At the two-month marker of heightened anguish over Iraq and (oddly less so) the war against terror generally, what better time for pulling off to stretch the legs and appraise the situation?

Highlights:

Fallujah and Najaf. Ayatollah Sistani and Islamofascist thug Muqtada al-Sadr with his "Mahdi Army" of goons. The targeting of American troops and the kidnapping of foreigners; IEDs, firefights, riots, charred American bodies. Madrid and the Zapatero tergiversation. Terrorists in Europe calling for jihad and the rule of Islam; swift rejection of the great Osama's attempted manipulation of European antiwar sentiment, wherein he offered a "truce" with European governments withdrawing their troops from Muslim countries.

The 9/11 Commission and its smearing of President Bush's honesty, the loyalty of his secretary of state and the competence of his national security adviser. (The Commission features ideologized partisans heavily responsible for 30 years of pressure and legislation woefully weakening the effectiveness of our intelligence agencies.) The Sharon plan regarding Gaza, and heavy thinkers groaning low about how Bush administration support for it has combined with dubious administration performance elsewhere to reduce American esteem in the Arab world to the lowest point in years. Halliburton, etc. The Woodward book. Say-anything John Kerry and his campaign surrogate Teddy Kennedy trashing George Bush and blaming him for everything.

What was right, what was in-between, what was wrong?

RIGHT: The determination to decapitate Saddam's regime, whether (a) to liberate the Iraqi people and democratize the country, (b) to fight terror, or (c) to ferret out weapons of mass destruction - as well as (d) the determination to get the job done despite the United Nations.

IN-BETWEEN: It is wrong to say the administration had no Iraq end-game for the period following formal hostilities; it is right to say that whatever the end-game, the plans for it quickly would go out the window.

WRONG: The article of faith - stipulated by those who would do nothing or who would have America do nothing (if not lose) - that by failing to maximize international involvement, the administration thereby augmented the risks to the nation and the nation's military personnel. In Iraq, America has done the right thing, the good thing. As Dwight D. Eisenhower reminded: "America is great because she is good. If America ever ceases to be good, America will cease to be great."