On borrowed time

Iraq: Captured memo shows terrorist leaders realize they are fighting against the clock | John Dawson

While Washington lawmakers were debating an exit strategy for the United States' prolonged engagement in Iraq, terrorist leaders may well have been cheering them on. That's because when it comes to measuring the insurgency's success in war-torn Iraq, enemy leaders and many American politicians don't seem to see eye to eye.

Documents found during a raid on a former safe house of super terrorist Abu Masab al-Zarqawi and released after his June 7 death suggest the terror leader didn't think the insurgency was as strong as some Washington pols say it is. Instead, the letter, penned by Zarqawi himself or someone close to him, reveals an insurgency nerve center worried about a prolonged engagement and the rise of the Iraqi National Guard.