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We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People (American Empire Project) Hardcover – September 27, 2011

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 277 ratings

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From a State Department insider, the first account of our blundering efforts to rebuild Iraq--a shocking and rollicking true-life tale of Americans abroad
Charged with rebuilding Iraq, would you spend taxpayer money on a sports mural in Baghdad's most dangerous neighborhood to promote reconciliation through art? How about an isolated milk factory that cannot get its milk to market? Or a pastry class training women to open cafés on bombed-out streets without water or electricity?
According to Peter Van Buren, we bought all these projects and more in the most expensive hearts-and-minds campaign since the Marshall Plan.
We Meant Well is his eyewitness account of the civilian side of the surge--that surreal and bollixed attempt to defeat terrorism and win over Iraqis by reconstructing the world we had just destroyed. Leading a State Department Provincial Reconstruction Team on its quixotic mission, Van Buren details, with laser-like irony, his yearlong encounter with pointless projects, bureaucratic fumbling, overwhelmed soldiers, and oblivious administrators secluded in the world's largest embassy, who fail to realize that you can't rebuild a country without first picking up the trash.
Darkly funny while deadly serious,
We Meant Well is a tragicomic voyage of ineptitude and corruption that leaves its writer--and readers--appalled and disillusioned but wiser.

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Editorial Reviews

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From the Author

Learn more, read my blog and see photos from Iraq illustrating many of the episodes in the book at wemeantwell.com!

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Metropolitan Books; First Edition (September 27, 2011)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 288 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0805094369
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0805094367
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 14.4 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.88 x 1.09 x 8.53 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 277 ratings

About the author

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Peter Van Buren
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Peter Van Buren returns with a deeply-researched anti-war novel, Hooper's War. Set in WWII Japan, Lieutenant Nate Hooper isn't sure he'll survive his war. And if he does make it home, he isn't sure he can survive the peace. He's done a terrible thing, and struggles to resolve the mistake he made alongside a Japanese soldier, and a Japanese woman who failed to save both men. At stake in this story of moral injury? Souls.

With allegorical connections to America's current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the reverse chronology telling of Hooper's War ("Fighting over the covers is better than remembering the empty side of the bed," Hooper says) turns a loss-of-innocence narrative into a complex tale of why that loss is inevitable in societies that go to war. Think Matterhorn and The Things They Carried, crossed with Catch-22 and Slaughterhouse Five.

A United States Foreign Service Officer (ret.), Peter Van Buren spent a year in Iraq. Following his first book, We Meant Well: How I Helped Lose the Battle for the Hearts and Minds of the Iraqi People, the Department of State began legal proceedings against him, falsely claiming the book revealed classified material. Through the efforts of the ACLU, Van Buren instead retired from the State Department with his First Amendment rights intact.

His second book, Ghosts of Tom Joad, A Story of the #99Percent is a novel about the social and economic changes in America after WWII and the decline of the blue collar middle class in the 1980s. The book anticipated the conditions that led many in America's Rust Belt to help elect Donald Trump.

Peter’s commentary has been featured in The New York Times, Reuters, Salon, NPR, Al Jazeera, Huffington Post, The Nation, TomDispatch, Antiwar.com, American Conservative Magazine, Mother Jones, Michael Moore.com, Le Monde, Japan Times, Asia Times, The Guardian (UK), Daily Kos, Middle East Online, Guernica and others. He has appeared on the BBC World Service, NPR's All Things Considered and Fresh Air, HuffPo Live, RT, ITV, Britain's Channel 4 Viewpoint, Dutch Television, CCTV, Voice of America, and more.

Learn more at http://www.wemeantwell.com and on Twitter at @wemeantwell


Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
277 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book humorous and witty, with an insightful perspective. They describe it as an enjoyable and informative read, filled with first-hand observations that resonate with them. Readers praise the writing quality as well-written, journalistic, and personal. However, some find the pacing frustrating and unengaging, while others consider it compelling and engaging. There are mixed opinions on the narrative quality - some find it accurate and realistic, while others feel it's inaccurate and unrealistic.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

47 customers mention "Humor"39 positive8 negative

Customers find the book humorous and insightful. They praise the witty, honest writing style with insights into bureaucracy. The book is described as tragic yet funny in the vein of great American satirists. The writing style shows wit, cleverness, and no-nonsense reporting.

