closet as soon as he is discharged. The relationship between the American soldier and the public is a complicated one.  There is no federal law which describes the method of wearing military medals and decorations with civilian clothes for veterans, although regulations state that veterans may wear medals on civilian clothing on Veteran’s Day, Memorial Day, and Armed Forces Day, as well as at "formal occasions of ceremony and social functions of a military nature."  Yet, even if validly authorized, there are essentially three reasons that a veteran would rather not display his medals in public.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Inkspots Reviews FOM

If you are a miltary or natsec professional and you are not reading Inkspots regularly, you are probably being described as a 'muppet' behind your back.  Read the blog, learn something, and see what they say about FOM.

"If you read one book on what guys on the ground faced during deployments to Iraq (and presumably Afghanistan as I have not been there), Father of Money should be it." Click here for the full review (and bookmark the page!)

Monday, September 26, 2011

IAVA Reviews FOM

"Part memoir and part military history, Jason Whiteley’s Father of Money is more of a Heart of Darkness-tale of personal introspection than a full, comprehensive description of the American occupation of Iraq..."

Read the rest of Jim Drury's review at IAVA

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Book Signing at the Army Ten-Miler

**ATTENTION DC RESIDENTS AND ARMY TEN-MILERS** 

Saturday, October 8, at the Barnes & Noble in Georgetown, I will be signing Father of Money: Buying Peace in Baghdad from 6-8p. 

This will be the last public book signing of 2011, and I hope to see you all there!

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Maclean's Review FOM

FATHER OF MONEY: BUYING PEACE IN BAGHDAD
by Jason Whiteley (REVIEW BY BRIAN BETHUNE)
 
Almost from the moment it began in 2003, the American led invasion of Iraq has spawned a flood of books on its causes and its course, but few have been as enlightening as this one. In March 2004, then- U.S. Army captain Whiteley was appointed governance officer for al-Dora, one of the most volatile districts in the violent Iraqi capital. His job was to establish and foster a local Iraqi-staffed council, one of the dozens expected to become the seeds that would blossom into functioning institutions in a self-governing state. The key problem facing Whiteley was that he represented one of the most hidebound bureaucracies (the Pentagon) ever known in a district with an imminent need for money and jobs, in a culture that functions by personal word of honour and exchange of favours, legal or otherwise.

Whiteley thought he got the message. Two months into his year-long posting, and finding his council was fast losing authority, unable to tap into any of the quasi-legal economic opportunities in its neighbourhood, he led a convoy of three Humvees of troops to a local scrapyard. There, his men seized a dozen drivers about to take a load of shattered Iraqi military equipment off to Turkey, while Whiteley personally tasered the foreman. When the boss arrived, Whiteley hit him up for an ongoing “tax” of $20,000 per shipment (payable to the council). Thus began Whiteley’s brief career as a player in the Iraqi system: known as “Abu Floos” (Father of Money), the captain was considered a man who kept his word and got things done.

It was exhilarating, Whiteley writes, but also a moral swamp. His quick fixes inevitably alienated one group or another, especially in the face of the larger American failure to establish basic order. When he returned stateside at the end of his tour, it was with  the same feeling of personal failure and the same desire to leave it all behind that seems to mark the entire occupation. 

(Click here to buy Father of Money)

Monday, August 15, 2011

Couple Thoughts on Riots and Iraqis

It has been a busy few weeks. I moved from London to Washington DC, Father of Money debuted on kindle, London burned, and Baghdad blew up. A couple observations.

1. The fact that riots occur among a wide swath of London disprove everything ever written about COIN.  You will not find an environment where there is more social support, policing capacity, etc, than London, and yet the insurgents looters still held sway for the better part of three days.  I guess we should direct more aid dollars their way, or maybe we finally have an AfPak endstate: when Islamabad looks like London the fight will be over (insert joke here, about how London already looks like a South Asian capital)

2. The Iraq bombings prove, yet again, that Iraq is well on its way to a military dictatorship.  You heard from me first, in this 2004 interview, Iraqis will accept the yoke if it means they will stop dying in markets.  This Ramadan, the blood-letting is about keeping people on edge enough to be happy when the new leader comes to power (and strips them of any ideas of liberty). 




