A Philadelphia Inquirer reporter recants his earlier optimism; an excerpt:
"Assassinations and kidnappings have become so common that they have lost their power to shock. More U.S. soldiers died in July (38) than in June (26), but that didn't make the nightly newscasts, either.
"The U.S.-led effort to restore basic services has become a story of missed goals and frustrations. Hoped-for foreign investment in Iraq's economy hasn't materialized - what company is going to risk seeing its employees beheaded on television?
"Simply by staving off stability and prosperity, the insurgents are winning.
"These are painful observations for me to make, because in early April, I wrote on this page that the media had been underplaying the good things happening in Iraq, and were missing the potential for a turnaround.
"I still believe the first part. But when I returned to Iraq in June, I found that the situation had deteriorated so dramatically that a lot of those good things have become irrelevant.
"As for the turnaround, I couldn't have been more wrong.
"Don't take my word for it: Listen to Sgt. Maj. John Jones, a First Infantry Division soldier who recently told my colleague Tom Lasseter that he grows annoyed every time he hears politicians and journalists on television talking about Iraq.
"'When people come over here, where do they stay? In the Green Zone. I call it the Safe Zone,' he said, referring to the heavily fortified area in Baghdad where most U.S. officials live and work. 'They miss the full picture.'"
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