stamenflicker said:
Notice the sign this lady is holding. It says, "Are you willing to kill her to get Saadam?"
FACT: She and 500,000 of her children have been killed since 1991 due to sanctions that Saadam continues to not only allow, but invite.
FACT: We kill more Iraqis with sanctions than we ever would with war.
FACT: If these protests were about saving lives, they'd be marching for the removal of Saadam.
FACT: There have been dozens of wars in the last five years, some of which have had death tolls near a million people and we did not see these protests.
FACT: These protests are not against WAR, they are against America.
Flick
Have you ever heard of the concept of the false dilemma? It assumes that there are only two options and then asks someone to choose. For example, either remove Saddam with war or continue the sanctions indefinitely.
There are those of us who oppose the war and who have been for years wanting the Iraq situation to be resolved peacefully so that the sanctions could be lifted. Also, the argument could be made that the sanctions in place are unnecessarily harsh, such as not allowing Iraq to rebuild its water purification plants (ALL of which were destroyed by the US) because chlorine could be a dual-use chemical. The destruction of these facilities was the cause for most of the Iraqi deaths under the sanctions.
When Clinton pulled the inspectors out of Iraq, 90-95% of the banned weapons had been located and almost all of those destroyed. Apparently it was useful to have Saddam around to bully every now and then for political expediency. So what could we do instead?
First, it is not necessary to be 100% sure that every banned weapon has been destroyed. Iraq, with or without Hussein, could always build more. Realistically, Iraq can be deterred. Saddam was supported by the US when he invaded Iran and he thought he had the greenlight from the US to invade Kuwait. (Actually, it seems that he did have that greenlight, but the GHW Bush administration thought he was only going to grab the part of northern Kuwait that was the source of the conflict between them.) Hussein now knows that if he were to attack another of his neighbors that it would mean retaliation by the rest of the world and the end of his regime and, probably, his life.
So you let the inspectors do all they can to find and destroy what they can. You relax those sanctions that can be relaxed for purely humanitarian purposes. (Some of the sanctions were relaxed already. As was pointed out already, Saddam used oil revenues to build new palaces.) At some point when the inspections are not making anymore progress (but not because of stonewalling), you say "good enough" and lift the sanctions.
I know that some of the hawks on this board will not be satisfied with this proposition because they believe all the propaganda coming out of the Bush administration that Hussein will build a nuclear bomb and give it to al Qaida, but I find that hard to believe. What I don't find hard to believe, and what you seem to ignore, are all the negative consequences that are likely to result because of a war. (For example, civil war in Iraq; guerilla war against occupying US troops in Iraq by angry Muslims; destabilization of Turkey, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia; expansion of the war if Israel is attacked and retalitates; the strengthening of support for al Qaida and increased terrorism against the United States; a push by the Taliban to retake Afghanistan while the US has its hands full with Iraq; the ravaging of the US economy caused by huge deficits and the costs of a war and an occupation that could exceed a trillion dollars, etc.)
Edited to add: I don't think that all of the negative consequences I've listed are equally probable or that they all will occur. However, I think it is very likely that some of them will.
An example of relaxing the sanctions while the inspectors are there: rebuilding the water purification plants and having UN monitors for their operation and the transport of chlorine.
I thought I was through arguing on this board about Iraq, but the presentation of this false dilemma simply had to be addressed.