Tuesday, July 12, 2011

A French Philosopher Sees a Japanese Film in Baghdad

Marcel Proust described involuntary memories as more important than voluntary memories, as they bring with them a component of emotion and feeling.  These so-called Proustian memories also imply a level of absolutism that voluntary memories do not. For example, because my feeling are so tightly wound in to the memory, it is difficult to acknowledge or accept that things may have occurred differently from how I experienced them.  I was keenly aware of this when I draft Father of Money, and I strove to be as faithful to the facts as possible.  I believe it is a highly accurate portrayal of the struggles in Baghdad in 2004.
However, one of the first people to read a draft of FOM, a highly-respect counter-insurgency specialist and Army Lieutenant Colonel, named LTC X, told me that he could not endorse such a book under any circumstances, and that it would likely generate a large amount of controversy.”
He went on to add that if published it, “You [Jason] would never work in Government again.”
It was shocking. This is from a man that I long-regarded as a mentor. On numerous occasions we discussed the shortcoming of various Army operations, one-time even explicitly discussing the same problems I wrote about in Father of Money.  When I had asked him how he proposed to deal with the problem of on-the-spot retribution or certain other obligations the Army was failing to meet in Iraq, he had replied “the Army has Captains for that.” 
This dismissive answer revealed volumes about the problems inherent in how our Army institutionalizes memory. We suffer from the Rashomon Effect.

The Rashomon effect is the effect of the subjectivity of perception on recollection, by which observers of an event are able to produce substantially different but equally plausible accounts of it.  It is named for Akira Kurosawa's film Rashomon, in which a crime witnessed by four individuals is described in four mutually contradictory ways.
How does the type of memory we summon affect the Rashomon Effect? For  people who have been in Iraq, at the level of company commander and below (lets call these tactical level), the lessons learned are deeply formed by involuntary memories. Their actions and reactions blur into large swathes of memory that is emotive and not readily recalled. For those at the higher levels (operational and strategic levels), the lessons learned in those early years are not as emotional and more subject to manipulation. These are the voluntary memories.
Whenever these two stories are told at the same time, different conclusions are highly likely. The tactical level guy, for example, may remember that each day in the street he felt a hardening of the Iraqi population, they were losing their dignity, and would eventually start fighting back.  The operational guy may remember that same time as a period of relative peace for which he received accolades from above. (there are many other variables here, I am just being illustrative)
This brings us back to LTC X who commented negatively about the approach taken in Father of Money.  If he were to view things from the perspective of his Proustian Memory, he may well find that our views are not so dissimilar, but we are telling a story from not only different viewpoints, but also different levels of consciousness. Consider the following contrast.
Recently, I received a review from an enlisted soldier with whom I served previously.  He was a smart guy in our battalion (each battalion gets a few), but we were not in Iraq at the same time. SGT Y (he will get his real name here when the Army lets him go in October) and I remember things similarly. His memories from my book, unlike LTC X, coincide with the narrative as I remember it. He writes:
“I was at FOB Falcon, not far from Dora, 5 years after you left and it really was still the same. I was on a transition team, so instead of bribing council members we were bribing Iraqi Army commanders and XO's. All the while standing idly by as they squandered a mint's worth of American dollars, grinning in our face and serving us tea as they misinformed us about their missions and delivered information to the enemy”
Which only leaves us with one question. If the book only resonates with people who had similar experiences, then why write Father of Money at all? What is the point? Why does this book matter to those who have no memories, involuntary or otherwise, of Baghdad's brutality?

Because we are compelled to seek the truth, and in the words of  SGT Y

“People need to know that there's not always a silver lining; they need people like you that have the wherewithal to tell the masses like it is and, subsequently, that we (the USG and military, collectively, that is) may not necessarily be the hero in this one. To tell them that the real heroes are the Iraqi common folk who, despite having EVERYTHING stacked against them, are still plugging away to keep their families fed, clothed, sheltered.”
In other words, the truth cannot be told by those who are consciously trying to tell a story. It must be cobbled together as it is remembered: spasmodically, episodically, and savage. Reading  Father of Money will challenge how you think about soldiers and Iraq.  Hopefully, the results will surprise you. 
Clich here to buy Father of Money: Buying Peace in Baghdad

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

We Meant Well Reviews FOM

Peter Van Buren, at the blog We Meant Well, knows more than most people about the  Father of Money.  Not only has he been around a few minutes (He served in the US Foreign Service for over 23 years), but he is passionate on the subject-matter. He is also a strident advoate for changing our state-building approach. 

