It was sold as a cakewalk—”skip in, skip out,” Chris Matthews said Tuesday night on Hardball. But 10 years later, the cost of the Iraq war have become a cautionary lesson for history. A new report from Brown University examines the real costs of the war—a jarring dose of reality for those who believed the war could be won on the cheap in lives and in treasure.
The report reveals that 190,000 lives have been lost due to the war—70% of them, Iraqi civilians—and has cost the United States $2.2 trillion—44 times higher than what the U.S. Office of Management and Budget estimated back in 2002 before the war began.
The Iraq war was intended, as Defense Policy Board chairman Richard Perle told the Washington Post in 2002, to be a “modest effort” to help the Iraqis attain freedom, but the real intentions of the war have been revealed to be more complicated than that. “This was going to be our next stage in exorcising the demons from Vietnam,” BuzzFeed‘s Michael Hastings told Matthews on Hardball. “People were thinking more Gulf War I than Vietnam, and anyone who brought up at the time, ‘Hey, this could turn out to be Vietnam’ was literally laughed aside and was considered not credible.”








