http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2007/05/18/cpa_documents/?source=rss> The secret Iraq documents my 8-year-old found
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> Editor's note: The document discussed in this story can be viewed here, both with and without its hidden text.
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> By Pete Moore
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> POOL/REUTERS
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> U.S. Iraq administrator L. Paul Bremer, left, greets Jacab Kirk of Cusick, Wash., in Baghdad during a meeting with the 3rd Squadron 2nd ACR, February 3, 2004.
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> May 18, 2007 | I'm a political scientist, and I've spent many hours rooting through documents to study the bureaucracies that once, not so long ago, ran various British colonial outposts in the Middle East. Back in the days when occupation governments dealt in paper, there was always a chance that you'd find a surprise in these cobwebbed mountains of folders, ledgers and official reports. There were sometimes notes scribbled in pencil in the margins of books, and it was not unheard of to open a dusty old volume and have a personal letter fall out. Through such fortunate mistakes researchers could piece together the unofficial, off-the-record history of empire.
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> When I started studying the massive archive of the Coalition Provisional Authority, the American occupation government that ruled Iraq from April 21, 2003, to June 28, 2004, I expected my experience to be different. I didn't think any letters would fall in my lap, because the archive is paperless. The first archive of occupation created during the IT era, the CPA's virtual history can be found online at www.cpa-iraq.org, on thousands of pages that each begin "Long live the new Iraq!"
> But I forgot to factor in the ubiquity of human error, and of Microsoft Word. It turns out the IT era really is different, after all. It took my 8-year-old son just a few seconds to shake loose some hidden history from within the official transcript of the CPA...........