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British Paper Reports
U.S. 
Troops 'vandalise' ancient city of Ur in 
Iraq
Ed Vulliamy
Sunday May 18, 2003 The Observer 
[Excerpted]
One of the greatest wonders of civilisation, and 
probably the world's most 
ancient structure - the Sumerian city of Ur in 
southern Iraq - has been 
vandalised by American soldiers and airmen, 
according to aid workers in the 
area. 
Land immediately adjacent to Ur has been chosen 
by the Pentagon for a 
sprawling airfield and military base. Access is 
highly selective, screened 
and subject to military escorts, which - even if 
agreed - need to be arranged 
days or weeks in advance and carefully skirt the 
areas of reported damage. 
Ur is believed by many to be the birthplace of 
the prophet Abraham. It was 
the religious seat of the civilisation of Sumer 
at the dawn of the line of 
dynasties which ruled Mesopotamia starting about 
4000 BC. Long before the 
rise of the 
Egyptian, 
Greek or Roman empires, it 
was here that the wheel was 
invented and the first mathematical system 
developed. Here, the first poetry 
was written, notably the epic Gilgamesh, a 
classic of ancient literature. 
The most prominent monument is the best preserved 
ziggurat - stepped pyramid 
- in the Arab world, initially built by the 
Sumerians around 4000 BC and 
restored by Nebuchadnezzar II in the sixth 
century BC. 
The Pentagon has elected to build its massive and 
potentially permanent base 
right alongside the site, so that the view from 
the peak of the ziggurat - 
more or less unchanged for 6,000 years - will be 
radically altered. 
Each hour, long convoys of trucks heave gravel 
and building materials through 
checkpoints and the barbed wire perimeter extends 
daily. 
There are reports that walls have been damaged by 
spray-painted graffiti, 
mostly patriotic or other slogans, and regimental 
mottos. One graffiti reads: 
'SEMPER FE' - Always Faithful - the motto of the 
Marines, who stormed through 
this region on their way to Baghdad, and form a 
contingent at the base.
The Army Public Affairs office at Ur refused to 
speak to The Observer.
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2003-05-20 Tue 18:24ct