Mission Accomplished: 5th Anniversary

4,064 US soldiers killed, up to 1.2 million Iraqi civilians killed. Ten times those number badly wounded, physically or mentally. Up to 5 million driven from their homes, while nearly all Iraqis suffer from lack of clean water, electricity, and jobs.
The only missions accomplished: destroying the nation of Iraq and handing the pieces to Iran, breaking the U.S. military and treasury, increasing global terrorism, and making the world hate the U.S.
No wonder Bush is the most unpopular President in polling history - the first to break 70% disapproval.
Those responsible? Still in power, and a 50-50 chance of remaining in power for 4 more years.
Impeach. Indict. Imprison. Immediately.
Update 1: Juan Cole:
Bush imagined that he could get rid of Saddam Hussein and install exiled businessman and bank fraudster Ahmad Chalabi in his place. Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz told Congress that the US would be out of Iraq, except for a division (20,000 men or so), by October of 2003. Wolfowitz and other Bush officials depicted Iraqis as secular and downplayed the possibility of ethnic violence in the aftermath of the overthrow of the Baath Party...
The "mission accomplished" banner was the least of it.
As for the present, the struggle between the al-Maliki government, backed by the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq and its Badr Corps militia on the one hand, and on the other the Sadr Movement with its Mahdi Army militia (all of them Shiites) made April among the deadliest months in Iraq since last September. Official figures show 1,073 Iraqis killed in political violence and 50 US soldiers killed. AFP says of Iraqis, "1,745 civilians, 159 policemen and 104 soldiers" were killed in April.
Update 2: Valtin reflects on the Simon Wiesenthal Center's decades-long efforts to hunt down Nazi war criminals
The geriatric status of Heim, Lam, Demjanjuk and others has not prevented them from being charged with crimes, and they will no doubt be pursued one way or another for the rest of their remaining lives.
U.S. war criminals -- currently uncharged -- like George W. Bush, president of the United States, and other members of his administration (Cheney, Rumsfeld, Rice, etc.), should ponder the fate of the Nazi pursued by justice, even unto their last years. No matter what they think they can get away with, if a party or regime in this country ever comes into power and sets its aim as cleaning up the crimes of this country, whether to serve justice, or as a matter of realpolitik, needing to reclaim some measure of integrity internationally, then Bush et al. had better have set aside a defense fund.
This is in addition to the possibility that other countries may choose to extradict or prosecute those criminals who aggressively invaded a sovereign country (Iraq), killing over a million people, and then proceeded to torture thousands or tens of thousands of individuals. Attempts to prosecute Donald Rumsfeld for torture have been made in France, Germany, Argentina, and Sweden.
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