Over the years, Americans have died all over the world fighting for causes
that, at the time, seems pointless. It is only in the long view that many of
these actions can be judged. The war on terror, which includes the "battle" in
Iraq is no exception. Bringing democracy to Iraq will, in the long term, bring
peace and prosperity to those people and make us a lot safer. We are a lot safer
having Saddam removed than leaving him there for the inevitable day when
sanctions were lifted and either he or his psychopathic sons were in charge to
do who knows what.
As wars go, this one was unusually justified.
Here's a list of the wars the US has been in:
War of 1812: Declared because a handful of US merchants were impressed
into the British Navy. Thousands of Americans died and the most of Washington DC
was burned to the ground by the British. Our President, James Madison, wrote
most of the constitution.
Mexican/American War: We wanted Mexican territory so we seized it.
War of 1898: A US ship in Havana Harbor blows up likely due to a
failure on the ship. The US declares war on Spain and seizes Cuba and the
Philippines.
World War I: Germany declares unrestricted submarine warfare around
the British Isles. So we declared war on them.
World War II: Japan attacks Pear Harbor, Germany and Japan both
declare war on us.
Korean War: North Korea invades South Korea. US troops sent to defend
South Korea.
Vietnam War: North Vietnam aims to unite all of Vietnam into a
Communist country. US defends South Vietnam. Ultimately ends in a stalemate with
the US leaving. North Vietnam ultimately violates the agreement and conquers
South Vietnam anyway. US doesn't respond.
Gulf War I: Iraq invades Kuwait. US and UN give Saddam an ultimatum to
leave Kuwait or be forced to leave. US and Coalition forces liberate Kuwait but
stop short of removing Saddam (since that wasn't part of the UN mandate). A
cease fire is called in which Iraq agrees to UN inspections, a no-fly zone over
the northern and southern part of the country to protect the Kurd and Shiites
respectively, and reparations to Kuwait.
Afghanistan: After 3 hijacked airliners crash into the WTC and
Pentagon (a 4th was retaken by the passengers and crashed into the ground), the
US determines that a worldwide terrorist network, Al Qaeda, was responsible and
is mainly based in Afghanistan. After demanding that the Afghan Taliban
government hand them over being refused, US forces work with "the northern
alliance" to eliminate the Taliban government and eject most of Al Qaeda from
that country.
Gulf War II: Iraq, having thrown out the inspectors, not paid
reparations, and regularly firing on US/UK planes patrolling the no-fly zone is
given an ultimatum in the unanimously passed resolution 1441: Abide by the
previous agreements or suffer "serious consequences". He is given 90 days to do
so. By February, it's clear Saddam is playing the same old games. Coalition
forces remove Saddam from power.
Now, if you look at this together, it's pretty clear that as wars go, this
one had more thought and justification to it than most efforts the US has been
involved in (the war of 1898, the war of 1812, and the Mexican-American war are
all 3 wars that are pretty hard to justify IMO).
I tend to think that most people just don't know much on these wars. IN the
Mexican-American war, the US army actually conquered Mexico. Not just some piece
of it. US forces conquered Mexico City. If they had had mass communications back
then, there's a pretty good chance that most of Mexico would have been
incorporated into the United States. Similarly, the war of 1812 was incredibly
foolish and had virtually no justification that I can find. And as for the
Spanish-American war, imagine the reaction today of US troops fighting and dying
in the Philippines because some old US ship blew up for unknown reasons 90 miles
south of Florida.
50,000 Americans died defending Korea. What was the justification for that?
It was a rural nation on the other side of the world with no national interest
to us. I certainly grieve for every one of the hundreds of Americans who have
died in Iraq, their sacrifice will ultimately help a great many people in the
long run.
Most defeated enemies of the United States have benefited in some way. If
Arizona, Texas, New Mexico, and California had remained part of Mexico, does
anyone think the citizens there today would be better off? Does anyone think
that Japan and Germany aren't better off today than they would have been
otherwise? France, which regularly whines about US "unilateralism" only exists
today because the same gang liberated them from the Germans (and was it not
French unilateralism that aided the US revolution? The French justification for
helping us was basically to piss off the British).
The point is, what we're doing in Iraq is almost certainly going to benefit
everyone on all sides (well, not the terrorists probably. We won't have to
worry that some dictator is using his billions in oil wealth to plot some
horrible revenge on the United States or its friends. Iraqi's won't have to
worry about having their children taken from them and tortured, killed and
imprisoned simply as a way to "teach the parents a lesson". Iraq's neighbors
don't have to worry about becoming a "province" of "Greater Iraq".
In other words, the benefit being gained from the war in Iraq is great and
our sacrifice has been relatively low. But not absolute zero. When people worry
about the details of justifying the war they ignore the bigger picture. Most
wars in history have had little or no justification. The US is no exception to
this. But what is exceptional is the long term results - US actions do tend to
benefit other peoples. There is no denying this. People who carp about the UN
not agreeing with this or that ignore the obvious - the UN was created by the
United States. It wasn't a team effort. It was wholly a US idea with British
backing that the US then talked others into being involved with. And the UN was
an action that resulted from World War II.
Wars are hell. But they do bring change both good and ill. But based on
history and based on a broader look at the situation, the war in Iraq is likely
to benefit everyone in the long run.