"...well-written book, full of facts, wry humor and thoroughly depressing anecdotes about Van Buren's year in Iraq as a State Department Foreign Service..." Read more

"...While this particular book is a good, and sometimes hilarious, account of what was seen and done in the presence of the author, it suffers from a..." Read more

"...Van Buren's book is humorous, and easy reading...." Read more

"...well written, incisively accurate, wildly entertaining and witty, and full of first hand observations that brought back a lot of memories for me,..." Read more

40 customers mention "Insight"38 positive2 negative

Customers find the book informative and engaging. They appreciate the first-hand observations and stories that resonate with them. The style makes it an easy read for all audiences, providing a great overview and honest explanation of what we are doing in Iraq.

"This is a marvelously well-written book, full of facts, wry humor and thoroughly depressing anecdotes about Van Buren's year in Iraq as a State..." Read more

"...a little more compassion, this book could have been both an excellent source of wisdom as well as a good read." Read more

"...I liked the book and it told an honest story, but it's one of the few books I regret that the author made some money off of me." Read more

"...The book is easy reading, but filled with information about what has been happening in Iraq in our name." Read more

40 customers mention "Readability"40 positive0 negative

Customers find the book easy to read and engaging. They say it's an interesting look at the US diplomacy efforts in Iraq. The book is described as entertaining, witty, and well-written. Readers appreciate the chicken factory chapter and the author's humor.

"...While this particular book is a good, and sometimes hilarious, account of what was seen and done in the presence of the author, it suffers from a..." Read more

"...In short, this is a book that is both entertaining and disturbing." Read more

"...I liked the book and it told an honest story, but it's one of the few books I regret that the author made some money off of me." Read more

"...'s book is exceptionally well written, incisively accurate, wildly entertaining and witty, and full of first hand observations that brought back a..." Read more

26 customers mention "Writing quality"24 positive2 negative

Customers find the book well-written, informative, and easy to read. They appreciate the journalistic style and author's candor. The descriptions are accurate, and the book is straightforward without simplistic sloganeering or pompous predictions.

"This is a marvelously well-written book, full of facts, wry humor and thoroughly depressing anecdotes about Van Buren's year in Iraq as a State..." Read more

"...Van Buren's book is humorous, and easy reading...." Read more

"...The book is easy reading, but filled with information about what has been happening in Iraq in our name." Read more

"...I do recommend the book. Well-written and easy to read. You just have to suspend disbelief and scorn for the way things were run...." Read more

23 customers mention "Narrative quality"10 positive13 negative

Customers have different views on the narrative quality. Some find it an accurate account of mismanagement and its effects on a country. They appreciate the great story tone and brief chapters that recount specific incidents. Others feel the narrative lacks creativity and is not creative nonfiction, describing it as boring and sad.

"...It simply opened the door to fraud and corruption. Pointless projects, overwhelmed US soldiers, bureaucratic fumbling---it's all there...." Read more

"I do recommend this book, imperfect as it is, as a good first-person history of what I cannot help think will be seen as a tragic time in American..." Read more

"...Underneath, there is a level of tragedy and sadness, as clearly the author was affected by the amorality and immorality of wanting U.S. efforts to..." Read more

"...The story is told in brief chapters, each recounting a specific incident or aspect of life in Iraq...." Read more

5 customers mention "Pacing"0 positive5 negative

Customers find the book's pacing frustrating and engaging. They describe it as an eye-opening, sobering collection of cathartic blog posts. While imperfect, they recommend the book as a good first-person history, despite corruption, ignorance, and incompetence.

"I do recommend this book, imperfect as it is, as a good first-person history of what I cannot help think will be seen as a tragic time in American..." Read more

"...Sickening tales of lack of strategy combined with fraud, corruption and mismanagement...." Read more

"...At times the book feels like a collection of ranting, cathartic blog posts...." Read more

"...There are tales aplenty about graft, corruption, ignorance, and most of all incompetence in the ridiculous pursuit of transforming Iraq into a New..." Read more

