The Green Zone and Related Terms

hpst@earthlink.net hpst at EARTHLINK.NET
Fri Mar 31 15:24:47 UTC 2006


Out of curiosity is anything outside The Green Zone beyond the pale?

Page Stephens

> [Original Message]
> From: Baker, John <JMB at STRADLEY.COM>
> To: <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Date: 3/31/2006 10:03:51 AM
> Subject: The Green Zone and Related Terms
>
> ---------------------- Information from the mail header
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> Sender:       American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Poster:       "Baker, John" <JMB at STRADLEY.COM>
> Subject:      The Green Zone and Related Terms
>
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>
>         The 4/6/2006 issue of The New York Review of Books includes a
> brief discussion, on page 65, of Baghdad's Green Zone and some related
> terms:
>
>
>         <<Several people told me that the Green Zone's name was derived
> from military parlance:  when a soldier clears the chamber of his M-16,
> he is said to have his weapon "on green," while "red" means that a rifle
> is "locked and loaded" and ready to fire.  Hence, this relatively safe
> zone occupied by American "liberators" came to be known as the Green
> Zone, while everything else outside, where weapons were ubiquitous and
> gunfire was almost incessant, came to be known as the Red Zone.
>
>         When one first lands "inside the wire," as the world inside the
> Green Zone is known, one has the feeling of having gained access to some
> large resort in which soldiers have been turned into staff.>>
>
>
>         The Review of Books, in spite of its intellectual credentials,
> historically has not been a reliable guide to etymology.  (For example,
> "jazz" does not derive from the jasmine perfume worn by prostitutes.)
> Can some of our members, more knowledgeable than I about the military,
> confirm or rebut this information?
>
>
> John Baker
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org

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