By chance, Peter was responsible for the same piece of ground that I was in Iraq, albeit five years later. That fact results in a comment that I found tragically insightful while reading the  review at We Meant Well:

 "I [Peter] say that with some authority, as the same ground Whiteley covered, and many of the same characters, were in my own area of responsibility as a PRT Team Leader in Iraq 2009-2010. Five years after Whiteley left, al Dora remained a nasty, violent place."

There you have it. Five years, and countless "success stories" later, Iraq is more or less the way it was the day after we got there. The law of averages has prevailed and a long-term reality has consumed each short-term success.  Peter and I know this cycle.  It has outlasted both of us.   

For the full review click here.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Married to the Revolution

This weekend we remember the War for American Independence, a revolutionary act that inspires an annual surge of patriotism and summer barbecues.  I am also contemplating getting engaged, so I am mindful of a few comparisons between revolutions and marriages, namely,  they are both fun to plan, exciting from a distance, and passionate at the outset.  However, it takes a few years to see if either a marriage or a revolution will work.  Take the American Revolution, for example.
As a thrilling tale of daring bravado, the American Revolution is hard to beat, but, even if you are not Sarah Palin, it is easy to overlook some basic premises of revolution that are routinely underestimated.  Click on the jump to read five common perceptions about revolutions.  Chew these over while you have your spouse hand you a Bud Light.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Father of Money Reviews Begin....

A recent review from Military Review provides a good summary of Father of Money by using selected quotes. It is a solid account and I encourage you to have a read. If you order  the book, please feel free to leave your comments and questions here or over at the Father of Money homepage.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Fathers and Soldiers

Father’s Day summons a flood of mixed emotions for me. I am both a son and a father, though I am neither by choice.  I became a son through no decision of my own making, though at the cellular level I must have been present. I became a father in a moment of uncharacteristic abandon within months of my deployment to Iraq.

Being a combat soldier, becoming a father had no real effect on me. Nor did it outwardly affect any of the soldiers I fought with. People often speculate on why soldiers fight and why they sacrifices, but the answer that keeps turning up is that they fight for each other. Full stop.   I never once heard a soldier say, “Sir, I can’t drive the Humvee tonight, because I have kids.” I never heard that, because soldiers don’t think that way.  They can’t think that way. Although, for their kids’ sake, I wish they could.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Leave the Gun, Take the Baklava

Explosions are again rocking central Iraq, killing more United States soldiers.  The recent violence focuses the world’s attention on the impending U.S. exit from Iraq and highlights the disconnect between political rhetoric and political reality. 

These spates of violence sent messages that can be construed as an Iraqi demand for US withdrawal and a return to a pre-invasion sense of national identity and sovereignty.  Indeed, this is the message that most of the Iraqis carrying out the attacks feel they are delivering.  Likewise, Iraqi leaders, of both formal and informal groups, deliver ringing nationalistic speeches about occupation and American injustice.

Unbeknownst to the people in the street, however, the same Iraqi leaders who are extorting the ills of the American occupation are entreating the Americans to stay longer.  In a famous line from the Godfather, Don Corleone remarked that a man with a briefcase can steal more money than 99 men with guns.  In Iraq, the question is how much money a man with a briefcase can steal, if he also manipulates the gunmen.  Is it possible for men with the briefcases to both encourage, and bargain against, the gunmen?  In Iraq, it is not only possible, it is expected for the following reasons.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Explosive News from Southern Baghdad

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Recently Published Book: “Father of Money: Buying Peace in Baghdad”
In March 2004, Jason Whiteley was appointed the governance officer for Al Dora, one of Baghdad’s most violent districts. His job was to establish and oversee a council structure for Iraqis that would allow them to begin governing themselves. The nature of persuading Iraqis to support the coalition quickly progressed from simply granting them privileges to ignore curfews to a more complex relationship defined by illicit dealing, preferential treatment, and a vicious cycle of assassination attempts. In these streets of Al Dora, Whiteley became feared and loved as the man they called Abu Floos—or “Father of Money.”

June 10, 2011 -  – In his new book, former U.S. Army Capt. Jason Whiteley reveals the dark details of his time spent on the streets of Baghdad as a soldier rebuilding the Iraqi political system from the ground-up. He would discover that it would take more than American ideals to complete the task.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

No Country for Old Men?

