These are extracts from an article published on March 16 by The New
York Times written by its correspondent John F. Burns (with some name
spelling and underlining by APS): "Five years on, it seems
positively surreal. On the evening of March 19, 2003, a small group of
Western journalists had grandstand seats for the big event in Baghdad,
the start of the full-scale American bombing of strategic targets in the
Iraqi capital. We had forced a way through a bolted door at the top of
an emergency staircase leading to the 21st-story roof of the Palestine
Hotel, with a panoramic view of Saddam Hussein's command complex
across the Tigris River.
"The bombing had been jump-started 16 hours earlier, when
President...Bush ordered two B-1 bombers to attack the Dora Farms
complex in south-central Baghdad in a dawn raid intended to kill Saddam
and end the war before it began. That caught everyone by surprise,
including Saddam, who somehow survived. But by nightfall, the city was
braced. The BBC reported B-52 bombers were taking off from a base in
England in early afternoon, and we knew, from the flying time, that zero
hour for Baghdad would be about 9 pm. At precisely that moment - not a
few seconds early, nor late - the first cruise missile struck the vast,
bunker-like presidential command complex in what would become, under the
US occupation, the Green Zone.
"For 40 minutes, followed by a break, and then another 40
minutes, a fusillade of missiles and bombs struck palaces, military
complexes, intelligence buildings, the heart of Saddam's years of
murderous tyranny. In Washington, they called it 'shock and
awe'. In Baghdad, Iraqis yearning for their liberation from Saddam
called it, simply: 'the air show'.
"On that hotel roof were experienced Western...correspondents,
men and women for whom impartiality was their coda. We feared the
bombing would remove the last reason for the secret police to spare us,
since our Iraqi 'fixers' had warned us...the only thing
protecting us...was the regime's concern that harming Western
reporters would speed the course to war.
"Demonstrating our impartiality, once the first missiles
struck, thus assumed an intensely personal, as well as professional,
dimension - the measure, perhaps, of whether we would survive the time
it took for Saddam's regime to finally collapse. But from that
first impact, among many on the roof, the mood was scarcely one of cool
detachment, or at least not as cautioned as it might have been by the
longer-term implications of what we were seeing.
"Part of it, no doubt, was the air show - the sheer,
astonishing, overwhelming demonstration of power, more like an act of
God than man, unleashing in those watching from the roof something
approaching awe. But the larger part, the one that seems surreal now in
the light of all that has followed, was the sense that, with the
beginning of the end of Saddam Hussein's evil, the suffering of
millions of ordinary Iraqis that we had chronicled, and pitied, was
ending.
"As they must have to many Americans watching the live
television coverage, those missiles and bombs seemed, in the headiness
of that moment, to be fit retribution for a ruthless dictator and the
medieval wretchedness he had visited on Iraq's people. That it took
such force to accomplish seemed mitigated, at least somewhat, by the
precision of the strikes, with only isolated instances, during the 19
days before US troops reached Baghdad, of errant missiles killing
innocent civilians.
"Early one morning, I went to the smoking wreckage of the
city's central telephone exchange, only to find patients from
Iraq's main heart hospital, 45 meters...away, across a narrow lane,
uninjured, out in the garden in their pajamas watching the commotion. It
was not long, of course, before events in Iraq began giving everybody
cause to reconsider.
"On April 9, the day the Marines entered Baghdad and used one
of their tanks to help the crowd haul down Saddam's statue in
Firdos Square, US troops stood by while mobs began looting, ravaging
palaces and torture centers, along with ministries, museums and
hospitals. Late in the day, at the Oil Ministry, I discovered it was the
only building that Marines had orders to protect. Turning to Jon Lee
Anderson, a correspondent for The New Yorker who had been my companion
that day, I saw shock mirrored in his face. 'Say it ain't
so', I said. But it was. Looking back, it has been fashionable to
say the Americans began losing the war right then.
