It's been awhile since I've been in Iraq threads on Poly, I don't know where people stand. Heck, last time I actually tried being serious in one Ted was pro-war
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It seems to me that Bush gave several reasons for attacking Iraq in addition to potential WMD's.
(just a few off the top of my head: not allowing inspectors in the country, attacking US airplanes patrolling the no-fly zone, attempted assassination of a former president, use of chemical weapons against his own people and during the war with Iran, diversion of funds from humanitarian oil sales to himself and the military, the countless political murders and false inprisonments within his own country, his open support for the 9/11 attacks and of other terrorist organizations)
Then he gave Iraq plenty of time to comply.
It also seems to me that at the time he got overwhelming support from the Senate, House and American people (I'm not talking about everyone at Poly though)
Then as time went on, the action became less and less popular and it became apparent that massive amounts of WMD's weren't gonna be found. Suddenly those who were in the awkward position of supporting the war initially, but were against it currently kept pushing the WMD issue, until it became "the only reason the US went into Iraq"
Someone earlier mentioned the "spin". Well that in my opinion has been the biggest spin of all.
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The other reasons for war were tack-ons by the Bushies once they had trouble making the case for war based on WMDs alone. Then, once it became clear that the WMDs they claimed we'd find wouldn't be found, they pushed those other reasons harder.
Please.
-Arriangrog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!
The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.
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And to be clear, some of those "other reasons" may have been the "real" reasons the Bushies went to war, but it wasn't sold that way.
-Arriangrog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!
The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.
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I'm not commenting on whether the action was right or wrong. I am just saying WMD's were one of many issues. And originally the major issue was not letting the inspectors in.
By the way, I knew we would never find any WMD's in Iraq even though everything pointed to the probability that he had chemical weapons.
If you warn a drug dealer 6 months ahead of time that you are gonna search his house for drugs, there won't be any drugs in his house at the time of the raid.
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There are two basic categories the justifications for the war fall into:
1) Security concerns (WMDs, alleged connections to A-Q, support for other terrorism, past history of regional warfare)
2) Humanitarian concerns.
The war was primarily sold on the basis of category 1. And it was mostly bull****. The WMD threat was blown entirely out of proportion. There was no alliance between Saddam & A-Q. Saddam's payment of $$ to the families of suicide bombers was distasteful support of such terrorism, but par for the course in that region - a cheap way to pay lipservice to the valiant struggle of the Palestianians against teh evil Zionist Crusader alliance. Was that invasion-worthy? As for regional aggression, Saddam was clearly contained.
That leaves category 2, which means nationbuilding (something Bush always disliked, and I think continues to dislike). As we have seen, the Administration's planning and execution of this nationbuilding was poor. The final outcome remains in doubt. I still hold out hope that things will get better, but so far not so good.
-ArrianLast edited by Arrian; June 22, 2006, 12:12.grog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!
The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.
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There was also this issue of not allowing inspectors into the country. Or some would be let in but not allowed to inspect the areas that they wanted. This suspicious and illegal behavior coupled with the fact that he had shown the world that he would use these weapons against his own people or against another country in a war was the original issue that set off the crisis.
Let's face it. Iraq lost a war and agreed to terms to end the war. They included inspections and a no-fly zone. He didn't allow inspectors and constantly attacked the US military patrolling the "no-fly" zone. Personally, I'm surprised something didn't happen the first time he took military action against the US and British airforces.
Just think about that. 2 sides fight a war and one side loses. The losing side agrees to a cease fire, then a few months later continually and openly attacks the victorious side militarily.
Add in 9/11 and people had had enough. There was a sense that if the US had been dilligent in enforcing international law 9/11 might not have happened.
Add to that the anthrax attacks in the US and suddenly chemical weapons seemed a very dangerous.
All of these issues were floating around at the time and people made decisions based on all of these things.
Now 5 years later the war that a majority of Americans and American lawmakers approved of isn't quite as neat and clean as people would like. Lawmakers who now want to run against the war have a difficult time answering the question on why they voted for it. Thus comes the magic answer "The only reason I supported the war was because we were told there were WMD's" (at least it sounds better than Kerry's first responses: "When I voted for the war I wasn't really voting for the war")
The reason why this spin works so good is because it allows the majority of American citizens that supported the war who have now changed their minds to blame it on someone else too.
MY unscientific poll puts Americans in 3 groups on the war issue
Group 1: Always against it (20%)
Group 2: Always for it (20%)
Group 3: Originally for it, now against it (60%)
OF the Group 3 you have 2 types of people:
3a: Those who won't admit they used to be for it
3b: Those who say they were lied to about WMD's
I have yet to hear a person say "I was for the war originally but I was wrong"
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Originally posted by Deity Dude
Now 5 years later the war that a majority of Americans and American lawmakers approved of isn't quite as neat and clean as people would like.
