Is the War in Iraq Justified?

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Nirvana-Eld
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Is the War in Iraq Justified?

Post #1

Post by Nirvana-Eld »

Wasn't it evil when GW Bush declared war on and killed tens of thousands of innocent Iraqi's for no provable reason? But isn't he a good Christian that follows the Bible's teachings?
Please tell me that you cringe at the sight of this terrible mis-understanding.

This was brought up in a thread concerning the nature of evil and it lead me to wonder about different opinions. And to link this to religion, im going to provide St. Thomas Aquainas' theory on just war. Three things are needed to make a war just.

1) a just cause

2) a just(legitimate) authority

3) a just intent

Personally i think the current war passes this test, but it is up to you. I would like to see facts, statistics, and logic, not the biased opinionated lie seen above.

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MagusYanam
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Post #41

Post by MagusYanam »

Nirvana-Eld wrote:I agree that America isn't the most 'moral' place to be, but I would like to see how we think that we're "God's own country" other than our traditional songs, or should we change them just because we're not perfect?
Interesting. I personally think the 'Star-Spangled Banner' infuriating particularly because it uses grand language of liberty and freedom from tyranny in defence of a war we joined on the behalf of a ruthless dictator (the War of 1812 being fought in support of Napoleon against the British). But that's just my low tolerance for hypocrisy talking.
Nirvana-Eld wrote:If we look at the atrocities caused by Saddam Hussien they are worse than any other nation out there now. Find one and I will shut up about it.
Sudan. 'Nuff said. The Janjiwids might not have bio-weapons, but they're doing plenty more damage to the Southern Sudanese than Saddam did to the Kurds. And how much effort are we putting into police action against the Janjiwids who are currently raping and murdering their way across said country? Too damn little, IMHO. We're spread too thin, and I'll give you three guesses as to why - the first two don't count.

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The Persnickety Platypus
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Post #42

Post by The Persnickety Platypus »

If we look at the atrocities caused by Saddam Hussien they are worse than any other nation out there now. Find one and I will shut up about it.
Burma
Cuba
Libya
North Korea
Sudan
Syria
Turkmenistan
Chechnya
Tibet
Uzbekistan


But hey, no reason to invade any of thesecountries! They have not done anything to anyone (i.e. they have no oil).

Nirvana-Eld
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Post #43

Post by Nirvana-Eld »

There are estamates coming from out of Iraq itself saying that throughout Saddam's regime he killed over 1,000,000 Iraqi citizens, Kurdish or not. None of the countries you listed, except for the Sudan who might match, can match or even come close to this number.

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juliod
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Post #44

Post by juliod »

There are estamates coming from out of Iraq itself saying that throughout Saddam's regime he killed over 1,000,000 Iraqi citizens, Kurdish or not.
Funny thing, that. Up till at least 2003, the numbers usually quoted for Hussein were about 300,000. Is there reason to increase that figure by more than 3-fold?

The 300,000 figure is suspect in itself, since no one ever underestimates the people killed by a foreign dictator.

Will the figure become 2,000,000 next year? And 5,000,000 the year after?

In any case, does the killing of Iraqis by Hussein justify, even slightly, the killing of Iraqis by us?

The Lancet study said we may have killed 100,000 Iraqis. If there has been another 50,000 killed since them that might give us a reasonable figure of 150,000 killed in about 1.75 years. That's a rate higher than Hussein is accused of by your new figure. The Lancet study, BTW, is based on actual data.

Iraq Body Count only lists about 30,000 people killed, but they only count deaths than are reported in the media by two or more sources. It seems unlikely that they record even a majority of deaths. Nevertheless, the 30,000 killed over 1.75 years is higher than the usual rate Hussein is accused of.

This is not a record to build a successful foreign policy upon.

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Nirvana-Eld
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Post #45

Post by Nirvana-Eld »

The 1 million was an estamate by the Iraqi people and not a statistical number. It was to show the scale by which the regime affected the Iraqi people. I still hold firm that the conditions in Iraq were worse than a large majority of the countries listed. But none the less...

