Truths of a Lost War
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
DIGG THIS
This is
part 2 of a dispatch on the Bush administration and Iraq. Part 1
was Losing
the Home Front. One of the sections below is devoted to Riverbend,
the pseudonymous "girl blogger" of Baghdad. For it, I read the collection
of her blog entries that the Feminist Press at CUNY published in
2005, Baghdad
Burning, Girl Blog from Iraq,
and then the newest volume, Baghdad
Burning II, More Girl Blog from Iraq,
just now being published. These represent an unparalleled record
of the American war on, and occupation of, Iraq (and Riverbend writes
like an angel). The two volumes are simply the best contemporary
account we are likely to have any time soon of the hell into which
we've plunged that country. I can't recommend them too highly.
Fiasco Then,
Fiasco Now: Why
Baghdad Will Keep Burning
Are we now
officially out of our minds? On Tuesday, General George W. Casey,
commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, and Zalmay Khalilzad, our ambassador
to Iraq, gave a joint
press conference in Baghdad that was all for home consumption.
By home, I mean Washington DC. I mean Indiana. I mean Texas. Baghdad's
Green Zone was essentially a stage set for a political defense of
the Bush presidency.
If the news
hadn't been quite so grim, this tandem's act might have qualified
as an Abbott and Costello comedy routine, including the moment when
the lights
went out while "gunfire and bomb blasts echoed around the
city" thanks to our inability to resuscitate Iraqi electricity
production. In fact, the
New York Times just reported that, on some projects,
more than 50% of U.S. reconstruction dollars are being spent on
"overhead" as, for months at a time, whole reconstruction teams
sit idly with the meter going waiting to begin work.
Some Democratic
critics had been calling on the Bush administration for a timetable
for withdrawal from Iraq. Well, a timetable they got (though Ambassador
Khalilzad preferred to call it a "timeline"). The catch was: The
hopeless, essentially powerless Iraqi "government" inside Baghdad's
Green Zone was to deliver that timeline as a pre-election present
to a disgruntled American public. Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki
himself would produce it with genuine "benchmarks" for upping oil
production and splitting oil revenues, for disarming and dismantling
Shiite militias and police death squads, and for negotiating with
Sunni rebels.
Not only that,
Maliki would have his "plan" in place (perhaps for the Iraqis to
withdraw from their own country) "before the end of the year"
and this was just one of a welter of mini-schedules offered by the
ambassador and general that would shove Iraqi matters at least beyond
November 7th, if not into the relatively distant future. The ambassador,
for instance, assured Americans that all those benchmarks would
be met and "significant progress" achieved "in the course of the
next twelve months" the slight catch being: "assuming that
the Iraqi leaders deliver on the commitments that they have made."
General Casey
chimed in with his own timeline: "And it's going to take another
12 to 18 months or so until I believe the Iraqi security forces
are completely capable of taking over responsibility for their own
security." ("Still probably with some level of support from us.")
Probably? These are the same forces some of whose battalions "demobilized"
rather than accept transfer assignments to work with Americans in
the dangerous streets of distant Baghdad. These are battalions that
can have 3050%
of their troops either on leave, AWOL, or perhaps as ghost soldiers
for whom commanders receive pay?
Ambassador
Khalilzad finished off his Arabian Nights version of a press
conference introduction with assurances that "victory" was possible
and "success" achievable in the foreseeable future. The solution
was simple: "Iraqi leaders must step up to achieve key political
and security milestones on which they have agreed." (There's a new
ad-jingle-style line to replace our President's "As the Iraqis stand
up, we will stand down": "As the Iraqi leaders step up, we will…")
Like some
genie from a bottle, Prime Minister Maliki, our recalcitrant "partner,"
who only the previous week had to check
with George Bush to make sure he still held his job, promptly
stood up at a
rival news conference and "slammed" American officials for demanding
a timeline. ("I affirm that this government represents the will
of the people and no one has the right to impose a timetable on
it.") Still, he seemed to grasp the essence of the message the ambassador
and general were sending out: "Al-Maliki said he believed the U.S.
talk of timelines was driven by the upcoming U.S. midterm election.
‘We are not much concerned with it.'" Once all those American purple
fingers fade, look for a new
spike in coup
rumors in Baghdad.
