One of the most debated things about the Iraq issue is, has containment worked with Saddam Hussein or not? The problem I see is that one of the answers given, that is has not, fails to iunderstand what containment is about.
So, what does it mean to contain? It means to keep something inside, pent up, bottled up, so forth and so on. Anyting tht does not spill out is contained, anyting that does spill out is not. Simple enough, correct? The problem now a days, of coruse, it is that the real meaning of containement has been warped.
Many people say containment of Iraq has failed. Why? Cause he has not disarmed. Seems siple enough you might say... but what does Saddam disarming have to do with containement? The US contained the Soviet Union for 40 years., and not a single time during this process did the Soviets take any step towards any sort of disarmament, in fact, they just got bigger and bigger, in terms of military capability. The US might have outpaced them but the Soviets in 1983 could do thing they could nto in 1973, and all of that while contained.
Containment is about keeping something bottled up: fundamentally, what is in the bottle is meanigless: whether the stuff is red, or blue, disarmed or not, good or evil it matters not: containement is to be measured by whether it is, or has gotten out, of the given box. Now, this may sound callous, may sound amoral, but that is what containement is, simply a strategy, a means, for dealing with an issue you have.
Containement has worked with Saddam Hussein. For 12 years he has stayed in his box, and if the situation is continued, he would stay in said box. What about his refusal to disarm, you ask? Well, that is not an issue of containment. Seeking to reform and change the regime as the ends is not an act of containment: containment would seek disarmament only as a means to ensure you can keep someone in the box. If you disarm someone enough to make them weak, or conversely, you are strongh enough and your commitment to neighbors is strong enough so that the other side will not attempt to break out of the box, then the policy of containement worked.
Now, I do not write this to convince anyone about whether to go to war or not: lord knows it won't, but next time you argue about why we have to invade, don't say "containment failed", because that is wrong. Containment worked, has worked, and for all intents and purposes will continue to work. If you want to argue that containment as a policy, being amoral and uncaring, is wrong, fine, you may have some great arguments there, but saying that containement is wrong is not that same as saying that containement does not work.
So, what does it mean to contain? It means to keep something inside, pent up, bottled up, so forth and so on. Anyting tht does not spill out is contained, anyting that does spill out is not. Simple enough, correct? The problem now a days, of coruse, it is that the real meaning of containement has been warped.
Many people say containment of Iraq has failed. Why? Cause he has not disarmed. Seems siple enough you might say... but what does Saddam disarming have to do with containement? The US contained the Soviet Union for 40 years., and not a single time during this process did the Soviets take any step towards any sort of disarmament, in fact, they just got bigger and bigger, in terms of military capability. The US might have outpaced them but the Soviets in 1983 could do thing they could nto in 1973, and all of that while contained.
Containment is about keeping something bottled up: fundamentally, what is in the bottle is meanigless: whether the stuff is red, or blue, disarmed or not, good or evil it matters not: containement is to be measured by whether it is, or has gotten out, of the given box. Now, this may sound callous, may sound amoral, but that is what containement is, simply a strategy, a means, for dealing with an issue you have.
Containement has worked with Saddam Hussein. For 12 years he has stayed in his box, and if the situation is continued, he would stay in said box. What about his refusal to disarm, you ask? Well, that is not an issue of containment. Seeking to reform and change the regime as the ends is not an act of containment: containment would seek disarmament only as a means to ensure you can keep someone in the box. If you disarm someone enough to make them weak, or conversely, you are strongh enough and your commitment to neighbors is strong enough so that the other side will not attempt to break out of the box, then the policy of containement worked.
Now, I do not write this to convince anyone about whether to go to war or not: lord knows it won't, but next time you argue about why we have to invade, don't say "containment failed", because that is wrong. Containment worked, has worked, and for all intents and purposes will continue to work. If you want to argue that containment as a policy, being amoral and uncaring, is wrong, fine, you may have some great arguments there, but saying that containement is wrong is not that same as saying that containement does not work.
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