(D$%n it, I was in the middle of writing a brilliant article when my browser crashed.)
Here's an attempt to recreate it.
I'm seeing the results in retorspect and calling them justified from that, the ends justify the means to an extent don't they?
No, not for a second. We've killed between 10 and 30 times as many people in our "war on terror" since 9/11 as the terrorists did then. Doesn't that make us 10-30 times as bad as they are?
Hussein is accused of killing 300,000 people over 25 years. We've killed between 30,000 and maybe 150,000 in Iraq. Even the minimum figure there represents a greater rate than Hussein.
Since our forces and "our" Iraqis are using the same means, and even the same prisons, to oppress the population, we can only claim to be morally worse than Hussein.
I would like to see evidence from a credible source of these mercenaries you spoke of in your first response, because I myself have never heard of them and I don't believe that an army such as that f the United States would need that type of support.
Oh dear, oh dear, I think you need to pay more attention to security issues.
Here is a partial list of contractor casualties in Iraq. It's "partial" because no one feels the need to report on their deaths. Politicians love that. The list includes all types of contractors. Look for those marked "security".
http://icasualties.org/oif/Civ.aspx
Don't believe they are mercenaries? Look them up:
http://www.blackwaterusa.com
And don't claim that these people are "just" security guards. Armed, non-uniformed "civilians" in a war zone are banned by the Geneva Conventions. Their presence also endangers the real contractors, since the insurgents and the population can't tell who is a mercenary and who isn't.
There's a whole world out there you aren't aware of.
I am not under-stating or discrediting Martin van Creveld's accountablity as a historian and a military theorist, yet it seems that his views on the American wars in the second half of the 20th century are very "anit-american".
Nope, he's very pro-American. If you exclude from consideration all sources opposed to your political views, you will guarantee yourself to be wrong every time.
but I'm here to look at the overwhelming inherent good that came out of it and the fact that under the given circumstances, a war with Saddam's regime was totally justified.
War can never be "inherently good". The outcome is [i:1e8dd91775]always[/i:1e8dd91775] worse than any other possability. The death and destruction outweight, many times over, any presumed benefit. In the past we've had war thrust upon us. Now we go out to create this suffering and misery.
There has been little "good" out of this war, and every reason to think it will only get worse and worse. If you had read van Creveld's writings you would see that the long-term beneficiary of our war is Iran. But don't take my word for it. Just remember my words over the next 2, 5, 10 years.
But the problems in Iraq we're a long-time coming, and severe to put it mildly.
No, they were mild to put is severely. Iraq presented no threat, and was overall a peaceful, coherent nation. We are learning that peace and stability is more important than anything else.
I felt like i needed to rant and get up on a soap-box there, sorry.
Fine. Your right. But you are wrong in almost every way.
Your source for your information in your second response is undeniably biased and anti-bush.
So? Are you aware that essentially all media in the US is controlled (biased) by corporations that support the Bush/Cheney administration?
Here's a report from 2003 in the run-up to the war, "In Iraq Crisis, Networks Are Megaphones for Official Views":
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=1628
And in any case, do you have to accept the political views of [i:1e8dd91775]Mother Jones[/i:1e8dd91775] in order to accept that administration officials have panned this war for up to 30 years?
On the home-page theres a link to a cartoon parody of the president for God's sake!
You'll find that politcal cartooning is common to even the most serious news sources. Again, if you limit yourself to outlets that vigorously support this war, you will never learn the facts about what is happening, why, and when these facts were known.
I will admit though that at first glance i find this...
Quote:
US oil companies have been granted full, blanket immunity in regards to Iraqi oil by an Executive Order
a little fishy, but for all we know there could have been toally justifiable reasons for that order. We aren't the exactly in the know of government beurocratic process and the purpose of some bills and orders. It is easily mis-interpreted by us, the common man.
I'm not a "common man" and neither are you. We can (and should) form our own opinions about important political issues. You seem a sincere, honest sort of fellow. I suspect you simply aren't aware of what's going on out there, being fed pablum by the corporate crap-media.[/quote]