The only evidence
General Casey offered of Iraqi fortitude was the news that 300 members
of their security forces had died over the Ramadan holiday "in defense
of their country." (In a gesture of American cross-cultural sensitivity,
he referred to them as "martyrs.") In the meantime, while waiting
for that miracle moment when the Iraqi non-Army and militia-infiltrated
police would truly "stand up" for Maliki's non-government, the general
hinted at a familiar solution: Bring in more
U.S. troops. Gen. Casey put it this way: "Now, do we need more
troops to do that? Maybe. And as I've said all along, if we do,
I will ask for the troops I need, both coalition and Iraqis." Expect
that "maybe" to turn into various stop-loss orders and reservist
call-ups soon after November 7th.
So think of
Tuesday's dog-and-pony show as "the light at the end of the tunnel"
news conference. And think of Prime Minister Maliki as a poor stand-in
for the recalcitrant-to-American-wishes South Vietnamese President
Ngo Dinh Diem, assassinated in a U.S.-backed military coup in 1963,
after which it was all downhill.
Meanwhile,
our chameleon President was in Florida visiting a company that produces
devices to detect roadside bombs. No longer was he the plodding,
"stay
the course" George Bush; now, he was the maestro of "change,"
a darting, dashing Wile E. Coyote of a president, zipping off a
cliff while saying
things like: "We're constantly changing. The enemy changes,
and we change. The enemy adapts to our strategies and tactics, and
we adapt to theirs. We're constantly changing to defeat this enemy."
Unlike the
President, Ambassador Khalilzad and General Casey undoubtedly know
that they are putting on an act for the TV screens back home, that
this is a moment to say whatever a desperate administration considers
necessary to bring voters back into the fold. This is policy as
vaudeville, a farce for everyone except those "martyrs," the Americans
dying in Iraq, and, of course, millions of Iraqi civilians who are
unlikely to feel mollified by General Casey's lame reassurance "that
90 percent of the sectarian violence in Iraq takes place in about
a 30-mile radius from the center of Baghdad."
The Vietnam
Analogy
In the most
hallucinatory moment of a news conference in which everyone must
have been inhaling something, Gen. Casey offered this summary of
the Iraqi War thus far:
"The
American people already know what a magnificent job the men and
women of their armed forces are doing here, and we continue to be
grateful for their continuing support. But they should also know
that the men and women of the armed forces here have never lost
a battle in over three years of war. That is a fact unprecedented
in military history."
For old Vietnam-era
hands, this had a ringingly familiar (and hollow) sound to it. From
the beginning, the Bush administration has had a knack for highlighting
how unfinished America's Vietnam business still is. In planning
their war, they had the "mistakes" of Vietnam on the brain and attempted
to reverse them rather systematically (no body counts, no body bags,
etc.). It didn't matter. The Vietnam War returned to American consciousness
(along with all
the familiar Vietnam-era terms) within days of the invasion
of Iraq and has never gone away again, not because Vietnam and Iraq
are interchangeable pieces of a historical puzzle, but because that
almost four-decade-old war remains an American obsession.
Now, the Vietnam
analogy is front and center again, thanks to the
President's response to a question about the Tet Offensive.
But as General Casey's comment indicates, many top U.S. officials
remain on Vietnam auto-pilot. Perhaps the commonest claim of American
commanders in Vietnam was exactly the one the general brought up
Tuesday. "Unprecedented in history"? Hardly, according to Vietnam-era
commanders who insisted that they had never lost a battle in those
years of endless war. Such a claim has all the advantages of rolling
cluelessness about the nature of guerrilla warfare and a stab-in-the-back
theory into a single package.
This brings
to mind a story from the Vietnam era, as written up in the March-April
2005 Military Review: "While negotiating in Hanoi a few days
before Saigon fell, U.S. Army Colonel Harry Summers, Jr. [later
author of On
Strategy: A Critical Analysis of the Vietnam War], said
to a North Vietnamese colonel, ‘You know, you never defeated us
on the battlefield.' The Vietnamese colonel replied, ‘That may be
so, but it is also irrelevant.'"
Think of it
this way: With the help of the Vietnam experience, our top generals
are already beginning to create their own exit-strategies from this
war. Along Vietnam lines, their tale will be simple enough: We won.
They (still to be defined but leading candidates include Donald
Rumsfeld and Pentagon civilian bosses, the media, and the American
public) lost. We wuz betrayed! Talk about incipient "martyrs."
