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7 - A More Humble Hawk; Crisis of Confidence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 August 2009

David Brooks
Affiliation:
Columnist for the New York Times
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Summary

I didn't get this job because i was self-effacing, but today I'm really going to beg for your indulgence. I thought it might be useful to describe the doubts and thoughts going through the mind of one ardent war supporter – me – during these traumatically bloody weeks in Iraq.

The first thing to say is that I never thought it would be this bad. I knew it would be bad. On the third day of the U.S. invasion, I wrote an essay for The Atlantic called “Building Democracy Out of What?” I pointed out that we should expect that the Iraqis would have been traumatized by a generation of totalitarianism. That society would have been brutally atomized. And that many would have developed a taste for sadism and an addiction to violence. On April 11, 2003, I predicted on “The NewsHour” on PBS that we and the Iraqis would be forced to climb a “wall of quagmires.”

Nonetheless, I didn't expect that a year after liberation, hostile militias would be taking over cities or that it would be unsafe to walk around Baghdad. Most of all, I misunderstood how normal Iraqis would react to our occupation. I knew they'd resent us. But I thought they would see that our interests and their interests are aligned. We both want to establish democracy and get the U.S. out.

I did not appreciate how our very presence in Iraq would overshadow democratization.

Type
Chapter
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The Right War?
The Conservative Debate on Iraq
, pp. 63 - 66
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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