As Obama Talks Peace, Many Iraqis Are Unsure
By ANTHONY SHADID
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Saud al-Saadi, an eloquent and informed teacher in Sadr City, was aware. But, he said, he had heard such pronouncements before, declarations of turning points in America’s experience here that seemed to hew to the logic of American politics. The American occupation was declared over before the 2004 presidential election. The two countries signed strategic agreements weeks before the Bush administration ended.
“But until now, to tell you the truth, we haven’t grasped our sovereignty,” Mr. Saadi said. “There are still American troops here, they still raid houses, we don’t have a government that makes its own decisions and the American ambassador still interferes.”
Mr. Saadi was neither angry nor disillusioned. And in his matter-of-fact appraisal, there was a hint of common ground between a teacher and a president. Mr. Obama did not trumpet democracy or victory. There was no reference to a mission accomplished. In a sober appraisal, he acknowledged that there would be more American sacrifice here.
Mr. Saadi was no less modest.
Interests, he called it. And the United States, he said, would try to secure its own.
“America is not a charity organization,” he said. “It’s not a humanitarian group.
There are words and there is reality, and actions don’t always match those words.”http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/04/world/middleeast/04iraq.html?th&emc=th