Let me suggest
to the non-generals among us, two Vietnam analogies that have yet
to arise but couldn't be more relevant. Think of them as "the bloodbath"
and "the non-withdrawal withdrawal" analogies.
The bloodbath
was a constant companion of Americans in the later Vietnam years.
Vietnamese civilians had, by then, died by the hundreds of thousands.
Huge swaths of the Vietnamese (as well as Cambodian and Laotian)
countryside were bombed and napalmed as well as shelled into a state
of near uninhabitability. "Free fire zones" were declared in rural
areas of a largely peasant land and treated exactly as the term
indicates. "The bloodbath" as an image referred to none of this,
but to something that had not yet arrived.
In his memoirs,
Richard Nixon tells how Alexander Haig informed him of intelligence
information indicating that the North Vietnamese and the National
Liberation Front (the Vietcong) had "instructed their cadres the
moment a cease-fire is announced to kill all of the opponents in
the area that they control. This would be a murderous bloodbath."
This sea of blood to come, constantly thrown in the collective faces
of those who wanted the U.S. out of Vietnam, deflected attention
from the nature of the struggle at hand. As an image, it was certainly
both a projection of American fears and American wishes, for the
bloodbath-to-come promised to cleanse those involved in the bloodbath
then in progress (as "victory" too would have done, had it ever
arrived, and as the unpredicted Cambodian genocide would do in the
years to come).
We find ourselves
in a surprisingly comparable situation today. As the recent Lancet
study figures (or even the more "modest" ones at Iraq
Body Count) indicate, there is a bloodbath of staggering proportions
underway in Iraq with no end in sight. Now, as then, "victory"
despite Ambassador Khalilzad's use of the word and our President's
love for it is inconceivable. Now, as then, a future bloodbath
deflects attention from the present one and from withdrawal possibilities.
The Iraqi
future bloodbath happens to go by the name of "civil war." Of course,
an actual civil war is underway there, but the claim has long been
that, whatever blood is now being spilled, it will be nothing compared
to what might happen if the U.S. military, the last bulwark between
bloody-minded Sunni, Shiite, and Kurdish enemies, were withdrawn.
That would mean, as Sen. John McCain put it back
in 2004, "all-out civil war… and the violence [we] see today
will pale in comparison to the bloodletting." As Robert Kaplan wrote
in a recent Atlantic
Magazine while arguing against any kind of withdrawal, "Iraq
may be closer to an explosion of genocide than we know. An odd event,
or the announcement of pulling 20,000 American troops out, might
trigger it."
Of course,
this is but one possible scenario we humans, who hardly have flawless
records when it comes to prediction, can project into the future
and yet there is no way to disprove such a possibility because it
has yet to happen. The problem is that it stands not as one possibility
among many (or even among many gradations of bloodletting), but
as a (capital F) Fact, a given, a sure thing, and so as a powerful
way to disarm all serious discussion of withdrawal.
The non-withdrawal
withdrawal plan was a commonplace of the Vietnam years. Then,
"withdrawal" regularly involved not departure but all sorts of departure-like
maneuvers from bombing pauses that led to fiercer bombing
campaigns to negotiation offers never meant to be taken up to a
Nixon-era "Vietnamization" plan in which American ground troops
were actually withdrawn, but only as our air war was intensified.
Each gesture of withdrawal allowed the war planners to fight a little
longer, to hope a little longer for some glimmer of "success" to
emerge.
As the pressure
for timetables and some form of phased withdrawal ratchets up in
Iraq, you will certainly see the same sort of thing "withdrawal"
plans, like the one former State Department official Richard Armitage
recently
suggested, that will take endless (reversible) years to complete.
A five-year withdrawal plan is not a withdrawal plan. It's a pacification
plan for the "home front," a way to keep on keeping on.
These are
among the possible endgame Vietnam analogies that are likely to
arise. Unfortunately, that endgame could take a while. After all,
if the Tet Offensive was the "turning point" in the Vietnam War,
the war itself lasted almost as long after Tet as before, with almost
as many American casualties.
How Long
Has Baghdad Been Burning?
