ROME, April 7, 2007

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.

    • 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.

      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)

    • U.S. troops patrol a market in Abu Ghraib district of Baghdad Iraq, Thursday, April 5, 2007.

      U.S. troops patrol a market in Abu Ghraib district of Baghdad Iraq, Thursday, April 5, 2007.  (AP)

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  • 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.

(CBS)  In view of the death toll it's a terrible thing to say, but for this reporter, the most depressing sight in a five week rotation in Baghdad was paper swirling in a roiling black cloud.

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.
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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.
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by gwalsh3rd April 10, 2007 1:09 PM EDT
"IF We Do Nothing" nothing will happen? The Iraqis will solve their own problems themselves.Al-Queda will disband and go away.No more fear for Americans abroad or right here.The supply of Oil and Gas will just keep on coming.No crazy dictator will rape and pilage his own people.The Middle East will be the next great place to live besides the U.S. Yea thats it! Lets not get involved and quit being the Worlds Police. I'm sure thats the answer, what was Bush and Cheney thinking when they ousted Sadam and his Sons. Lets just hope that things will just work out for the best and by not sending Troops over there the anti-american groups will have more respect for us and leave us alone.........If We Do Nothing
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by randalds April 8, 2007 8:19 PM EDT
"Everyone desires"

Make that decries. Got to proof these better. Sorry.
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by randalds April 8, 2007 8:15 PM EDT
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!
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!
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by j-whitman April 8, 2007 5:15 PM EDT
tbweb -- How's the song go ?? "To dream the impossible dream",,,
,, Now the Pentagon says results from the surge will take years & not months.
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by tbweb April 8, 2007 3:27 PM EDT
--toldyouso21

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!
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by micubano1 April 8, 2007 3:23 PM EDT
It is this simple. GW Bush, a person I vote for, lied and mislead this country. It is easy for guys like Bush, Cheney, Rice and the rest of the crew to lie to this country about going to war, it is not their sons or daughters who are sent to fight. In fact, I am pretty sure that their sons or daughters are on some holiday right now perhaps spending their dads money on some beach in Miami driving around a hummer trying to impress other folks. This war IS A SHAM. I went to Iraq believing that what we where doing was getting rid of a person with weapons of mass destruction, I wonder when another country will invade us and do the same. We have a nut in the white house, and we have weapons of mass destruction, what is the world waiting for????? This is the same pretext used by the Bush administration to wage war, so where the hell are the French, the Brits and the World Community. My boys suffer from Autsim yet there is no money for them to help with their treatment, but congress and the president want to spend 81 billion. Great job. I mad at myself for voting for the idiot I want to be clear that that means all the idiots I ever voted for, Bush, Reagen, Clinton etc...None of them have what it takes to wake up in the monring and look in the mirror and say, I have earned the right to be who I am...they are all fakes and so are those who support them.
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by toldyouso21 April 8, 2007 2:57 PM EDT
"After the defeat of the French army in June 1940, the MPs massively (all but 80) voted full powers to Philippe Pitain. The French State was under total German control but attempted to maintain the fiction of an independent state, with a French administration, especially for police and justice."

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.

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by kscislaw April 8, 2007 12:41 PM EDT
If a Sunni (i.e. our stringers) gets a hangnail...IT MUST BE REPORTED. We must silence any dissent to our worldview including John McCain. We must now tell the American people that McCain's campaign for the GOP nomination is now tanking rapidly because he supports the war....and repeat after me: "Republicans don't support the war" Ignore McCain. Ignore McCain. La La La La La La La La
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by jn122736 April 8, 2007 12:00 PM EDT
"CBS, NBC, CNN, PMSNBC and the Democrats have something bad to say about Iraq?

Shocking....... "
Posted by hillaryin08 at 12:26 AM : Apr 08, 2007
---------

That's doublespeak for; They just keep telling the truth and it hurts.
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