Iraq...The Legacy
4 out of 5 stars
Iraq...The Legacy
I saw the book title while reviewing news, weather and sports on my Kindle. As such, a few comments now..and many more as I progress through the book.GARDEZ PRT, Gardez, Paktia Province, Afghanistan/2003The first PRT (February of 2003) in Afghanistan was the then called Fire Base Gardez, initially grouped together were 5th SFG Soldiers, Civil Affairs unit comprising of those from upstate New York and South Texas and a US State Department representative (Thomas P)..I came in early March as the USAID Field Program Officer.Follow on quickly were PRT's in Bamyan (where the giant sized Buddhas were until the Taliban destroyed them) and Kandahar. Over a period of years, the numbers of PRT's grew.With the invasion of Iraq in mid-March of 2003, the "resources" of the PRT at Gardez began to diminish.USAID is not a direct funding entity, but rather contracts with NGO's, IO's and other companies, like Louis Berger (at that time the singular contractor for infrastructure development in Afghanistan) as an implementer. As such, the word "contractor" may imply to one of those organizations. The "contractor" designation became more prominent (in a perhaps negative implication) as security firms were added to the contractor designation in Iraq.The United Nations did not support the PRT initiative (at least when I was there), because the UN mission initiatives are normally after a conflict..not during (although, during the war in Bosnia, the UN had a significant presence). Because there was no security..there were few, if any NGO's or IO's operating freely in SE Afghanistan. The killing of the ICRC field representative in February of 2003 cast a security shadow over SE AfghanistanI suspect the perception of "success" of the PRT program in Afghanistan led to the implementation of those PRT's in Iraq. I was asked about moving to Iraq..but, after my experience within USAID (a State Department asset), I declined (added to the mission was the fact that after six months, USAID could only offer six (6) days of leave).Let me close for the moment to say, many fine and dedicated people (emphasis added) worked both the PRT's in Afghanistan or Iraq. But, many after only a short amount of time became to realize that the pace of reconstruction and development...and success will never materialize at least to the expectations....so they just did their time, collected the pay and went back to the States.Like Tom Ricks who wrote Fiasco..Peter's view is from the ground truth level...the implementation metric of the Bush era promise to "win the hearts of minds" of the Iraqi people..which really should of been.."buying..or attempting to buy the hearts and minds" of the Iraqi people.From program to grow wheat in Al Anbar Province to other absolutely ridiculous hearts and minds programs resulted in billions (lost)..Peter does an excellent job of explaining an attempt to bring infrastructure development, employment, sustained peace through democracy..but, with little or no success. The Iraqi's just "bled" us financially..and that price will be paid for decades to come.Peter's inside perspective of the PRT..and as a State Department "lifer", he can readily look and reflect on issues that those of us on the "outside" cannot..I enjoyed the book..(in part sadly) in hopes my experience in the early days of USAID in Afghanistan wouldchange with successes in Iraq some six (6) years later. However, that was not to be.The infection of bureaucratic "BS" apparently became even more pronounced with in the PRT initiative as the years progressed.I only hope people will not forget who the leadership was during the war in Iraq...nor forget about the nearly 4469 men & women of the US military that lost their lives...and the other thousands now suffering with horrific life changing wounds. Their days in Iraq are not forgotten..for everytime they look down at lost limbs or scars..they remember...each and every day.Let us hope that the historical accounts of Iraq, especially from the hearts and minds perspective, as Peter so correctly defines is not lost.For many of us who have served in Iraq...we found the Bush 41 decided not to "invade" Iraq, per se because his adviser's indicated that doing so would result in "owning" the country. Yet, Bush 43 decided to totally invade Iraq based on weapons of mass destruction and the fact Iraq could attack the US in 45 minutes.And, Peter, if you read this....after my first day on the ground in SE Afghanistan/March of 2003, I secured a long gun and a pistol There was no way I would delegate my security to someone who would be more worried about his security at that moment than mine.Gardez PRT, Paktia, Afghanistan/2003 (Sudan, Nuna Mts./2002; Afgh/2003;Iraq/2005;Sudan, Juba/2007-08;Uganda/2010 (Balkans (Brcko/Posavina)96-97; Haiti/95
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2017
    I first became acquainted with the work of Peter van Buren when I read Ghosts of Tom Joad: A Story of the #99 Percent about six months ago. It is a devastating portrait of the impact of globalization and deindustrialization on one small town in the Ohio River valley. I gave the book my special “6-star, plus” rating, only the third one of some 1500 reviews. I also immediately ordered this book, on Van Buren’s year in Iraq, feeling he would also have something incisive to say, and he does. Overall, I’ve read several other books on America’s involvement in Iraq, from Thomas Rick’s aptly named Fiasco: The American Military Adventure in Iraq, 2003 to 2005 to Rajiv Chandrasekran’s Imperial Life in The Emerald City: Inside Iraq's Green Zone. Van Buren’s work is set several years later than these other works, covering his one year in Iraq, in 2009. Things have gotten no better. Self-delusion has become even more finally honed.

