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Some Marines in Iraq are Questioning Bush on War

Shades of Vietnam again...some Marines in Iraq are questioning Bush and the war.

In a dozen interviews, Marines from a platoon known as the "81s" expressed in blunt terms their frustrations with the way the war is being conducted and, in some cases, doubts about why it is being waged. The platoon, named for the size in millimeters of its mortar rounds, is part of the 1st Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment based in Iskandariyah, 30 miles southwest of Baghdad.

The Marines offered their opinions openly to a reporter traveling with the 1st Battalion, 2nd Marines during operations last week in Babil province, then expanded upon them during interviews over three days in their barracks at Camp Iskandariyah, their forward operating base.

The Marines' opinions have been shaped by their participation in hundreds of hours of operations over the past two months. Their assessments differ sharply from those of the interim Iraqi government and the Bush administration, which have said that Iraq is on a certain -- if bumpy -- course toward peaceful democracy.

These marines think Bush isn't being straight with the American people on how long the war will last.

I feel we're going to be here for years and years and years," said Lance Cpl. Edward Elston, 22, of Hackettstown, N.J. "I don't think anything is going to get better; I think it's going to get a lot worse. It's going to be like a Palestinian-type deal. We're going to stop being a policing presence and then start being an occupying presence. . . . We're always going to be here. We're never going to leave."

This is a long article and fairly depressing, but read the whole thing anyway.

Update: Jeanne at Body and Soul has some important comments on this article and the distinction between the marines being angry about being in the war and the marines being angry about the restrictions placed on them in not being able to go far enough:

That people are angry about the same thing you are does not necessily mean they're angry for the same reason, or blame the same people. This article adds to that suspicion.

But the article concerns me far more on a human level. What happens when the war gets worse and worse, and thousands of young Americans in Iraq believe they've been too respectful of the rights of civilians, and chafe at the fact that they have limits the worst of the insurgents don't have?

And who will be to blame when they act on their beliefs?

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