SkepticJ said:
Yeah, and the thing to do after one losses a lot of money is to spend billions more on a war. You know what a huge stupid move for those few days after 9/11 was? Banning flights. How much less would the economy have suffered if flights hadn't been grounded?
That's an easy claim to make now. But at the time, when the situation wasn't clear, such a decision wouldn't have been riskless. If they had immediately resumed flights, and a repeat had happened, that would compound the damage quite a bit.
I involved Iraq because it's part of the War on Terror. Please tell me what other beef we had with Iraq other than the WMD terrorism angle?
Well, mostly that I'm not sure you really understand either angle. Iraq was indeed a state sponsor of terrorism - the Al Quaeda connections may have been unimportant, but Saddam's connections to other terrorist organizations were not. Given his proclivity for supporting, funding, and sheltering terrorists, and his general hatred for us, we were not in a forgiving mood. And the WMD question, though often framed in terms of present capabilities and stockpiles, was actually about much more than that. Maintaining sanctions was costly, both to Iraqis and to us, and the corruption it engendered was rotting away at our alliances and at the UN - not a good precondition for the cooperation needed to fight terrorism. So we either had to accept that this would continue indefinitely (if that was even possible - France, for example, actively worked to lift sanctions), or sanctions would be lifted. If they were lifted, then there would be no means to ensure that Saddam could not, in the future, rearm with WMDs. Saddam was a problem that had simply been festering for too long.
Ok, I was wrong. I didn't know he killed so many. Would you care to cite when and where these deaths happened though?
The 80's Iran-Iraq war, in which probably over 100,000 Iraqis died (some estimates as high as 300,000, and most also place Iranian death toll around twice Iraq's).
The late-80's "Anfal" ethnic cleansing campaign against the Kurds, which killed between 50,000 and 200,000 kurds and displaced hundreds of thousands more.
The '91 suppression Shia uprisings, which killed something like 60,000 people.
Continuous political assasinations and killings throughout his reign that were used to maintain despotic control. Numbers for this are hard to estimate, but likely in the tens of thousands and possibly much greater.
The increased mortality rate for children and the sick in the 90's due to malnutrition and inadequate medical care, a direct result of his deliberate abuse of the oil for food program. Numbers for this ran as high as half a million, which was almost certainly overinflated (and tended, ironically, to come from Saddam's supporters).
Your opinion. Yes Saddam is an evil man. However, is he so much worse than the dictators that are to blame for the genocides in Africa that have killed millions? ?,000,000s>?00,000 is correct yes? When is the US going to bomb and liberate those people from their murderous dictators?
He's more dangerous to our interests, and to global stability. The fact that he was sitting on lots of oil meant that he would never run out of money to buy weapons. The fact that he was centrally located in the middle east meant that, if he were to rearm, he might pose a threat to the entire global economy. And before you start thinking then that this was just about money, consider this: if the price of oil quadrupled because Saddam wiped out Saudi Arabia's oil refineries, who do you think will suffer the most? Third world countries which don't have the money to buy the oil they need. What happens when third world economies collapse and no one is there to pick up the pieces? Violence and death, on a massive scale.
The possible consequences for such a scenario include a lot of people dying all over the world. This confluence of worst-case scenarios being much worse for Saddam than African dictators, plus the fact that, yes, it was also American interests at risk and yes, the US government (as every other government) is always more likely to act when its own interests are at stake meant that Iraq was different.
I'm not morally opposed to us invading, say, Zimbabwe to get rid of Mugabe. But realistically, we simply can't do it. Even if we weren't tied down in Iraq, there's no way that the American public at large would tolerate the kind of sacrifices necessary to accomplish that if they don't feel that their own interests are also at stake. It might be preferable if we were a more selfless country, but that's the reality, and we have to act accordingly.
Just like children who scream louder and bite your arm until they're spanked so hard their fecal matter goes out the other way, huh?
These aren't children, and this isn't just misbehavior. This is life and death. Dealing with it doesn't include spanking, but it does include killing people, yes. The point of killing people isn't always to punish them, sometimes you do it because them being dead works pretty well to keep them from trying to kill you.