Reporter's Notebook: Not McCain's Iraq
Allen Pizzey's Perspective On Iraq Differs Sharply From That Of A Recent Congressional Delegation
-
Play CBS Video
Video
Iraq: A Reporter's Perspective
Veteran CBS correspondent Allen Pizzey reports on his perspective of the situation in Iraq after a five-week rotation there. His idea of the security situation is very different from Senator McCain's.
-
-
Photo
A man looks at cars burning after a parked car bomb exploded in front of a TV station, Baghdad TV, in Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, April 5, 2007. (AP Photo/Asaad Mouhsin)
-
Photo
U.S. troops patrol a market in Abu Ghraib district of Baghdad Iraq, Thursday, April 5, 2007. (AP)
-
-
Photo Essay
Iraq In Pictures
A daily diary with scenes of the latest attacks and snapshots from the effort to rebuild a nation.
-
Interactive
Iraq: 4 Years Later
The conflict wears on as the nation struggles to rebuild.
The bomb tore apart the old book market — where in the 1990s we used to go for tea — and along with it a sense of Iraq's culture and glorious past.
Another telling perspective was from inside an armored Humvee. No Iraqi smiles or waves at military convoys any more — a view lost on the latest VIP to see Iraq in domestic political terms.
"The American people are not getting the full picture of what's happening here,” Sen. John McCain said on his recent trip to Baghdad. “They're not getting the full picture of the drop in murders, the establishment of security outposts throughout the city and other signs of progress having been made."
After a staged walkabout that required massive security, Sen. McCain did the time-honored politician's back-track, and said he "misspoke" about how well things were going.
In fact, some things are improving. Being able to walk around in the normally perilous suburb of Sadr City was a pleasant and unexpected surprise. But it was also deceptive.
A car bomb there last week killed ten people and wounded dozens.
It came in spite of the centerpiece of "the surge”: American troops and Iraqi forces together in the new Joint Security stations. The reinforced police posts reduce the soldier's exposure to IEDs, roadside bombs have caused 70 percent of U.S. casualties and make riding with the troops a nerve-wracking experience.
And that's just part of their grueling workload. A day spent with MPs patiently training Iraqis to take over security themselves made us wonder how the MPs find the will to get up every day and keep trying.
One soldier was assigned to be with us all the time, not to control our movements but to protect us.
It's hard to see progress when according to the Associated Press "an average of four U.S. soldiers died or were killed in each of the first five days of this month."
© MMVII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Video and Galleries from CBS Evening News: Reporter's Notebook
- Latest in CBS Evening News: Reporter's Notebook
- A Love For The Game
- Arab World Saw Obama's Speech As Historic
- Tiananmen Square: 20 Years Later



This ill-advised 'propaganada venture' has dealt the fatal blow to McCain's political career.
He 'hitched his wagon to a dead horse'.
I so hope you are right. McCain's brain pulled up lame long ago. It's really too bad because in his younger days he had possibilities. Unfortunately, ol' John is like many boxers who don't know when their days in the ring are over.
McCain is Bush and Karl Rove's lapdog or should I say French poodle.
Bu$h and his PNAC puppeteers may have pulled off 9/11 to sway the world's opinion on the Middle East, as a red flag. Following an abortive attack on Afghanistan, they seem to have grabbed US Treasury funding and used manufactured reasons to invade Iraq. Did Cheney's Secret Energy meetings have anything to do with the invasion? We must investigate that. Did the cherry-picked 9/11 investigation whitewash something far darker? We must investigate fully. There is no statute of limitations on murder and treason.
Shocking.......
With her mythical madonnas still walking in their shades:
Lenny Bruce, declares a truce and plays his other hand.
Marshall McLuhan, casual viewin, head buried in the sand.
Sirens on the rooftops wailing, but theres no ship sailing.
Groucho, with his movies trailing, stands alone with his punchline failing.
Klu Klux Klan serve hot soul food and the band plays In the Mood
The cheerleader waves her cyanide wand,
Theres a smell of peach blossom and bitter almonde.
Caryl Chessman sniffs the air and leads the parade, he know in a scent,
You can bottle all you made.
Theres Howard Hughes in blue suede shoes,
Smiling at the majorettes smoking Winston Cigarettes.
And as the song and dance begins,
The children play at home with needles; needles and pins.
Shocking.......
Posted by hillaryin08"
Independents and a good chunk of Republicans feel the same way. The only Bush supporters left on this are the fake conservatives who are busy burying their heads in the sand and thinking of ponies.
