Nirvana-ELd wrote:Legitimate Authority - The U.N. is and would be, yet it and its members didn't act. So are we to be the kid (U.S.) on the street (the world) watching kids(innocent Iraqis) get beat up by a big bully (Saddam)? I wouldn't want to be just a bystander that sits a shakes his head saying "pity pity". If no one else does anything then why not us to stand up in the face of injustice.
I would disagree that the U.N. 'didn't act.' Yes, I can understand the frustration that some feel at the perceived slowness or inadequacy of the response, but I don't think it is fair to say that the U.N. was just sitting on its hands.
In addition, even if the U.N. is not generally perceived to be an effective de facto 'legitamizing authority,' that does not automatically mean the U.S. was justified in taking matters into its own hands. When we are talking about a pre-emptive strike against a sovereign nation, however unpalatable we find that nation's ruler, we need more legitamization than just our own domestic considerations. This is an international issue with international consequences and so the authority needs to be in some sense international, IMHO.
Also, remember that our original reasons for going to war had really very little to do with freeing the Iraqi people from the rule of a brutal dictator. The rationale was principally WMD's and the threat they posed to other nations in the area, and possibly even the U.S. Freeing the Iraqis was only a 'bonus reason.' If freeing the Iraqis was the only reason for going to war, then I think it is pretty clear we would not have gone to war.
Finally, I would agree with Cephus' comments on this point. We took the law into our own hands, and really, in my view, made a sham of the idea of legitimate authority.
Last Resort - how many years did he defy sanctions/inspections? I think 14 is the right number correct me if I'm wrong. There were 17 U.N. sanctions passed in this amount of time. If the U.N. is un-willing to take any real action against tyrrany, after 14 years of attempts at diplomatic solutions, what would work?
Granted Saddam was and would probably continue to try and 'game the system' as much as he thought he could get away with. However, I don't think the facts show that the U.N. actions had no effect at all. The fact that Saddam's attitude was 'defiant' does not mean that the sanctions, etc. were entirely ineffectual.
I think there was reasonable evidence available at the time to conclude that the risk of maintaining the existing 'go slow' approach was minimal, and that there was also enough to be gained by maintaining this approach so that we cannot say we were at the point of 'last resort.' Neither the passing of time nor the loss of patience are in and of themselves enough to make a situation one of 'last resort.'
Reasonable Hope and Success - I beleive I should let the Iraqi people speak for themselves on this one, The elections today/yesterday had a voter turnout of 70%+. In Saddam's home town of Tikrit the voter turnout was 80%. Even Suni religious leaders even urged voting. (Suni makes up most of the remaining insurgency) If Iraqis thought that there was no hope for a peaceful future or success, why would they vote? There is an obvious optimism about the future within Iraq.
I say HURRAY for this.
However, this is being retrospective. The question is not 'did it turn out OK' but 'was there a reasonable expection
beforehand that things would turn out OK, enough so that the risk of failure, the unavoidable loss of life, and the deterioration of international relations, etc. would be worth taking.' My view was that it was not, and the fact that we might get lucky and have things turn out OK does not mean that this assessment was wrong. Certainly history would indicate that the kind of action we took was a high risk gamble. See Russia in Afhanistan, U.S. in Viet Nam, U.S. in Phillipines, U.S. in Cuba, France in Algeria, etc.
USIncognito wrote:The problem I see, and I think I see more clearly as the years go by, is that if we were to violate the soverignty of every nation where we felt there was tyranny and crimes against humanity going on, not only would we need to reinstitute the draft, we'd need to mobilize, and then deploy the majority of this nation's population. Democracy is much more widespread than it was 20 years ago, but there are still a lot of despots and crappy places to live in this world.
A very valid point.
I would also argue that, were we to implement a widespread policy of such pre-emptive wars, we would greatly destabilize the world-wide situation by making such actions appear to be OK/justified/etc. We would open up a huge can of worms, and find that other countries would follow our lead and engage in their own 'self-justified' pre-emptive wars.