sparky wrote:galanter wrote:sparky wrote:You are correct. I should have used the words "misguided, catastrophic and ruthlessly selfish."
So the Iraqi people were better off under Saddam with no end in sight?
Do you think most Iraqi's would answer "yes" to this?
Compared to the situation now? Yes. And considering Saddam's age, no end in sight seems thick. A stable and repressive dictatorship (see Saudi Arabia) is preferable to the disintegration and widespread murder which is a direct consequence of the invasion.
Besides which, who asked for this humanitarian intervention? Where do you draw the line Galanter? Why so keen to send armed men to places where they are not wanted? Why dictate to a people a revolution that they were not willing to carry out themselves?
You seem to forget Saddam's sons who were, by all accounts, worse than the father. North Korea offers a good example of what such a situation promises.
There were numerous attempts to off Saddam, and significant uprisings that failed around 1991...because Saddam was willing, for example, to use chemical weapons to wipe out entire villages.
Where to draw the line? Each situation is different. Each requires its own analysis. For example, at this point going into North Korea would be a terrible idea...at least so far as I understand the tactical situation.
And as I've tried to explain (so many times now) the rational for taking down Saddam is based on multiple reasons taken in their totality. Why Saddam? Because (1) it was do-able (2) it wouldn't upset the neighbors, (3) it was justified because he was the worst of the worst.
The Saudi's are bad, but living under the House of Saud is a picnic compared to living under Saddam.
Briefly some of the reasons that contribute to the tally include (1) past crimes (e.g. attacking 3 countries, using chemical weapons inside Iraq and out, the murder of more Moslems than anyone in all of history) (2) ongoing threat to the region (3) breaking the terms of the end of the previous war (4) ongoing warfare against his own people (5) support of terrorists (e.g. his support of Hammas is beyond dispute) (6) refusal to demonstrate the destruction of his WMD's and related programs, and the related probability his WMD efforts could continue, (7) nearly daily firing upon the overflights preventing him from killing more Kurds in the north and Shiites in the sourth.