This article excellenty shows the horrible innaccuracy of the Lancet Study.
http://www.slate.com/id/2108887/

It says
We estimate there were 98,000 extra deaths (95% CI 8000-194 000) during the post-war period.

I'll spell it out in plain Englishwhich, disturbingly, the study never does. It means that the authors are 95 percent confident that the war-caused deaths totaled some number between 8,000 and 194,000.
I would believe that the above said 30,000 Iraqi deaths is more accurate than the 8,000-194,000 presented by the Lancet Study.

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Post #46

Post by Vladd44 »

Nirvana-Eld wrote:Personally i think the current war passes this test, but it is up to you. I would like to see facts, statistics, and logic, not the biased opinionated lie seen above.


You cry for facts, and then you use a smear effort to call the opinion you disagree with a lie.

If you cannot understand how someone could read the bible followed by the newspaper and see hypocrisy in this presidents christianity then perhaps you should examine your own perspective.

But for me, Thomas Aquainas was just some arrogant moron who was looking for a way to rationalize what he wanted to believe.

War is never just. War is the result of reasonable people to find a solution. When war is the solution we have all failed.

Recently Bush himself estimated 25,000 dead Iraqis. Considering that I have a problem believing anything out of his mouth, I wouldn't be suprised if the real number was closer to double that. But either way, 25k dead people because of our actions. Doesn't seem very christian to me.
The Persnickety Platypus wrote:I dissagree with ever going to war in the first place. However, now that we are here, I genuinely hope something good can come out of it.


I could not agree more. We have done the damage, I can only hope we see a result in the coming decades from it. But for me it will never justify our going in the first place.
When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.[GOD] ‑ 1 Cor 13:11
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micatala
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Post #47

Post by micatala »

Nirvana wrote:There are estamates coming from out of Iraq itself saying that throughout Saddam's regime he killed over 1,000,000 Iraqi citizens, Kurdish or not. None of the countries you listed, except for the Sudan who might match, can match or even come close to this number.


Here is some information on the 1990's famine in North Korea.

Now, a famine is certainly not the same as gassing or other forms of intentional massacre. However, it is pretty clear that Kim Il Sung's ruling practices made this into an incredibly major and tragic event, with hundreds of thousands if not millions dieing. I think it is fair to place the blame for a huge number of these deaths with the government, and to describe it as a from of 'massacre by neglect.'

Regarding Burma, this site contains some information on the long-standing problems there, including the following:

According to the 1948 convention, in order to prove the junta guilty, Horton must demonstrate that it has committed genocide in one of five ways. The first is "killing members of the group." Most experts estimate that several thousand ethnic minorities have been killed annually for the past 50 years. In a rare moment of candor in 1989, the chairman of the junta acknowledged that the death toll "would reach as high as millions." He was discussing total deaths in the long-running battle, including Burman soldiers, but a high percentage of the dead are ethnic minorities.
Several thousand per year with a total of up to a million is certainly in the ball park of what we are talking about with Saddam.



Although not current, in the not too distant past, Guatemala and Chile both deserve mention as places where there were incredible human rights abuses. I think it is fair to say that the U.S. aided and abetted these abuses in both instances.

THis site has estimates for a long list of 20th century conflicts. For Guatemala, they report that approximately 200,000 were killed in the period from 1960-1996.

Suffice it to say that Saddam was very bad, and arguably among the worst of rulers in the present decade as far as human rights abuses. Whether he was in another league, compared to some of the other countries mentioned, seems to be debatable.

I think it is fair to say that the U.S. has certainly not been consistent about using its power to promote human rights around the world, and in many cases, we have contributed to a great extent to human rights abuses that have occurred.

At any rate, it certainly does not seem clear that the nature of the abuses in Iraq, although clearly egregious, justified the war, if we use past or present history of interventions by the U.S. as a guide.
Vladd wrote:War is never just. War is the result of reasonable people to find a solution. When war is the solution we have all failed.
I agree. One can certainly make a very good case that war is sometimes necessary or inevitable, but it clearly represents a failure to solve the problem by other means.

