It has been a week and a half since the American public was told in no uncertain terms that the "last brigade" had left Iraq, and President Obama took time out of his vacation yesterday to declare his campaign pledge to end the war "a promise kept."
Pointing out that the war hasn’t really ended is of considerable interest to some Americans, notably the families of the 50,000 US troops still fighting it, but nowhere is the reality of the situation more sobering than on the streets of Baghdad where, after seven and a half years of American occupation, the rising violence and the prospect of several more years of occupation and fighting make this supposed "end" a tough line to swallow.