The war in Afghanistan never looked so hopeless as it did in the days after an American soldier walked from his base near Kandahar and murdered 16 civilians, including nine children, in their homes. The massacre may have been the brutal act of a lone man. But it also felt like a last straw, one nasty turn too many in a conflict lately defined by grim episodes: the murder of the Afghan government's top peace negotiator, Marines urinating on dead Taliban fighters and the sacrilegious burning of Korans by U.S. troops innocently trying to dispose of them. That last incident produced...
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