In that press
conference, Ambassador Khalilzad said: "My message today is straightforward:
Despite the difficult challenges we face, success in Iraq is possible
and can be achieved on a realistic timetable." By "we," he meant
"the American people," but at this late date what exactly can "success"
mean for an Iraqi? Or, to put it another way, with the likelihood
of somewhere between 400,000 and 900,000+ "excess deaths" since
the invasion of 2003 (and with morgues, urban killing fields, and
rivers still filling with bodies), what is the value of one Iraqi
life?
This question
has been on my mind these last weeks because one Iraqi life had
come to mean something to me. And I wasn't alone.
She arrived
online on Sunday, August 17, 2003, just over four months after Baghdad
was occupied by American troops. "So this is the beginning for me,
I guess," was her first sentence. "I never thought I'd start my
own weblog… I'm female, Iraqi, and 24. I survived the war. That's
all you need to know. It's all that matters these days anyway."
Reading that passage over now still gives me a little chill.
She took the
pseudonym Riverbend, called her blog Baghdad
Burning, and we did learn a bit more about her over the years:
that, like many Iraqi women, she had worked as a computer
programmer, a self-styled "geek"; that she had lost her job soon
after the war ended as hostility toward women in the workplace grew;
that she was a Sunni (though for a long time she clung to the hope
that Iraqis would not make religious affiliations their identity)
and believed in God; that she did not wear a hijab or headscarf;
that she lived in a middle-class neighborhood in Baghdad with her
beloved younger brother "E" (who would soon be sporting a pistol
for protection) and her parents in a world that was slowly, slowly
slipping away. We learned that she had spent some years of her youth
abroad, though not where.
We know, from
a rare e-interview she did with Lakshmi
Chaudhry at Alternet, that she started her "girlblog from Iraq"
at the suggestion of Salam Pax, a well known male Iraqi blogger
and wrote it in English stunning, American-style English
because she didn't want to "preach to the choir" in Arabic.
We learned a little about her life as a young reader (Jane Austen
to John LeCarré) and about the limitations her parents put on her
TV watching as a child. Bits and pieces slipped out. But, in the
end, she was generally as good as her word. Signing off on each
post as "river," she offered remarkably little more in the way of
biographical information but so unimaginably much more about
everything else.
About what
it felt like over several years, for instance, to have the lights
of civilization literally blink off; about how it felt to lose the
things city dwellers normally take for granted: the water in your
house (and hence the ability to bathe or wash your clothes), your
electricity (and so the ability to turn on the air conditioning
in 120-degree heat or even post the blog entry you just wrote);
the telephone, and so the ability to speak to friends and relatives,
especially as your house became something close to your prison.
She taught us what it was like to retreat to the roof in the heat
of the evening and watch the explosions going off in your own city;
what it was like to become an expert in telling one kind of weapons
fire from another.
It took Washington
Post reporter Thomas
Ricks until this year to produce his bestseller Fiasco.
Riverbend has produced her version of fiasco then (as well as fiasco
now) on the fly and if you read her online, you generally learned
about the disasters of the moment first there, not in our papers:
the first deaths of those she knew; the first brutal, humiliating
U.S. house searches and arrests of neighbors; the first kidnappings;
the first mentions of the rise of fundamentalism; the first signs
of an incipient civil war and ethnic cleansing campaign; the first
mention of horrors at Abu Ghraib prison; the first suicide bombs
and car bombs; on and on. On the fiasco of L. Paul Bremer, then
our viceroy in Baghdad, disbanding the Iraqi Army, she wrote on
August 24th, 2003: "The first major decision [Bremer] made was to
dissolve the Iraqi army. That may make sense in Washington, but
here, we were left speechless."
Hers were
often the quietest of descriptions of the comings and goings
inside a single house, but they were also war reports. By the nature
of things, as the explosions and chaos crept ever closer, as they
morphed into the familiar wallpaper of her life, she became, even
inside her own home, a war correspondent on the frontlines of some
unnamed conflict. ("When Bush ‘brought the war to the terrorists,'
he failed to mention he wouldn't be fighting it in some distant
mountains or barren deserts: the frontline is our homes… the ‘collateral
damage' are our friends and families.") Her prize-winning blog entries,
gathered into two books, Baghdad
Burning, Girl Blog from Iraq, and more recently Baghdad
Burning II, More Girl Blog from Iraq, add up to the best
account we have of what it's been like to live through the American
"liberation" of Iraq and, though it's a terrible thing to
say, her work was beautiful to read because she wrote her English
like an angel.
