Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Cindi's own words? You want Cindi
Even if containment were slightly more expensive in the long run, the number of US soldiers whose lives would have been saved (~1900) would have well been worth the extra cost.
If they find nothing, then they can leave. I see no problem with that. If evidence is found that Saddam is restarting his WMD program, then we can put them in again. If he refuses, then we can start considering military action. What is wrong with that?
Ziggurat said:Inspections were only part of the containment. We were spending around $13 billion per year on containment, with no end in sight. Yes, that's cheaper in a dollar basis. But it was also perpetual, and had other, non-dollar costs as well.
Even if containment were slightly more expensive in the long run, the number of US soldiers whose lives would have been saved (~1900) would have well been worth the extra cost.
The inspectors were NEVER given a mandate to stay indefinitely. Their express purpose was to verify disarmament. If they had ever managed to verify that Saddam had no weapons (they didn't), then they would have been obligated to pack up and leave. Did you not know this? It would have taken a completely new mandate from the UN to get inspectors to make sure he never rearmed, and frankly, you're smoking crack if you think the UN would have been willing to do that, considering how willingly they let Saddam halt cooperation in '98 without consequences.
If they find nothing, then they can leave. I see no problem with that. If evidence is found that Saddam is restarting his WMD program, then we can put them in again. If he refuses, then we can start considering military action. What is wrong with that?