She reports. You decide.

Wall Street Journal reporter Farnaz Fassihi writes from Baghdad:

Being a foreign correspondent in Baghdad these days is like being under virtual house arrest. …

It’s hard to pinpoint when the “turning point” exactly began. Was it April when the Fallujah fell out of the grasp of the Americans? Was it when Moqtada and Jish Mahdi declared war on the U.S. military? Was it when Sadr City, home to ten percent of Iraq’s population, became a nightly battlefield for the Americans? Or was it when the insurgency began spreading from isolated pockets in the Sunni triangle to include most of Iraq? Despite President Bush’s rosy assessments, Iraq remains a disaster. If under Saddam it was a “potential” threat, under the Americans it has been transformed to “imminent and active threat,” a foreign policy failure bound to haunt the United States for decades to come.

Read the whole shebang.