125gJoe said:
Sadaam changed, and turned into something horrible. So the U.S. changed, and took him out of dictatorship. How the U.S. gassed the Kurds I will never understand. If a Dictator misuses weapons then whos action and fault is that?
oh well.....I thought I could avoid this debate, as I generally do avoid most debates, but looks like I got sucked into another one....darn you all.
As far as your comment is concerned joe, I cannot completely agree with you. Like happychem said, we were a bit late in our actions against Sadaam. I’m not saying he wasn’t a horrible man, I’m just saying it was a bit..."off topic."
As far as being surprised about misusing weapons (I still laugh at the concept of "misusing".....like there’s a right way or something), well...common man, that’s like being surprised at a bully for beating a kid up after you give him a shiny new set of brass knuckles to play with. Directly, yes, it was Sadaams fault and his action, indirectly, it was our fault....and in my eyes that’s just as bad.
I might get a few Bush supporters riled up with this comment.... but you guys won the election so I don’t care. I don’t think that Iraq was about removing Sadaam, hell, I don’t even think that Iraq was about Weapons of mass destruction. I think it was about Bush's falling approval rating. The war in Afghanistan wasn't showing results....I mean, how could it? It was a war on terrorism, which is a lot harder to fight considering there aren’t any defined enemies....your next target could be that dude standing over there, or it could be that old lady walking up to you (if you remember Vietnam, the VC used civilians as walking bombs). When we moved to Iraq because of "weapons of mass destruction" and "a threat to peace loving countries everywhere", we immediately were able to see results. We continually bashed our way in and "won" the war (I say "won" because we're still fighting). We were "fighting the good fight" and kicking some serious butt. If you look back, Bush's increased approval rating and the movement in Iraq link up pretty well.
But like plantbrian said:
"What choice does the average Iraqi have but to fight against Saddam and the USA? Which oppressor does it matter?
Those people are not terrorist/insurgents/masterminds, they are doing what I'd do if China came here and wanted to impose communism on the USA.
There are many ways to fight against injustice, not just killing people.
Two wrongs still don't make a right."
I could not have said it better myself.
On a different note, I’m a lot more worried about Asia as a threat. Look at it.....We have North Korea with the second largest standing army (not to mention that little thing about the ability to launch nukes at us...), China has the worlds largest standing army, the second largest nuclear arsenal (or Russia....not sure). Then we have India and Pakistan, both of which are threatening each other with nukes. It’s just not a good time over there. So, another possible reason why we're in Iraq and not North Korea is because Iraq doesn’t have China to back it up, which would make things a lot harder.....
Speaking of Asia... I’m still mad at the US for allowing Japan to join the war against Iraq. If we all remember our WWII history, we'll remember that we set up Japan's constitution so that they
cannot be an aggressor. That means no wars unless they are threatened.....ooooohh, Iraq.....big threat to Japan....yeh, right. If we're gonna set up other countries laws, we should at least make an effort not to override them every time it’s convenient to us
Id also have to agree with happychem on his statement about human rights in Iraq. I’m sorry to say this, I really am, but the average American does not care about the rights of the Iraqi people. If that were the case, then just like happy chem said we would also be in Africa, South America, Central America, and Asia. I realize that there is a
very big list of places to start (quite frankly, I’m more worried about our own education and all the poverty/homelessness), but Iraq was just a bit "random."
I’m not saying there aren’t people out there who care, I’m just pointing out the general sentiment. I realize that there are thousands of people and many many orginizations to help other countries, its just that the average American doesnt really care about the religous wars in Africa, or the near political revolution in Mexico.