    Van Buren was a Foreign Service Officer (FSO), with the State Department, with an emphasis on the past tense, since as the Boston globe noted, this is a “burn-his-bridges” book. The author notes that there are more people in American military bands than FSOs. Motivated by both the carrot and the stick, he went to Iraq, purported to “win the hearts and minds of the Iraqi people” as the sub-title states, with all the doomed implications that phrase conveys from the Vietnam War. He would spend the year as part of an “embedded Provincial Reconstruction Team” (ePRT) at two FOBs (Forward Operating Basis), Hammer and Falcon. It was (sorta) “life in the field,” without the glitz, glamor, or flush toilets that were in the Emerald City. Ah, but they brought in the “Third World Nationals” to do the dirty work.

    How could the United States spend $63 billion on “nation building,” far more than was spent on the Marshall Plan (on an inflation adjusted basis) to get war-devastated Germany and Japan back on their feet, with so little to show for it? Van Buren explains. There seemed to be a willful effort to “forget about the basics,” that is, ensuring that the Iraqi people had safe drinking water, functioning 24-hour a day electricity, proper sewage and garbage removal, and day-to-day security. Instead, a library of American classics was provided, in Arabic translation, and was promptly dumped behind a school. Schemes to improve milk production, keep bees, and hold art shows were conducted. All good ideas, in isolation, and might work if the basics were in place, but they never were. A women’s health clinic was started, certainly a great idea, but then it closed down after six months as the “hot idea of the day” in the Emerald City moved on to something else, and follow-up funding was not provided.

    The chapter that received my most marks of emphasis in the margins is “Economic Conference Blues.” Van Buren leaves the relative sanity of his FOB for the never-never land of unreality in the Emerald City were the Embassy’s “grass is always greener.” I see him sitting in the back of the room, trying not to scream, and jotting down “sanity-preserving” observations: “…people who incestuously briefed one another- all of the facts, none of the understanding, the big picture, our ‘legacy.’ The new adjective of choice was ‘robust.’” “Will plan webinars and roundtable discussions, maybe a blog, oh yes, a blog is modern, get an intern on it, they know this online stuff.” “Task one: Suspend disbelief, rewire your brain, accept that people at the Embassy who never stray outside the Green Zone tell you about Iraq, the place you live 24/7.” Van Buren describes how a new briefer, just in from Washington, commits (career) suicide on stage by telling the truth about what is really occurring, providing a handy formula: “Corruption= Monopoly + Discretion – Accountability.” Ain’t that the truth?

    I am currently watching Ken Burn’s new series on the The Vietnam War: A Film By Ken Burns and Lynn Novick Season 1, and I believe it is an essential accompaniment for this book, with the core takeaway being one that Karl Marx, of all people, first proposed, concerning Louis Napoleon: “Hegel says somewhere that that great historical facts and personages recur twice. He forgot to add: ‘Once as tragedy, and again as farce.’” So, so many mistakes that America made in Southeast Asia were repeated, two generations later, in Southwest Asia, “as farce”. Not exactly the way to get over “the Vietnam syndrome,” as Bush 41 proclaimed we had done.

    I had a problem with Van Buren’s title. No doubt, a few did try, and try hard, but most merely ignored and even suppressed the reality in front of them, in order to successfully have their “career card” stamped: “a good player.” And I definitely have a problem with Van Buren’s assessment that Michael Herr’s Dispatches: “remains the best book ever written about the personal experience of being at war.”

    Despite the above reservations, I still consider Van Buren’s account an essential 5-star, plus read.
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on November 4, 2019
    This is a marvelously well-written book, full of facts, wry humor and thoroughly depressing anecdotes about Van Buren's year in Iraq as a State Department Foreign Service Officer in charge of some reconstruction projects in that war-torn country.