I have yet to hear a person say "I was for the war originally but I was wrong"
Now you've heard it (sorry, I'm not an American...)."I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure." - Clarence Darrow
"I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it." - Mark Twain
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There was a sense that if the US had been dilligent in enforcing international law 9/11 might not have happened.
Add to that the anthrax attacks in the US and suddenly chemical weapons seemed a very dangerous.
I think a few people here at 'poly have admitted to being for the war but now think they were wrong. But it is indeed rare. People don't like admitting mistakes. Politicians are even worse.
-Arriangrog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!
The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.
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Add to that the anthrax attacks in the US and suddenly chemical weapons seemed a very dangerous.
That anthrax was manufactured right here in the United States in a military lab.
If you warn a drug dealer 6 months ahead of time that you are gonna search his house for drugs, there won't be any drugs in his house at the time of the raid.
Because drugs aren't used to defend your country.
One question, not one single conservative anywhere has answered is:
and Victor galis said it best:
If Saddam wasn't willing to use WMDs against coalition forces as they toppled his regime, when he had little to lose, do you really think he would have used them offensively?
can any bushpologist answer this question?
anyone?
anyone?
I didn't think so.
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Saddam did everything he could to convince he world he had weapons of mass destruction in an effort to firghten us into letting him do what he wanted. Unfortunately, for him he miscalculated. Bush was looking for excuses to take him out and it was all too easy for Bush to take Saddam at face value.“It is no use trying to 'see through' first principles. If you see through everything, then everything is transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world. To 'see through' all things is the same as not to see.”
― C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man
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Originally posted by Arrian
Diligence would have helped. International law as you put it, had nothing to do with it. Our own security folks were on to them, but didn't quite put it all together. Saddam had nothing to do with 9/11.
Originally posted by Arrian
Not to me. First off, anthrax would be a bioweapon, not a chemical weapon. How many people died in those attacks, btw?
My point again is, right or wrong, there were many issues floating around at the time when Congress and the American people gave their support for the war.
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Originally posted by Deity Dude
Then he gave Iraq plenty of time to comply.
It also seems to me that at the time he got overwhelming support from the Senate, House and American people (I'm not talking about everyone at Poly though)
Then as time went on, the action became less and less popular and it became apparent that massive amounts of WMD's weren't gonna be found. Suddenly those who were in the awkward position of supporting the war initially, but were against it currently kept pushing the WMD issue, until it became "the only reason the US went into Iraq"
Someone earlier mentioned the "spin". Well that in my opinion has been the biggest spin of all.
I'm not commenting on whether the action was right or wrong. I am just saying WMD's were one of many issues. And originally the major issue was not letting the inspectors in.
By the way, I knew we would never find any WMD's in Iraq even though everything pointed to the probability that he had chemical weapons.
If you warn a drug dealer 6 months ahead of time that you are gonna search his house for drugs, there won't be any drugs in his house at the time of the raid
There was also this issue of not allowing inspectors into the country. Or some would be let in but not allowed to inspect the areas that they wanted. This suspicious and illegal behavior coupled with the fact that he had shown the world that he would use these weapons against his own people or against another country in a war was the original issue that set off the crisis.
Let's face it. Iraq lost a war and agreed to terms to end the war. They included inspections and a no-fly zone. He didn't allow inspectors and constantly attacked the US military patrolling the "no-fly" zone. Personally, I'm surprised something didn't happen the first time he took military action against the US and British airforces.
Add in 9/11 and people had had enough. There was a sense that if the US had been dilligent in enforcing international law 9/11 might not have happened.
Add to that the anthrax attacks in the US and suddenly chemical weapons seemed a very dangerous.
The reason why this spin works so good is because it allows the majority of American citizens that supported the war who have now changed their minds to blame it on someone else too.
I have yet to hear a person say "I was for the war originally but I was wrong"
And no offense, but Bush doesn't give a rat's *** about international law.
I think a few people here at 'poly have admitted to being for the war but now think they were wrong. But it is indeed rare. People don't like admitting mistakes. Politicians are even worse."The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists."
-Joan Robinson
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What did Colin Powell give a speech about when discussing Saddam?
Hint, "It's a slam dunk."
It's great that we took out one of the guys that was contained without WMDs. Maybe next time the US can take on North Korea, Pakistan, Israel or one of the other countries with Nukes. Maybe we should just concentrate on countries that have used WMDs and have WMDs, like Britain or the US?I never know their names, But i smile just the same
New faces...Strange places,
Most everything i see, Becomes a blur to me
-Grandaddy, "The Final Push to the Sum"
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Originally posted by NeOmega
One question, not one single conservative anywhere has answered is:
and Victor galis said it best:
If Saddam wasn't willing to use WMDs against coalition forces as they toppled his regime, when he had little to lose, do you really think he would have used them offensively?
can any bushpologist answer this question?
anyone?
anyone?
I didn't think so.
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