John Sidney McCain, Jr. (January 17, 1911 %u2013 March 22, 1981) was a four star admiral in the United States Navy, husband of Roberta Wright, whom he married on January 21, 1933, in Tijuana, Mexico.
John Sidney McCain III (born August 29, 1936) is an American Republican politician, currently the senior U.S. Senator from Arizona. He was a presidential candidate in the 2000 election, but was defeated in the Republican primary by current President George W. Bush.
Posted by hillaryin08 at 12:26 AM : Apr 08, 2007
But war lovers and Bush supporters want to look at this bloody mess with rose colored glasses, just to help save face for the most incompetent and negligent administration in American history ?
Not shocking at all. 100% Predictable.
Your post is correct until the last sentence. Of course, his character can be questioned. What he was during Viet Nam as a POW simply doesn't exist today. His character has been corrupted by himself. No one else is responsible for his character demise.
I claim no political party affiliation, but there was a time when I would have supported John McCain. That time is history as is Senator McCain.
John McCain has as little public support (or less) as George Bush.
His campaign is an ego driven waste of money and time.
He will never be president of the US.
Maybe he should run for president of the local VFW. But, I doubt he could win that office.
McCain is only embarassing himself by continuing his campaign.
A whole lot of humans never cheated on their spouses -- Barack Obama, for instance, never cheated on his wife.
Here is John McCain, the man who says you can walk through Baghdad without fear:
"McCain has acknowledged engaging in extramarital affairs upon returning from Vietnam. While he was in Vietnam, his wife Carol had been severely injured in a car accident. Due to the accident, she had become 4 inches shorter, gained weight, and had to use crutches to walk. He soon began engaging in extramarital affairs and in 1979, he met Cindy Hensley. A year later, McCain sought a divorce from Carol and a month after that, he married Cindy." - Wikipedia
Wikipedia
I wonder how many times the word N/I/G/G/E/R has passed his pale blue lips.
Shocking.......
Posted by hillaryin08 at 12:26 AM : Apr 08, 2007
Well help us out here Sparky! Give us some good news then. Don't bother with the LIE about being able to walk around Bagdad in the opne, McCain already took care of that lie.
Shocking....... "
Posted by hillaryin08 at 12:26 AM : Apr 08, 2007
---------
That's doublespeak for; They just keep telling the truth and it hurts.
make no mistake, ANY GOVERNMENT CREATED UNDER THE SHADOW OF AN OCCUPATION (NO MATTER WHO THE OCCUPIER IS) IS A SHAM GOVERNMENT. There can be no legitimate government under an occupation. Because such a government cannot follow the will of its own citizens but must do the will of the occupiers. Al Maliki and every Iraqi who supports this government are collaborators and as far a country patriotism is concerned; collaboration is tantamount to traitor and will always be a dirty word.
The U.S. is trying to secure Iraq and leave Iraq so that Iraq will not operate under an occupier status. But in Iraq's current state of affairs if the U.S. leaves now, another occupier namely Iran will step in and create the same situation. The solution is to create an Iraq where no occupier is there and let Iraqis work things out on their own. But as everyone can see it's not easy to do!
,, Now the Pentagon says results from the surge will take years & not months.
Posted by tbweb at 12:27 PM : Apr 08, 2007
Funny considering one of the goals of this war by the neoconservatives was to have Iraq in a permanent state of occupation, by us. Everyone desires Bush's supposed lack of planning because he went into this debacle without an exit strategy, when in fact he didn't have one because leaving was never going to be an option. Why have an exit plan when you don't plan on leaving? The hope (stupidly of course) was to use American bases in Iraq (which we are going ahead with building at a huge cost) to launch war against Iran and Syria. The neoconservative wet dream was to create (by war of course) an "arc of democracy" (as Douglas Feith called it) across the Middle-East from Afghanistan to the Mediterranean running through Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. I guess these morons never figured that the people who actually live there might not like the idea of becoming new American colonies. Sh*it they thought it was going to be a walk in the park!
Make that decries. Got to proof these better. Sorry.
-
by tomchat-2009
April 10, 2007 3:44 PM EDT
- Remeber the looting of the Baghdad Museum four years ago? It's simple, our fearless leaders do not care about the people of Iraq. Nor do the care about their history nor their future. This war has always bowed at the hem of a different agenda.
-
Reply to this comment
-
See all 32 Comments