    Van Buren starts us right out with one absurdity from the Bush years. US tax payers spent $88,000 to get certain classics ("Huckleberry Finn, Moby Dick," etc). translated into Arabic to encourage Iraqi children to attain literacy skills. The truckload of books arrived, but no third party vendor could be found, so the books were just dumped outside behind some school. And that was that.

    Van Buren's book was published in 2011, and up to that time, the US taxpayer had forked over 63 billion dollars for rebuilding the war torn country that we had just destroyed and were still destroying while the supposed rebuilding was going on.

    Thousands of dollars were spent to bring independence to women, something that most of them didn't even want. One group was taught to make pastries, so that they could set up little shops. Unfortunately, after their training, there was no water and electiricity in their area, so they could never get their businesses going. This was one of what the US called "Empowering Women" projects.

    Projects were evaluated by one criteria only--how much money was spent on it. The more you spent, the better your project. Van Buren was chastized for trying to save money. Of course, this did not make for better projects. It simply opened the door to fraud and corruption.

    Pointless projects, overwhelmed US soldiers, bureaucratic fumbling---it's all there.The obscene amount of money paid to contractors (50,000 of them inflitrating the country like a warm of locusts, was shocking beyond belief.

    The US Embassy in Iraq is larger than the Vatican, with 104 acres, 22 buildings, a 4 story atrium, built around 2003, after Bush's invasion. The Ambassador at the time didn't like the desert ambience, so gardeners were hired and grass planted to turn the lawn around the main Embassy building green .When that didn't work, sod was flown in from Kuwait, at an estimated cost of between two and five million dollars.Hundreds of thousands of gallons of water had to be used to keep the lawn hydrated. Palm trees were trucked in and planted as well. Van Buren writes, "We made things in Iraq look the way we wanted then to look, water shortages throughout the rest of the country be damned. The grass was the perfect allegory for the whole war."

    Meanwhile, the average Iraqi had no consistent water or elecrtricity. Most claimed that the quality of life under Saddam Hussein was far better than life under the America.

    .I wonder how much longer the US is going to keep repeating this nation-destroying, nation-rebuilding insanity.
    6 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Benderstyle
    5.0 out of 5 stars Smile and wave
    Reviewed in Germany on November 5, 2018
    Dieses Buch ist geeignet, auch den festesten Glauben an die Vernunft zu erschüttern. Eine niederschmetternde, witzige, einfühlsame und vor allem von der ersten bis zur letzten Seite spannende Abrechnung mit der "Reconstruction" nach Bushs Irak-Abenteuer. Selbst, wenn nur ein Drittel der geschilderten Ereignisse der Wahrheit entspricht, bleibt noch immer eine haarsträubende Irrfahrt durch eine Nachkriegspolitik, die von schnelllebigen Business-Zyklen und Desinteresse bestimmt ist (und an der mittel- oder gar langfristigen Realität zwangsläufig scheitern muss). Und doch schafft Van Buren den Spagat, mehr zu sein als Chronist einer zynisch-ironischen Posse. Er fühlt mit, er bereut, er übernimmt Verantwortung, und manchmal, manchmal sieht er sogar ein wenig Hoffnung. Unbedingt lesen.
  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amusing yet scary
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 1, 2017
    From a textual perspective this is a well paced, articulately written book. The author is clearly a accomplished writer.

    From a content point of view it was rather worrying how do much at stake in the sense of a country was broken into metrics and data which had no meaning to reality.
    This may be because the although the effort is there the right intentions are not.
  • Greg Hunter
    5.0 out of 5 stars Funniest non fiction book about a holocaust I have ever read.
    Reviewed in Canada on May 9, 2013
    As funny as "The Good Soldier Schweck" - only this story is non fiction (well except for the title).

    You won't be able to put it down - and damn where were we when we could have got on the gravy train of reconstruction in Iraq - anyone got any connections with the US government ? - I have a great idea for a chicken processing plant in Syria (or could be adapted for North Korea or Iran or Chad or anywhere we invade to bring prosperity to the people).
    One person found this helpful
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  • Bob smith
    5.0 out of 5 stars When you suppress a people and their not happy about it!!
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 20, 2015
    Someone in the pentagon has an idea!
    This is what happens on the ground.
  • Edward J Towse
    4.0 out of 5 stars Should be read by a large number of people.
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 17, 2014
    This book explains the great difficulty that an occupying power has when trying to relate to a population of overrun people.