not to depress anyone too much more, but i can't not post this:
[q] REVOLTING TRUTH:
Even by the degraded standards of everyday life in Baghdad, this report from CNN's Nic Robertson comes as a shock:
One international official told me of reports among his staff that a 15-year-old girl had been beheaded and a dog's head sewn on her body in its place; and of a young child who had had his hands drilled and bolted together before being killed.
From its gruesome particulars, the report goes on to describe the fear that has gripped even the most hardened Iraqis during this latest round of sectarian bloodletting. Robertson's dispatch points to a revolting truth about the war in Iraq--one that American officers discovered long ago, but which has yet to penetrate fully the imaginations of theoreticians writing from a distant remove. The fact is, there is very little that we can do to dampen the sectarian rage and pathologies tearing Iraq apart at the seams. Did the Army make a mistake when it banished "counterinsurgency" from the lexicon of military affairs? Absolutely. Does it matter in Iraq? Probably not. How can you win over the heart and mind of someone who sews a dog's head on a girl? Would more U.S. troops alter Iraq's homicidal dynamic? Not really, given that, on the question of sectarian rage, America is now largely beside the point. True, U.S. troops can be--and have been--a vital buffer between Iraq's warring sects. But they cannot reprogram their coarsened and brittle cultures. Even if America had arrived in Iraq with a detailed post-war plan, twice the number of troops, and all the counterinsurgency expertise in the world, my guess is that we would have found ourselves in exactly the same spot. The Iraqis, after all, still would have had the final say.
--Lawrence Kaplan
http://www.tnr.com/blog/theplank?pid=24150
[/q]
and now i'm going to throw up.
and this leads us to a hard observation: we cannot pull out too soon lest everything completely collapse, and yet there appears little that we can do to stop Iraq from spiraling into civil war.
Kaplan is saying that our guns and money and ideas are no match for history and hatred.
and Kaplan, a writer for the liberal hawkish The New Republic, was an ardent neocon supporter of the war just a few years ago.