All the sound and fury over Iraq in advance of the American midterm elections signifies nothing. The United States has been reacting to events -- not dictating them -- since shortly after the U.S. military seized Baghdad three and a half years ago. President Bush's press conference Oct. 25 was a political gesture designed to convince the electorate that he is not terminally detached from Iraq's brutal reality. His relatively clear-eyed description of violence and sectarian divisions were a long-form version of his decision to ban "stay the course" from his vocabulary. But Bush did not unveil a new policy that deals with those realities. Instead his rhetoric revealed the limits of American control over the situation in Iraq.
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