I’m one of the few who does believe it was just and feels it must be continued until we secure the country enough to leave it in Iraqi hands. I honestly feel that Pres. Bush was on the offense after 9/11 and was trying to stop further dangers from coming to fruition. I was just wondering if those who feel it was unjust in the first place have ever wondered if it would be worse for us to abandon the people we were trying to help by getting rid of a murderous dictator who acted suspiciously like he did have those elusive WMDs.
Haven’t we already begun to abandon them? We’ve started aiding Sunni militias, it was the Shia majority that Sadam primarily oppressed. Similiarly, we’ve ignored the pleas of the USCCB and the Pope to setup safe havens for fleeing Christian’s in the north because of our new desire to build up Sunni alliances.
In other words, the only tangible progress we’ve made in recent months on security has involved essentially switching sides. As multiple Pentagon officials have now noted, we’ve largely given up on anything remotely resembling a western democracy. That leaves two basic choices, allowing the majority, who are Shia to establish a theocracy with strong ties to Iran, or somehow empowering the Sunni minority, who would hopefully ally itself with the Saudis.
The Saudis, of course, are the principle backers of Islamic terrorism (most the 9/11 hijackers were Saudi), but at least we have an uneasy triange between the House of Saud, extreme Wahabism, and a US thirst for oil.
Iran, on the other hand, is also potentially dangerous, but we seem utterly incompetent when it comes to dealing with them. The citizens are, surprisingly, more in tune with western ideas than most of the region, but we have a knack for killing reform. Two examples, Iran was actually tacidly helpful when we invaded Afghanistan. Many experts thought that there would be a real thawing of our relationship. Then, of course, we dubbed them part of an “axis of evil”. Another would be Amahdinejad. He was spectacularly unpopular with Iran, primarily because he had failed to deliver a number of modest reforms on women’s and social rights in Iran, but his popularity has soared since we’ve begun to demonize him in the US press.
So, it seems likely that ‘winning’, should it ever be achieved, will be to have some form of Sunni controlled military state establish security. But at least be ‘friendly’ to US interests. I use single quotes because Sadam was considered friendly to US interests before Kuwait.
I think this is short sighted, but US politics does not lend itself to long term planning.