Re: War is Imminent (Score: 3, Insightful)
posted Wednesday, March 19, 2003 - 10:55 AM (
#4515)
I oppose the way we've gotten into this war more than anything else. I can see a point when you look at the 10-year picture that there were resolutions passed that were meant to have consequences attached to them, and they were not properly enforced. But when you look at events in terms of the past weeks or months, what we're doing doesn't make sense. It feels like the 10-year perspective was being held in reserve and is being used as an excuse.
My biggest problem with the situation is that the U.S. government has been misleading the U.S. people, and as a result we don't have a clear and true picture of why we should or should not be at war at the moment. There hasn't been an acceptable level of question-and-answer communicaton with the press, for one thing.
Bush has over-stated the nuclear threat from Iraq, citing findings from organizations that say they don't know of any such findings. This is not to say that there is no Iraqi WMD threat.
Bush has over-stated the alleged connection between Iraq and bin Laden. It seems unlikely that the two are aligned. That is not to say that Iraq lacks terrorist ties.
In both cases, Bush appears to be manipulating public opinion by latching on to high-visibility fears. The fact is, he's weakening his position by doing it. If he'd just stuck to what's known to be true, he might have been able to build a stronger case both here and internationally. Unless, of course, we're being lied to at a far more fundamental level about the state of things in Iraq.
So what is it really about? I don't honestly believe it's about oil. It's fashionable to think that everything we do in the middle east is about oil, but it doesn't make sense to me in this case. Nor do I accept that it's as simple as Bush wanting a war. I've come to dislike Bush, but I don't buy into the popular image that he's stupid.
So to me neither the official reasons nor the common speculation add up. If I don't know why we're at war, that means no justification has been presented to me, so I oppose being at war.
At the same time, I can't say I agree with the French position. The unwillingness to attach consequences to resolutions -- or even to stand behind that aspect of existing resolutions -- goes too far in my opinion. Statements that imply that no compromise is even possible are simply counter-productive, and even if France is right that the aborted vote wouldn't have gotten 9 votes, the hard line "we will veto you" stance contributed to the break-down of diplomacy.
As for the influence of "some hick from Texas"... well, I'd feel no better if our president were a slick New Yorker. The U.S. political system grants certain power to the president, and your chosen candidate isn't always going to be in office. That's the system at work.
Did containment work with Iraq? Depends what your objectives are. Would it have worked forever? We'll never know. Does Iraq pose a threat to the U.S.? Well, the ability to lob a nuke onto the U.S. mainland isn't the only thing that constitutes a threat. If, as I've heard reported, Iraq is funding suicide bombers -- or terrorists of any form -- then they are posing a threat to Americans abroad if not at home.
So to me, it may be that a case for war could have been constructed, but that didn't happen.
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Constants might be the only universal irony