Quote for the Day

"Q: Was there a hardest day, a moment when you’d most lost hope?
A: After we were handed over to American authorities in Kandahar. We thought it was good, Americans uphold people’s rights and protect them. When we realized where we were going ‚Äî to Guantanamo ‚Äî that was the hardest moment," – from an interview with five completely innocent Chinese Uighurs, kept at Gitmo for three and a half years, charged with nothing, cleared and still held for another year, and now accepted by … Albania.

That statement – "We thought it was good, Americans uphold people’s rights and protect them" – shows the enormous good will and reputation that the U.S. used to have across the world. Until this president.

Secure Baghdad

The NYT account today of lawless militias, and a government whose various ministries are gradually gathering private armies makes for sobering reading. You have this vicious cycle of insecurity leading to self-defense, leading to more insecurity. That’s why it really did matter to establish order immediately after the invasion; and why, thanks to Rumsfeld and Bush, we have come to the current crisis. But it’s not insuperable. Some of the Shiite-dominated forces have actually been doing their job:

Car bombings and suicide attacks have markedly dropped in Baghdad over the past several months, and the Shiite leaders say a large-scale purge of the Interior Ministry, or a rehiring of officers fired after the fall of Saddam Hussein, would probably revive the insurgency.

We should go easy on the Shiites, who have exercized enormous forbearance thus far. The extent of the infiltration, according to one official, is not that pervasive:

While acknowledging the well-publicized cases of murder and torture within the Interior Ministry, American officers say that most of the atrocities are being carried out by a small number of rogues inside the government, or by groups, like the militias, that are not under Iraqi government control. "The size of the problem is basically within a couple of brigades," said a senior American official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, citing the delicacy of the subject.

Maliki has his work cut out. But we could help. I’m not convinced that military withdrawal or the promise of such withdrawal is what is needed. Max Boot has a good idea: why not add three divisions to Baghdad and focus on securing the capital first? Money quote:

To gain control of the situation, an American officer who has served in Baghdad suggested to me the need to deploy at least 35,000 U.S. troops (six brigade combat teams, plus support personnel), two Iraqi army divisions (20,000 men), and 30,000 competent Iraqi police officers. That would give you a total of 85,000 security personnel, or one per 71 inhabitants — still lower than the ratio in Tall Afar but much higher than it is today.
Although the U.S. Army and Marine Corps are badly overstretched (they should have been enlarged years ago), they could still provide at least three more brigades for Baghdad.

Who’s in the way? Rumsfeld, of course. Politically – and I fear this is the only way to persuade this administration – re-engagement may not be perilous. Americans have turned on this war because they see that we are losing, and retreating. A security turn-around in Baghdad would be far more likely to rally Republicans to the polls than headlines about troop withdrawals. If Rumsfeld cannot see that, maybe Rove can.

The Window Project

A reader writes:

I am a (very) infrequent reader of any blogs, but yours is one of the few I have bookmarked.  I came across the "The View From Your Window" series today and found it capivating. The sense of immediacy and even intimacy – made possible by the instantaneous transmission of digital photographs over high-speed fiber optic cable networks – is the best thing about it. The photos would have nowhere near the same effect if they had been taken, say, a few months ago; it’s the sense of "here’s how things look where I am, halfway around the world or maybe only ninety miles south, a few hours ago" that demands the viewer’s attention and ensures success.
I understand you have other claims on your time than sorting through and posting photos – but still, this is brilliant.

I’m delighted by the response – I’ve now had several hundred entries. I’ve tried to select for variety and for specificity. Purely subjective criteria, of course – so please don’t feel bad if you didn’t make the cut. I find the digital glimpse into the worlds of the readers of this blog oddly moving. All those pageviews are actually human beings, with lives and homes and windows. Every time I get exhausted by the blogosphere, something like this happens, and I’m in love with it all over again.