The New Yorker: A date that will live in oblivion
Iraq has no government. Almost six months after national elections, the country’s politicians remain unable to compromise and cut a deal. newyorker.com

The New Yorker: A date that will live in oblivion

Sep 2, 2010 at 04:59
George Packer writes:

What President Obama called the end of the combat mission in Iraq is a meaningless milestone, constructed almost entirely out of thin air, and his second Oval Office speech marks a rare moment of dishonesty and disingenuousness on the part of a politician who usually resorts to rare candor at important moments. The fifty thousand troops who will remain in Iraq until the end of next year will still be combat troops in everything but name, because they will be aiding one side in an active war zone. The proclaimed end of Operation Iraqi Freedom has little or nothing to do with the military and political situation in Iraq, which is why Iraqis were barely aware when the last U.S. combat brigade crossed into Kuwait a few days ago. Read the story here.




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