New York Times - "When I left Iraq in the summer of 2006, after living three and a half years here following the collapse of Saddam Hussein’s regime, I believed that evil had triumphed, and that it would be many years before it might be stopped.
And now, in the late summer of 2008, comes the calm. Violence has
dropped by as much as 90 percent. A handful of the five million Iraqis
who fled their homes — one-sixth of all Iraqis — are beginning to
return. The mornings, once punctuated by the sounds of exploding bombs,
are still. Is it possible that the rage, the thirst for revenge, the
sectarian furies, have begun to fade? That Iraqis have been exhausted
and frightened by what they have seen?"