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Dee wrote on 17:01, 26th Feb 2003:
Has anyone on this thread suggested any alternative solution to the problem of Saddam? I've looked through it and can't find one.
It seems to be some sort of article of faith with the anti-war movement that there [i]has to be another way.
Can I ask the question - what if you're wrong? What if there is no other way? What if this is the
only way to topple Saddam?
Because if you're wrong, you're condemning Iraq to Saddam's oppressive regime for God knows how many years, to be followed by his son's rule - which I suspect will make Saddam's look like a picnic. You're condemning neighbouring countries to invasions by his regime, and that's before we even consider the WMD, which we know he has from previous inspections.
For myself, there is no excuse for covering our eyes so we don't see the Kurdish massacres; the widespread disapperances, oppression, imprisonment, murder, torture, and rape that the Iraqi people are subjected to.
Also, it seems from what I've read that a major reason for being against the war is not wanting to be on the same side as Gee Dubya, or admit America might, on occasion, do the right thing. Regardless of your feelings on America, and its past misdeeds, this is not an admirable reason to deny the Iraqi people the chance to be free of Saddam's oppressive regime.
You don't have to like right wing politics to support this war. You don't need to "sell your soul", and vote Conservative/Republican. By all means write letters stressing your quite reasonable humanitarian concerns - expressing your desire that the liberation of Iraq should be conducted in as humane a manner as possible with minimal loss of human life.
Lord knows this is what a respectable political left-wing would have been doing for the past few months.
Lastly, on the matter of WMD, just so you know, the primary exporters of weapons to Iraq have been Russia, and (everyone's favourite candid friend) France.
That the US and UK armed him in the past as well is atrocious I do not deny it. But the fact that we served to create the problem, does not remove the need for someone else to solve it. Quite to the contrary - it seems to me to double the moral imperative on us to solve the problem.
[hr]"Freedom is what you do with what's been done to you."
- Jean-Paul Sartre
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Great post, Dee. I agree 100%
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