One of the few senses in which an Iraq analogy to Vietnam holds is in the concept of quagmire, a compelling consideration, and rightly so. The prospect of increased, indeed, unmitigated, violence erupting in the wake of a premature US exit is a concern both you and I share. Yet, the ultimate day of reckoning for Iraqis may truly be inevitable despite anything we might do. Traveling from that speculative proposition through all the intermediate minefields of a failed state through to unbridled Iranian hegemony, we arrive at a constant concern, testable only by withdrawal itself, that is, the American presence (occupation) actually fuels the bloodshed and strife, which, the argument goes, would subside in due course if the Americans were to leave. Whatever the merits of one or another of these armchair observations, the unalterable truth is that, if only for political reasons, we must give notice of our intention to leave with a rough accompanying timetable so that the true belligerents, the Iraqis whose animosities festered under Saddam, can work it out or fight it out. We may have unleashed the dogs of war, but those dogs were their demons, for which, in the end analysis, THEY are responsible.