Posted on 03/23/2003 9:35:22 AM PST by Clive
A few people have asked lately how I came to support the Iraq war.
As a good Canadian, and generally peaceful person, I say I naturally had misgivings. I've marched in my share of peace demonstrations - in university, and after I joined the real world.
And like many good people around the world, my gut initially questioned the U.S.-led drive to oust Saddam Hussein. Did all those clever cynics crowing about how it was really Bush's "Daddy's war" and "all about oil" have a point? Was there really a 9/11 connection or was Saddam just a stand-in for the elusive Osama bin Laden?
But I've since been convinced this is a just war.
In part, because of the arguments and evidence we've all heard, from the eloquent Tony Blair, the elegant Colin Powell and others. In part, because I understand, as many Canadians instinctively do (even if our prime minister doesn't) that terrorism and the rogue states that sponsor it have to be crushed. In part, because of my first-hand observation of the dysfunctional UN earlier this month.
But what really convinced me this war was right was the behaviour and arguments from the other side - so wrong, in so many ways.
The arrogant, juvenile, pedantic, illogical, smarmy, smug and offensive nonsense spouted by so many of this war's opponents pushed me over the edge.
It's the sort of stuff I'd hope no self-respecting Canadian would want to be associated with.
Alas, much of it is coming not from fringe extremists, but from actual elected members of our Parliament.
Liberal MP Carolyn Parrish: "Damn Americans, I hate those bastards." Liberal cabinet minister Herb Dhaliwal: "(U.S. President George Bush has) not only let Americans but the world down by not being a statesman." Liberal MP Janko Peric: "Do you think President Bush really cares about Iraqi people? I don't think so." NDP MP Svend Robinson: "It may very well be that many of us consider Bush a war criminal." NDP MP Bill Blaikie: "(Bush is) planning every minute of his life to kill as many Iraqi children as he can."
This isn't healthy dissent, it's pathological petulance. Nor is it the isolated ranting of a few bad apples. On the contrary, their bosses condone this stuff - including Canada's boss.
Indeed, Jean Chretien is the single person most responsible - other than Saddam, that is - for my stance on this war.
Since Sept. 11, 2001, Chretien has rarely put a foot right. He has never made a strong, articulate statement against terrorism. He has never addressed the nation - and when he did talk about 9/11, he blamed it on our "greedy" society. He has shamefully neglected the Canadian victims and shrugged off terror threats to and within this country.
As for Iraq, he waffled on whether or not a war resolution was needed at the UN. In the end, he decided Canada's position was whatever the UN's position was - and since the UN failed to get its act together, the war was "not justified."
No debate, no discussion of what Canada stands for, whatever that may be. No troops, no support for our greatest ally and friend. It's shameful, and millions of Canadians think so.
No one can predict war's outcome, but I and others trust that it must result in a better Iraq (we will, of course, hold the U.S. to its lofty promises - the U.S. being the only country in the world that's expected to wage a politically correct war).
And if all goes well, the positive results will ripple well beyond Iraq. Already the UN and all its flaws have been exposed (along with some of the weapons France, et al. insisted Saddam didn't have), which could clear the way for a new and improved world institution. Dare we hope the same for Canada, where the Liberals and their would-be leader have been exposed as no better than Chretien - heedless of history and duty? ("Regime change," anyone?)
We can only hope someone, somewhere, will emerge to give voice to the anger and frustration that I and so many other Canadians feel right now. So far, the only politician in Canada who's even tried has been Alliance Leader Stephen Harper, who last week made a stirring appeal not just for supporting our allies but for the values on which Canada was built.
As he said, this war is about doing what's right. Not following the polls, not trying to have it both ways, not slapping back at the big American giant like a cranky child. It's about stating what you believe in and sticking to your guns (assuming you have any).
It's a defining time for us all, individually and as a nation. I, for one, refuse to be defined by the way my country's current leaders - and their whiny acolytes - have defined Canada.
Concise, cogent, pointed, and true.
Then you go on to suggest ulterior motives for those nations -- but you offer absolutely no evidence. Nor do you offer any evidence for your interpretation of "severe consequences".
But never mind all that. There's only one question I'd like you to answer: If you don't believe in democracy, then just how do you think international disputes should be settled?
The news cycles of this world are incredibly short at this point in history and it's hard to keep a focus on one issue. You do realize that on an almost daily basis the Iraqi military had targeted or actually fired on Allied planes in the no fly zone, right? How often did we hear this?
From March 1, 1991 to September 12, 2002 (that is exactly 4,183 days) Saddam Hussein violated the terms of the cease fire. During those 4,183 days, the UN passed an additional 15 resolutions, or one every 278 days, to "compel" Saddam to abide by his agreement. On average every 278 days the world community realized he wasn't behaving and chastized him by writing another unenforced resolution.
How many days was it since Bush made his speech to the UN last September 12th? It was 188 days. 188 mornings that the "World Community" woke up and decided not to enforce it's cease-fire document. Do you really think that an extra 14 or even 28 days would matter to them?
4,128 days of defiance, 278 days on average between reprimand. 14 to 28 days would have made a difference? Not a chance.
A child who was born on March 1, 1991 would be 12 years old by now. A child born on March 1, 1991 would now be old enough to recognize the problem. France, Germany, Russia, Canada, and like minded people have do not have the recognition capabilities of a 12 year old. How sad.
By the way, in answer to your question in a straight forward way, a couple of weeks would not have been possible logistically. The desert heats up quick and if we were to wait until the end of April to move, the daily average temp rise to 90+ degrees in the desert. By the end of May it is closing in on 100 degrees every day.
At that point, we might have had to wait until October to move in so our guys aren't dying from the heat in a literal sense. That would be an extra eight months to keep our guys there. Eight months of stress away from the family. Eight months of stress being on alert. Eight months of paying the cost from the budget.
No, better to go when the weather is favorable and to stop the delaying tactics of Saddam.
I too am frustrated by the UN's apparent paralysis. I was scratching my head five years ago at how Saddam continued to ignore his commitments and yet the UN simply piled one resolution on another. I would have been supportive of military action years ago.
But for me, the paramount considerations are the principles of democracy and due process. (As far as I'm concerned, democracy is an axiom -- I'm not interested in debating with those who don't acknowledge it.)
As you say, this has been going on for twelve years now, so another few months more or less isn't going to make much difference, either to the UN's credibility, which is already damaged, or to the threat posed by Saddam, which IMHO was minimal from an American perspective and virtually nil as long as the inspectors were on the scene.
On the other hand, it really hasn't been that long in diplomatic terms since the United States began pressuring for military action. I believe that another few weeks or months could have made the difference. Certainly there were a number of countries who were favourably considering a resolution explicitly authorizing war after a fixed period of time (which was still being negotiated). There might have been a veto or two, but IMHO that wouldn't make much difference. A simple majority in favour would have provided enough moral authority to justify action.
Although I personally believe that war is more than justified in this case, I don't believe that one or two nations should ever arrogate to themselves the decision to invade a foreign country. I see this principle as being far more important in the long run than the small benefits to be gained by unilateral action now. If it has to wait till October, then so be it. (And I don't buy this "coalition" stuff -- everybody knows this is an American war, with the willing assistance of the Brits and a number of smaller countries going along for the ride.)
However, the battle has been joined, for better or for worse. I hope it will be quick and successful, and I hope that the blowback will be minimal -- though I fear that neither will be the case.
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