"At the least, it was the first misstep in what quickly became
a long chronicle: the failure to find weapons of mass destruction, the
primary cause the Bush administration had given for the war; the absence
of a plan, at least any the Pentagon intended to implement, for the
period after Baghdad fell; the disbanding of the Iraqi Army, and thus
casting aside the help it might have given in fighting the insurgency
that began flickering within 10 days of US troops entering Baghdad; and
the lack of an effective American counterinsurgency strategy, at least
until the troop increase last year (2007) finally began bringing the
war's toll down.
"Beyond these, there were the instances when America's
intentions were betrayed by its troops in more personal ways, with the
abuse and torture of Iraqi detainees at Abu Ghraib, with the shooting
deaths of 24 civilians in Haditha and with the rape and murder of a
14-year-old girl at Mahmudiya, along with the killing of three other
members of her family, all leading to court-martial hearings that tore
at the heart of anyone who starts from a position of admiration for the
US armed forces. The Marine offensive that recaptured Falluja from
[Neo-Salafi] Islamic militants in November 2004, virtually flattening
the city without achieving more than a temporary change in the arc of
the war, may also draw its share of condemnation.
"At the fifth anniversary, the conflict's staggering
burden is a rebuke to any who hoped Saddam's removal might be
accomplished at an acceptable cost. Back in 2003, only the most
prescient could have guessed that the current 'surge' would
raise the US troop commitment above 160,000, the highest level since the
invasion, in the war's fifth year, or that the toll would include
tens of thousands of Iraqi civilians killed, as well nearly 4,000 US
troops; or that America's financial costs, by some recent
estimates, would rise above $650 billion by 2008, on their way to
perhaps $2 trillion if the commitment continues for another five years.
"Beyond that, there are a million or more Iraqis living as
refugees in neighboring Arab countries, and the pitiful toll of fear and
deprivation on Iraqi streets. Those of us who witnessed the war at
firsthand have more personal reckonings. These pressed home, for me, on
countless occasions during the years since the invasion, up to my
departure from Baghdad late last summer, when I completed a five-year
assignment in Iraq and moved to a new posting in London.
"Worst of all were the moments when war and its arguments were
reduced from the remote, and political, to the intensely personal, and
to that terrible sense, familiar to anybody who has experienced war,
that nothing, or almost nothing, can justify its wounds. They are scenes
that do not fade: Watching American soldiers being slipped into body
bags for the journey home, and knowing, at that instant, that the lives
of unknowing families thousands of miles away have been shattered;
surveying the aftermath of suicide bombings, with severed limbs in the
street, and hearing the wailing of the Iraqi bereaved.
"In time, those who started the war will answer in history, as
much as they will claim the credit if America ultimately finds a way
home with honor, and without destroying all it went to Iraq to achieve.
But reporters, too, may wish to make an accounting.
"If we accurately depicted the horrors of Saddam's Iraq
in the run-up to the war, with its charnel houses and mass graves, we
have to acknowledge that we were less effective, then, in probing
beneath the carapace of terror to uncover other facets of Iraq's
culture and history that would have a determining impact on the American
project to build a Western-style democracy, or at least the basics of a
civil society.
"It was not easy, with a reporter's every move
scrutinized by Saddam's lugubrious minders, to undertake that kind
of in-depth reporting. But from the exhaustive reporting in the years
since, Americans now know how deeply traumatized Iraqis were by the
brutality of Saddam, and how deep was the poison of fear and distrust.
They also know, in detail, through the protracted trials of Saddam and
his senior henchmen, of the inner workings of the merciless machinery
that transported victims to the torture chambers and mass graves.
"They know, too, through coverage in The New York Times and
other newspapers, of the deep fissures of ethnicity, sect and tribe,
which were camouflaged by the quarter-century of Saddam's
totalitarian rule.
"As much as America's policy failures, it has been these
factors that have contributed to the Iraqi quagmire. Properly weighed,
in time, they might have given cause for second thoughts about the
wisdom of the invasion. What seems certain is that those entrusted with
the task of fulfilling the US mission were confronted, from the
beginning, by an odds-against calculus.
"Iraq, in 2003, could scarcely have been less prepared than it
was to embrace democracy, dependent as that is, everywhere, on a minimum
of popular consent and trust. The harsh reality is that many Iraqis, at
least by the time of the two elections held in 2005, had little zest for
democracy, at least as Westerners understand it.
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