Some thoughts on Iraq
“…. the desire for regime change was not a legal base for military action.” — British Attorney General Peter Goldsmith, quoted in the “Downing Street memo”
Perhaps the evangelicals are right — perhaps America is in a moral free fall. After relentless media disclosures, Capitol Hill testimony, and the recent damning “Downing Street Memo,” a belated reversal in American public opinion may be underway. Polls say a slim majority now realizes that we who opposed the Iraq war from its inception were right: there were no weapons of mass destruction, Saddam Hussein’s noxious regime posed no global threat, and it was never linked to September 11.
So … why did the Bush Administration invade Iraq? How disquieting that today, most Americans still respond to that question with a figurative shrug and some mumbled rhetoric about freeing the Iraqi people from Saddam or bringing democracy to the Middle East.
Those are laudable goals. But they’re not the reasons why America went to war. America unleashed its devastating arsenal, killing and wounding (literally) uncounted numbers of innocent Iraqi civilians, bringing about the deaths of almost 1700 Americans and the wounding of thousands more — and all of the reasons the Bush Administration offered at the time for doing this are now known to be untrue. Even if worthwhile things occurred as a result of the campaign — something proponents will argue, and we will dispute — such results are afterthoughts at best, accidents at worst. The moral question is, when America’s leaders chose this terrible path, did they have compelling reasons?
Testifying on May 17, 2005, before a U.S. Senate subcommittee probing the oil-for-food scandal, the rambunctious British M.P. George Galloway answered that question for the ages. Riposting Sen. Norm Coleman (R.-Minn.), a war supporter, Galloway announced: “Senator, in everything I said about Iraq, I turned out to be right and you turned out to be wrong and 100,000 people paid with their lives; 1600 of them American soldiers sent to their deaths on a pack of lies; 15,000 of them wounded, many of them disabled forever on a pack of lies.”
That is the truth, and — apparently — most Americans now know it. So … where is the moral outrage? Rep. Walter Jones (R-N.C.), a former Iraq hawk, made headlines in June when he admitted to ABC’s This Week that “the reason of going in for weapons of mass destruction, the ability of the Iraqis to make a nuclear weapon, that’s all been proven that it was never there.” The arch-conservative Rep. Jones, not normally a man slow to judgment, could not muster moral outrage at this. The most he would say is “we’ve done about as much as we can do,” then call for a timetable for withdrawing U.S. troops … someday.
Where is the moral outrage? In Iraq, the United States of America engaged in precisely the sort of behavior we condemn in our adversaries. Our leaders leapt to the ultimate human rights violation – “pre-emptive” warfare — for reasons that were either simply untrue or worse, known to be untrue. Today America stands discredited among nations, an aggressor, its moral authority shattered. Does saying “we’ve done about as much as we can do” come anywhere near capturing the enormity of the needless carnage? Does it come anywhere near capturing what our beloved country has done to Iraq … or to itself?
Where is the will to admit that we as a nation have done wrong? Where is the demand that those who led us down this twisted path be called to account?
Where is the moral outrage?
And if our nation is incapable of moral outrage even in the face of so reprehensible a provocation as this … whither America?
From Free Inquiry




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June 17th, 2005 at 9:38 pm
great article…..i want to see my bass
June 20th, 2005 at 2:07 pm
I am outraged but then I was from the inception of this tragic war. Bush came into office with his own agenda, not the agenda of the people of America. 9-11 was the opening Bush needed to fuel American support for a war, all he needed were a few well placed lies and war would be his (and Cheneys). While I agree Sadam had to go there are more civil ways to rid the world of a dictatator that premptive war. The “we are spreading Democracy in the Middle East” rhetoric is just more lies to try and win more support for the war. Fact is you cannot shove democracy down the throats of people that do not want it. You may win a war against another army but you will never win a war against a people; Vietnam proved that. Today 30 years after Vietnam we’ve found ourselves in another bloody quagmire facing an unrelentless insurgency that will not stop till the last American leaves Iraq.
Outraged? Fu#%ing A I’m outraged! Where is the rest of America?
June 22nd, 2005 at 10:05 am
it’s a given the goverment will lie to us. no suprise that US citizens are not welcome in many countries. All this can’t be changed, but those that want death to USA came and killed innocent people. how long do you wait to kick their ass? After they have blown up your favorite pub, attacked the pentagon, or just killed your grandma or grandpa,who’s only mistake that day was to go to work in the twin towers or catch a ride on a plane. No doubt we should be ashamed by our gov leaders looking for weapons of mass destrution. They should have said, you killed USA citizens, we don’t like it and we are going to make you pay dearly. If you kick the dog long enough, he will eventualy get off the porch. I’m sure we must have done something to deserve being attacked, but almost everyone expects to catch hell when they pick on the neighborhood bully’s little sister. The British fiqured it out, now it’s whoever claims to be in charge of the terroist attacks turn, if they have the balls to quit hiding. Hell,if they would just come forward and say “oops, I’m sorry” they would only get 5-10 years and be out in 3. remember, it was’nt a drug crime that gets you a life term. Just a non-recovering hick and proud of it.