I'm a 62 year-old
book editor, so it's not unknown for me to fall in love with someone
through their words and I now realize that, when it came to Riverbend,
I did so. Then, on August 5th of this year, she posted a blog eerily
entitled, "Summer
of Goodbyes" which began: "Residents of Baghdad are systematically
being pushed out of the city. Some families are waking up to find
a Klashnikov bullet and a letter in an envelope with the words ‘Leave
your area or else.'" Telling us that she no longer dared go out
without wearing a hijab, she signed off this way: "I sometimes
wonder if we'll ever know just how many hundreds of thousands of
Iraqis left the country this bleak summer. I wonder how many of
them will actually return. Where will they go? What will they do
with themselves? Is it time to follow? Is it time to wash our hands
of the country and try to find a stable life somewhere else?"
And then she
blogged no more. Those of us who regularly read her waited. She
had been gone before, the first time in early September 2003 ("I
haven't been writing these last few days because I simply haven't
felt inspired"); once for a month and a half. Sometimes family crises,
simple lack of electricity, and the heat kept her away; sometimes,
clearly, it was depression and perhaps a sense of her own insignificance
this fierce, yet gentle young woman whose blog had links
to both Iraq Body Count and Dilbert, Iraq Occupation Watch and the
Onion given the magnitude of the catastrophe happening
around her. ("The war was brought to us here, and now we have to
watch the country disintegrate before our very eyes.")
As time passed
and nothing appeared, readers began writing in to Tomdispatch, asking
if I knew anything about her fate. No, I knew nothing. I had written
her a couple of times and once even gotten an e-line back, so I
went to her site, found her email address, and wrote again. No answer,
no entries. More days, then weeks passed. Months passed, two of
them, and I found myself at odd moments wondering, whether she had
been among the estimated one
and a half million Iraqis who had fled the country for almost
anywhere else. Or had she, like the neighbors down the street been
taken in a U.S. raid and imprisoned, or like one of her relatives
kidnapped, or had she even… and here I would hesitate… become victim
655,001? And would we ever find out?
How can you
care for someone you don't know? What does that caring even mean?
I'm honestly not sure. But I found I did care in a way that was
impossible when it came to Iraqis en masse, no matter the fact that
my own country, the place where I grew up and to which I'm deeply
and undeniably attached, has been so central to those hundreds of
thousands of wasted lives and all the other ones to come.
I called Riverbend's
publisher, the Feminist Press at CUNY, and talked to a couple of
worried souls there. They, too, had heard nothing. Finally, I decided
to do something about her absence the one small thing I could
actually do write a dispatch. So I got my hands on those
two books of hers and was just beginning to relive her Baghdad experiences
when, on October 18, readers started emailing me that she had just
blogged, that she was back. She had written a new
entry on the Lancet casualty study. In it, she admitted
that she had stopped writing, in part, due to "a certain hopelessness
that can't be put into words and that I suspect other Iraqis feel
also."
On the Lancet
figures themselves, she found nothing strange. ("There are Iraqi
women who have not shed their black mourning robes since 2003 because
each time the end of the proper mourning period comes around, some
other relative dies and the countdown begins once again.") Nor was
she surprised that American war supporters were not about to embrace
the study's figures: "Admitting a number like that would be the
equivalent of admitting they had endorsed, say, a tsunami, or an
earthquake with a magnitude of 9 on the Richter scale, or the occupation
of a developing country by a ruthless superpower… oh wait – that
one actually happened."
So amid the
carnage, Riverbend has returned to us, though only once thus far.
Given the world she inhabits, once already seems like a small miracle.
Truths
of a Lost War (or Why Baghdad Will Keep Burning)
If someone
could protect the polls and there were a plebiscite tomorrow, there
seems little question what the majority of Iraqis would vote
for: The withdrawal of American troops, the end of the occupation.
And these are people who know that things could get a lot worse.
Like Riverbend, they are there to witness or experience the present
bloodbath. Like Riverbend, like most human beings, among their fondest
wishes is surely not to die, nor to live without water or electricity,
without easy access to fuel in one of the energy-richest lands on
the planet; to be secure from car bombs, death squads, assassins,
kidnappers, and criminals in a land that is losing its educators,
its engineers, its doctors, its middle class, in a land where so
much has been deconstructed, where women are being sent home, where
ever more extreme theologies are gaining the upper hand, where militias
rule the streets, killing grounds dot cities, bodies float in the
rivers, and anarchy
rules. That is how we have liberated and protected the Iraqi
people thus far.
