Wednesday, June 29, 2005

'The Secret Way to War': An Exchange

The New York Review of Books: 'The Secret Way to War': An Exchange: "Alas, as Americans go on dying in Iraq and their fellow citizens grow ever more impatient with the war, the story of its beginning, clouded with propaganda and controversy as it is, will become more important, not less. Consider the strong warning put forward in a recently released British Cabinet document dated two days before the Downing Street memo (and eight months before the war), that 'the military occupation of Iraq could lead to a protracted and costly nation-building exercise.' On this point, as the British document prophetically observes, 'US military plans are virtually silent.'[4] So too were America's leaders, and we live with the consequences of that silence. As support for the war collapses, the cost will become clear: for most citizens, 1,700 American dead later�tens of thousands of Iraqi dead later�the war's beginning remains as murky and indistinct as its ending."

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Quite agreed.