The IHT has a pertinent and relevant Opinion piece " After five years, mission sorely unaccomplished":
"President George W. Bush will never live down "Mission Accomplished." And he should not. When the White House spinners spun that claim five years ago (remember the aircraft carrier?), it seemed cocky and premature. As Bush continues his $526 billion war-without-end in Iraq, it seems stunningly deceitful.
The only mission that needs to be accomplished is an orderly exit from Iraq, and Bush is no closer to acknowledging that reality. Neither is Senator John McCain. All Congress seems capable of is hand-wringing.
So it is up to Senators Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton to revive the national debate on Iraq and to up the pressure on the White House. While it is clear that Bush has no intention of coming up with an exit strategy, there are things he could do to give his successor a better chance at containing the chaos after American troops leave.
A rational debate must first recognize that Iraq is still a very dangerous place. An increase in American forces last year initially produced a steep decline in insurgent attacks. But attacks in April killed more than 50 American troops, the highest death toll for a single month since last September."
"President George W. Bush will never live down "Mission Accomplished." And he should not. When the White House spinners spun that claim five years ago (remember the aircraft carrier?), it seemed cocky and premature. As Bush continues his $526 billion war-without-end in Iraq, it seems stunningly deceitful.
The only mission that needs to be accomplished is an orderly exit from Iraq, and Bush is no closer to acknowledging that reality. Neither is Senator John McCain. All Congress seems capable of is hand-wringing.
So it is up to Senators Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton to revive the national debate on Iraq and to up the pressure on the White House. While it is clear that Bush has no intention of coming up with an exit strategy, there are things he could do to give his successor a better chance at containing the chaos after American troops leave.
A rational debate must first recognize that Iraq is still a very dangerous place. An increase in American forces last year initially produced a steep decline in insurgent attacks. But attacks in April killed more than 50 American troops, the highest death toll for a single month since last September."
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