In this case,
if the history of the last few years is our guide, until we decide
that we are at the heart of the problem and begin to draw back and
out, things will only get exponentially worse in Iraq. Shoring up
Maliki will make no difference. A coup is only likely to destabilize
the situation further. Even the return of a Saddam-style Baathist
strongman under our aegis would be unlikely to restore order. After
all, along with doing more than our fair share of the killing
only the other day, for instance, four
firemen in Falluja mistaken for "insurgents" were gunned down
by American troops we have also destroyed an intangible of
every state that wants to establish some version of law and order:
sovereignty.
It's gone and, no matter what James Baker's Iraq Study Group or
any other group in Washington may suggest, we are incapable
of restoring it.
Had the United
States left Iraq in 2003, the country would certainly have been
a mess and there would have been explosive tensions waiting to be
relieved, but it's unlikely such a bloodbath as has already happened
would have occurred. Time, as
I wrote in October of that year, was never on our side.
It was always
going to get worse as long as American forces remained an occupying
power in an alien land. If such things were possible for imperial
powers in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, they are no longer
possible in our world. That is the simplest and most truthful
analogy you can make between the otherwise disparate Iraqi
and Vietnamese situations. It seems such an obvious conclusion today.
It seemed obvious enough before the invasion of Iraq ever began.
It is, after all, a large part of the history of the previous century.
The longer
we stayed, the worse it was always going to be. When we finally
do leave one year, two years, five years from now
it's likely to be even worse, possibly far worse than the "all-out
civil war" predicted if we left tomorrow.
Here, to my
mind, is the deepest truth of the present situation, and the hardest
for Americans to grasp: We are part of the problem, not part
of the solution.
The neocons
and other top Bush officials were dazzled by American military power.
They believed that, as the leaders of the planet's only "hyperpower,"
its last imperial superpower, its New Rome, they could do just about
anything. Now, having attacked two weak countries, one among the
poorest on the planet, and finding that they can achieve nothing
they want, they and others in Washington are sitting
around desperately dreaming up further hopeless solutions to the
Iraqi catastrophe. Should the country be divided into three parts?
Should the Iraqis share oil revenues in a certain way? Should the
Iraqi constitution be amended? And on and on.
The deep belief
that, even at this late date, the United States can somehow "solve"
the problem of Iraq is part delusional self-regard, part leftover
goodwill, and part a greedy desire to remain, as well as a total
fantasy. But as long as we believe that the problem is ours to solve,
we will only continue to rev up the motor that is actually making
it worse, no matter what "tactics" we turn on or off.
Withdrawal
from Iraq is no longer a good path. Long ago, in fact, any good
path may have been drowned in a sea of blood and suffering. It is,
however, the only path that has any hope of relieving the situation.
Don't believe otherwise. Exactly how we get out, on what timetable,
and under what conditions are important but secondary matters. First,
we have to decide that leaving is what we're about; second, we have
to declare that we have no future interest in retaining permanent
bases in Iraq or permanent control over Iraqi energy resources;
third, we should offer genuine reconstruction help to a future Iraq
help not bound to the hiring of corporate looters like Halliburton's
KBR. (Let me not even mention offering apologies for what we've
done. That's not in the American grain.)
Unfortunately,
we continue to build the largest, most permanent embassy in the
universe inside Baghdad's Green Zone; we continue to upgrade our
vast bases in Iraq (and are reputedly building a "massive"
new one in Kurdistan, undoubtedly a fallback position for keeping
our hand in a future Iraq). On Wednesday, at his surprise
news conference, the President managed once again not to repudiate
the permanent basing of American forces in Iraq. As of now, whatever
tactics are changing, whatever supposedly strategic decisions may
be made after the elections, the top officials of the Bush administration
have by no means made up their minds to leave Iraq.
To
write all this, I'm aware, is to consign Riverbend, the girl blogger
of Baghdad, to hell on Earth. But I don't have to tell her that.
She's already there and knows it all too well.
This is the
impasse we are presently in. But our impasse is just a formula for
more deaths in Iraq, a formula guaranteed to keep Baghdad burning.
October
27, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion.
Copyright
© 2006 Tom Engelhardt
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