In the case of Iraq, we did not even allow the possibility of failure or success with respect to the non-violent processes that were under way. We simply pre-empted the possibilities by going to war, IMHO.[/url]

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Post #48

Post by juliod »

This article excellenty shows the horrible innaccuracy of the Lancet Study.
Don't confuse accuracy with variability. The high range implied by the data is caused because some towns in Iraq suffered high casualties while others suffered none at all. That doesn't mean that the average they measured is "wrong" or can be discounted. It would be nice if we had better figures, but we can be fairly sure that the real figure is in the range of 100,000.

The data were biased, BTW, towards the low side, you know. They excluded Falluja from the study since it suffered far more casualties than anywhere else in the study.
I would believe that the above said 30,000 Iraqi deaths is more accurate than the 8,000-194,000 presented by the Lancet Study.
The IBC count is inherently accurate because they are not counting bodies, but news reports. No problem there. But you seem willing to presume that everyone who is killed in Iraq has a news article written about them by more than one source. That would require an astonishing level of credulity.

Also, during the war and immediately after there was essentially no media presense in Iraq, so the bulk of casualties would never have been counted at all.

That's why the Lancet study is important. They conducted a serious, rigorous study by standard techniques.
The 1 million was an estamate by the Iraqi people and not a statistical number.
OK, it was just made up. So we'll stop using it. So we can see that even under the impossibly low figure of 30,000 deaths since the war, we are killing Iraqi's faster than Hussein was.

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Post #49

Post by 1John2_26 »

I just watched Fahren Hype 9-11 with a Bush hater that believed everything in Michael Moore's movies.

It was also the first time I had seen it.

(I've seen Bowling for Columbine and Fahrenheit 9-11 several times.)

The Bush hater was stunned to say the least. I knew better. Especially when he heard the woman talking about Bush in the school and saw Al Gore sitting behind Bush and his "base," during the infamous dinner.

War against Iraq was not justified only because Muslims seem to have have no desire for peace and freedom. Bush should have sent thousands of Christian Evangelical Missionaries instead of the Marines, the Army and the Air Force.

Saddam was just another killer in a world full of them.

BUT, if Bush would have done the Christian peacful thing . . . the cry of it would be ten million times louder from the same people cursing his military actions now.

You know now that I think about it, make that over one-billion times louder!

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Post #50

Post by juliod »

Bush should have sent thousands of Christian Evangelical Missionaries instead of the Marines, the Army and the Air Force.
You bring up an interesting point. Accidently, of course, but interesting all the same. It's a fact of history that no significant religious issues have ever been resolved except through brutality.

Within a religion, scismatics and heretics can only be stopped by butchery. Academic theological debates are resolved the same way. Even the earliest controversies in chrsitianity were never resolved by any process other than violence. Doctrinal differences in christendom align with the map at the end of the major religious wars.

Externally, large-scale conversions have only happened through violence. Islam is of course drenched in violence, few people here will doubt that. But christianity is pretty much the same. During it's expansion years, all those pagan tribes fell to the sword, not the cross. Conversion was usually synonymous with submission to the so-called Holy Roman Emporer (who was none of those) or other "frankish" overlord.

(There's a charming tale about a Viking group who had been parasitizing a certain river system in modern France. The Vikings were too strong too defeat, but after several years the water level in the river dropped making for poor navigation. They decided to leave, but asked the local lords for permission to hold a market to exchange their booty for supplies and equipment (a common occurence in Viking expeditions, apparently). The lords agreed, but with the stipulation that if they did not make off by a certain date that they would convert to christianity and submit to the king. Sensibly, the Vikings choose the North Atlantic.)

So, given the massive violence of religious history, do you expect that there would have been less violence or more violence if Dubya had sent in the Jesus Storm Troopers?

DanZ

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