Originally posted by: MachFive
You're right. We had close to 7 years of inspections, during which Saddam and his underlings sought to send the inspectors on wild goose chases and denying them access to the places they suspected the weapons to be stored.
Then they kicked them out. Iraq then spent 4 years building new facilities to house the weapons. They would've kept building and hiding, but the UN wanted back in. But Saddam wasn't going to let them in.
It was not until the US began mobilizing troops in the area that Saddam had a change of heart. The threat of force, along with the unified stance of the UN on resolution 1441, was enough to get inspectors back in.
However, a threat of force is only effective when you are willing to back it up. Otherwise, it's merely a well-played bluff. Saddam knew this. After 2 months of giving the inspectors access to some of the decommissioned sites, while denying them access to the sites that we now suspected the weapons to be stored in, we went to flex the muscle again - Once again, using the threat of force as coersion.
Unfortunately, this is where the shite hit the fan. France, Russia, and other nations folded - They layed their cards out, and said they oppose force.
Game set match. Saddam then believed that it had been a bluff, and went about jerking the inspectors around, destroying a few toy missiles here and there to continue buying time while gaining coverage of the world press, who would no doubt show everyone he was cooperating.
The United States isn't stupid. It knows how to play poker, and it layed down the line. In not so few words it declared, "We weren't f*cking around. Disarm or we go in." Once again, Saddam guessed bluff. He didn't believe we were willing to wage a war without the approval or backing of a majority of the UN nationstates.
But when we play, we play to win. "You have 48 hours." It must be a bluff, yes?
Bam.
We're going to find WMD. We're going to find shite we weren't even expecting to find. We're going to get back whatever POWs haven't been executed against the explicit rules of the Geneva convetion. We're going to turn Iraq into an example for other Middle Eastern nations ruled by despots.
Very well said. I still don't think war was the right answer, but you make a persuasive case.
The part that bothers me is what gives us the right to unilaterally attack "bad" countries? Saddam was a bad man - absolutely - but a lot of countries are ruled by bad men, at least from a U.S. perspective. Do we attack them all? Are we the 21st century Roman Empire, imposing our civilization on the barbarians in the rest of the world?
How do we claim the moral high ground when the U.S. supports many of these bad men? Many years ago, we supported Saddam because it was convenient for us; we looked the other way as he killed his people and attacked his neighbor. Where is our moral authority when we are hypocrites? Is it "might makes right", or do we have a more civilized set of rules we follow?
Much of the world thinks we are "ruled" by a bad man; is it OK for them to attack us? After all, how many hundred people did GWB kill as governor of Texas? For much of the world, that is more like Saddam than it is different. So, where do we draw the line? What objective measure do we use to distinguish us from the "bad" countries?
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I agree that military force is appropriate in self-defense against a
real attack on this country or our allies. Note:
real attack, not some theoretical, well they may pose a threat someday, ever-changing story-of-the-week BS Bush gave for this war. Iraq invaded Kuwait; we responded - clear cut, real attack, justified response to defend Kuwait.
In my opinion, any other use of force needs to be done under the banner of the U.N. or a similar world authority. In the example of this war, your reasoning makes sense to me
as long as the United Nations agreed to proceed along this path. When the U.N. said to continue inspections, however, we were obligated to follow their lead as a supposedly law-abiding member of the world community. There was no clear and immediate danger that justified our use of unilateral force. Our cowboy disregard for the U.N. makes us an outlaw, and it gives other countries an excuse to ignore the U.N. whenever
they want. In short, we undermine the U.N. in its role of promoting civilized cooperation among the countries of the world.
Yes, I acknowledge that the U.N. has not been effective in many cases, that it is too unwilling to act when action is needed. However, we don't help by setting a bad example. If the U.N. is to work effectively, then the world powers like the U.S. need to take the lead in demonstrating support and showing a willingness to follow its decisions, even when we don't like them. Again, there was no clear and immediate danger that justified our taking the law into our own hands.
Finally, on a much more pragmatic level, I oppose the war because of the financial cost and the increased risk of terrorism directed against the U.S. By going it alone, we lose hundreds of billions we can't afford, and we made ourselves a target for thousands of new Osama wanna-be's. I fear we'll be tallying the cost of this war for many, many years.