Jana Brychtova and I combined forces to publish a controversial look at pursuing alleged war crimals.

Prevailing wisdom says that those accused of crimes against humanity should be pursued relentlessly and perpetually. This view is misguided. Below are eight common assertions made in favour of pursuing alleged war criminals and a reasoned look at why these assertions pervert the true goal of global peace and justice.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Father of Money hits the street!

June 11, Amazon and other major retailers will begin shipping Father of Money directly to your door.  Visit the link to see the early reader reviews and place your order. 




This promises to be one of the most controversial books to come out of Iraq, so reserve a copy and enter the debate. 

We welcome your thoughts here!

Monday, May 30, 2011

Quoted in Canada

Our good friends in Canada keep a keen eye on Iraq developments. A smoking ban is being considered in the Iraqi Parliament.

Unfortuntely this ban does not apply to smoking debris.

Yours truly serves as the voice of reason in this short piece from Macleans.

http://www2.macleans.ca/2011/05/23/butting-in-martin/

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Early Praise for the Father of Money

A few early copies have slipped out and the feedback has been tremendous. See below for a few of the early comments:

"Jason's story of Iraq is war as it actually is—far from a tale of duty, honor, god, and country, Jason's year in Iraq was filled with moral ambiguity, fraught with fragile loyalties, and progress that was frustratingly ephemeral. He documents the momentous challenges of the U.S. occupation from the ground level, the brotherhood of war, and the imperfect compromises that marked the intersection of the U.S. government and Iraqi culture."

Garrett M. Graff, author of "The Threat Matrix: The FBI at War in the Age of Global Terror."


"... a hugely enjoyable read and I couldn’t put it down until I finished the last page. It swept me along with the intensity of a great novel, yet it was filled with the bitter truths of reality."

Tom Roberts, Director - A Company of Soldiers, PBS Frontline

"Stunning. A timeless and brilliant exposé of the emotions of a soldier. A story about the stories that are rarely told. A fascinating insight into war-time Iraq. Art that moves you like it should; by an author that is truly avant-garde." - James R. Howe, Historian, University of Oxford

Visit http://www.fatherofmoney.com for the latest and don't forget to sign the guestbook!

Thursday, May 5, 2011

There Are No Songs About Tea

The Army marches to the cadence of coffee, literally. You know the one. "They say that in the Army, the coffee’s mighty fine." From the first day of basic training soldiers learn that breaking for coffee provides warmth, camaraderie, and, sometimes, a brief respite from the insanity. Ours is a coffee army. So, why have recent articles suggested that the military leadership in Afghanistan was overly influenced by tea, specifically, Three Cups of Tea, the beleaguered book by Greg Mortensen? Because it this is a good story, and if the Army runs on coffee the American media runs on scandal. Nonetheless, the criticism of the military leadership is not entirely unfounded. There are several reasons that the Army has recently migrated towards a lighter caffeine source.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

No Exit, No Problem

“♫Nowhere to run to baby, ♪ nowhere to hide. ♫” Those quintessential Vietnam -era lyrics from Martha and the Vandellas in 1965 describe well the passion with which the baby boomers assiduously avoid becoming stuck in political situations with “nowhere to run.” Being associated with a political quagmire akin to the Vietnam War is the kiss of death for political support for any contemporary military action. Accordingly, when the first U.S.-fired ordinance hit the ground in Libya, the question, “What is the exit strategy?” immediately exploded across the U.S. airwaves. The public wants to know, “Where can we run, baby?”

Read more at http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/2011/04/no-exit-no-problem/

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

War by any other name is War

In Starship Troopers, Robert Heinlein wrote that, “War is controlled violence, for a purpose.” After the recent military intervention in Libya there has been a rush in some circles to distinguish the purpose of this most recent episode of ‘controlled violence’ from those military offensives launched by the United States against Iraq and Afghanistan in 2003 and 2001, respectively. Analyst aplenty, have published observations on the normative use of military force and even provided frameworks for analyzing the latter half of Heinlein’s quotation. However, to better inform ourselves on the context of the question of whether or not to initiate ‘controlled violence’, we, as citizens, must also be certain that we have a common understanding of what is meant by war.

Read more at http://smallwarsjournal.com/blog/2011/04/war-by-any-other-name-is-war/