America is leaving Iraq. We already itch to forget. The U.S. media gave more coverage to the elections in Zimbabwe than those held in March across Iraq. We award Oscars to films about Iraq, but don’t particularly care to watch them. The seventh anniversary of the U.S. invasion passed recently, with little notice. Another regrettable anniversary recently passed, one from which U.S. President Barack Obama might take heed. The fall of Saigon 35 years ago marked the end of the Vietnam War and the beginning of a seismic refugee crisis. An eleventh-hour request for $722 million to evacuate the thousands of South Vietnamese who had assisted the United States went unfunded by a war-weary Congress. What ensued in those early morning hours on the rooftops of Saigon, as desperate Vietnamese clamored beneath departing helicopters, would be the war’s final image seared into the American conscience. Al Jazeera rebroadcast these scenes of abandonment throughout 2005, when I worked for the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) in Baghdad and Fallujah. My Iraqi colleagues who risked their lives to help us were demoralized by the footage, and constantly worried about what would happen to them when we left. Since my […]
Friday, May 21st, 2010
Left Behind in Iraq
Author: KIRK W. JOHNSON
Source: Foreign Policy
Publication Date: 18-May-10
Link: Left Behind in Iraq
Source: Foreign Policy
Publication Date: 18-May-10
Link: Left Behind in Iraq
Stephan: Another tragedy in a saga of tragedies. And no one wants to talk about any of this. The only place I find this kind of material is in specialty journals for the foreign policy community.