barney i am going to disagree with you about not going to war. Cause since the us was fighting soviet union , we left our weapons there. so we are at fault for half of the stuff that has happen. Second, millions of people die... just not in the usa or london there were plenty of attacks.
The weapons were meant for use against Iran. Russia had little to do with it.
Most of those weapons were in a state of decay by the time it even became an issue. (And it still isn't clear what actually happened with the Kurdish thing.) The war couldn't be justified by WMDs because there was no clear evidence that there were any hidden stockpiles of new weaponry and it had already been quite well established that the small-scale WMD program in Iraq had stopped a while before.
WMD-wise, nothing had to happen. The UN was handling it until the US put a stop to the whole thing prior to invasion.
And this makes perfect sense; after years of sanctions, Iraq was a broken state by the time the US occupation forces got there (notice there was barely a fight--none of the 'glory' of the Gulf War).
there a reason we went to war. Now with bush its a bit different the way it was handle was the wrong way. But he also made the right decision. I rather listen to those people who had family members die if they support the war or not.
If you mean the families of US soldiers that died, most of the deaths were after occupation (i.e. victims of the follow-up Insurgency). US death toll was virtually nil against what little remained of the regime's forces during the 'official' war.
...What's more, you can't justify going to war for victims of said war. (And frankly, death is an inevitable result of war when you're a soldier. Definitely not a reason to hold a grudge, especially when you're the attacker.)
But speaking of the families of dead soldiers; every example I am aware of has been of hatred for the war itself.
(And if you mean the victims of 9/11...sigh...Iraq had absolutely nothing to do with that--no serious debate on that exists. Sorry but you were duped on that one.)
That will have much more meaning to me. Just cause millions of people don't like us going to war, it just a fact things like this are going to happen. As long as i am gone before the biggest... next war happening i want to be in peace.
If you mean internationally, try billions. But yeah, millions of Americans would certainly be accurate.
If by things like this, you mean friendly little 'interventions,' then yeah I'd have to agree; they'll continue as long as the US remains as it is. Count on a new one every decade or so.
Just to be clear, people are not against ousting dictators; even though the US in Iraq has implications for the entire world, the public mainly protested because of the humanitarian toll lacking legitimate justification (i.e. the dictatorship was already on its last legs and the country in ruins; the war was unnecessary and therefore a crime against the civilian population).
Now there plenty we can look into did bush do it for oil... yes even my brother who fought in wars said we got enough oil
It doesn't take much to figure that out; it's only the world's largest easily accessible/refineable source. (I don't think it's a secret as even the mainstream media alluded to the need to ensure stability in this important area.) Saddam was removed because he threatened control over that--control over a primary energy reserve ensures that there cannot be any global energy program independent of the US system.
The other big reason was to corner Iran, and of course, it strengthens Israel's position in the region.
I don't know why you would bring a soldier's perspective into it; being in the field doesn't clarify much in this case.
This is funny because outside of North America, it wouldn't even occur to anyone to doubt that the war wasn't over oil (i.e. a resource war).