Over at
Instapundit, Glenn Reynolds offered the following insight into the U.S. war in Iraq:
"SO LAST NIGHT I FINISHED HARRY TURTLEDOVE’S The Man With the Iron Heart. it’s an alt-history story in which Reinhard Heydrich survived and led a post-VE-day insurgency in Germany, and a pretty obvious allegory for Iraq. I won’t give away the ending, but I’m happy to say that things have gone a lot better in Iraq than they do in Turtledove’s Germany. Like just about all Turtledove, it’s a good read, but it’s made more enjoyable by realizing that our outcome has been superior.
Posted at 9:21 am by Glenn Reynolds"
I think it also is worth noting that the response to Katrina was far superior to that of the government in a novel in which insurgent remnants of the Confederate army captured helicopters and strafed African-American hurricane survivors as they tried to escape the Convention Center. A good read, and it makes me feel better knowing our response was better.
[It was bad enough that apologists tried to spin the insurgency (in its early days) by falsely saying that it was similar to what went on in Germany after the war; now that that has long beeen debunked, I guess Instabunion figures he can try that spin again using 'alternative history.']