Monday, January 29, 2007


For Jane






















Charles Wilson



DC protesters are beneath contempt


Mixed message between signs.
Same scum.
Same haters.
Same defeatists.
Spoiled brats.

10 myths about Iraq

I was pointed to this site by 7.62mm Justice

January 28, 2007:
Top 10 Myths of the Iraq War.

In no particular order. There are more, but ten is a manageable
number.

1-No Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD). Several hundred chemical
weapons were found, and Saddam had all his WMD scientists and technicians ready.
Just end the sanctions and add money, and the weapons would be back in
production within a year. At the time of the invasion, all intelligence
agencies, world-wide, believed Saddam still had a functioning WMD program.
Saddam had shut them down because of the cost, but created the illusion that the
program was still operating in order to fool the Iranians. The Iranians wanted
revenge on Saddam because of the Iraq invasion of Iran in 1980, and the eight
year war that followed.

2-The 2003 Invasion was Illegal. Only according to some in the UN. By
that standard, the invasion of Kosovo and bombing of Serbia in 1999 was also
illegal. Saddam was already at war with the U.S. and Britain, because Iraq had
not carried out the terms of the 1991 ceasefire, and was trying to shoot down
coalition aircraft patrolling the no-fly zone.

3-Sanctions were working. The sanctions worked for Saddam, not for
Iraq. Saddam used the sanctions as an excuse to punish the Shia majority for
their 1991 uprising, and help prevent a new one. The "Oil For Food" program was
corrupted with the help of bribed UN officials, and mass media outlets that
believed Iraqi propaganda. Saddam was waiting out the sanctions, and bribing
France, Russia and China, with promises of oil contracts and debt repayments, to
convince the UN to lift the sanctions.

4-Overthrowing Saddam Only Helped Iran. Of course, and this was
supposed to make Iran more approachable and open to negotiations. With the Iraqi
"threat" gone, it was believed that Iran might lose its radical ways and behave.
Iran got worse as a supporter of terrorism and developer of WMD. Irans clerical
dictatorship did not want a democracy next door. The ancient struggle between
the Iranians and Arabs was brought to the surface, and the UN became more active
in dealing with problems caused by pro-terrorist government of Iran. As a result
of this, the Iranian police state has faced more internal dissent. From inside
Iran, Iraq does not look like an Iranian victory.

5-The Invasion Was a Failure. Saddam's police state was overthrown and
a democracy established, which was the objective of the operation. Peace did not
ensue because Saddam's supporters, the Sunni Arab minority, were not willing to
deal with majority rule, and war crimes trials. A terror campaign followed. Few
expected the Sunni Arabs to be so stupid. There's a lesson to be learned
there.

6-The Invasion Helped Al Qaeda. Compared to what? Al Qaeda was a
growing movement before 2003, and before 2001. But after the Iraq invasion, and
especially the Sunni Arab terrorism, al Qaeda fell in popularity throughout the
Moslem world. Arab countries cracked down on al Qaeda operations more than ever
before. Without the Iraq invasion, al Qaeda would still have safe havens all
over the Arab world.

7-Iraq Is In A State of Civil War. Then so was Britain when the IRA was
active, and so is Spain today because ETA is still active. Both IRA and ETA are
terrorist organizations based on ethnic identity. India also has tribal
separatist rebels who are quite active. That's not considered a civil war. This
is all about partisans playing with labels for political ends, not accurately
describing a terror campaign.

8-Iraqis Were Better Off Under Saddam. Most Iraqis disagree. Check
election results and opinion polls. Reporters tend to ask Iraqi Sunni Arabs this
question, but they were the only ones who benefited from Saddams rule.

9-The Iraq War Caused Islamic Terrorism to Increase in Europe. The
Moslem unrest in Europe was there before 2001, and 2003. Interviews of Islamic
radicals in Europe reveals that the hatred is not motivated by Iraq, but by
daily encounters with hostile natives. Blaming Islamic terrorism on Iraq is
another attempt to avoid dealing with a homegrown problem.

10- The War in Iraq is Lost. By what measure? Saddam and his Baath
party are out of power. There is a democratically elected government. Part of
the Sunni Arab minority continues to support terror attacks, in an attempt to
restore the Sunni Arab dictatorship. In response, extremist Shia Arabs formed
vigilante death squads to expel all Sunni Arabs. Given the history of democracy
in the Middle East, Iraq is working through its problems. Otherwise, one is to
believe that the Arabs are incapable of democracy and only a tyrant like Saddam
can make Iraqi "work." If democracy were easy, the Arab states would all have
it. There are problems, and solutions have to be found and implemented. That
takes time, but Americans have, since the 18th century, grown weary of wars
after three years. If the war goes on longer, the politicians have to scramble
to survive the bad press and opinion polls. Opposition politicians take
advantage of the situation, but this has nothing to do with Iraq, and everything
to do with local politics in the United States.

If Iraq is lost, it is being lost here in America and is being lost by Liberals and the media, but I repeat myself.