by devolved_kmbkr on Fri Feb 28, 2003 5:19 pm
First of all, I'm very aware of how intelligent Saddam can be. I certainly am NOT putting words into your mouth about the views of US citizens, only that as a former student of an American university, I still keep in contact with several of my US-born and voting friends.
The US has exercised and proven near control of the United Nations. Perhaps I'm biased as the child of someone who works for the UN, but from what I understand, France can kick and scream and delay all it likes - it can exercise no control or bullying, and the US will eventually get what it wants.
I am also completely aware of Saddam's actions against the Kurds in particular. I have listened first hand to lies from the Iraqi mission in NYC, and parlayed those lies into writing a position paper from the viewpoint of Iraq for a conference. I also know that starving a country and people to death (as statistics clearly prove) is factual, and can only be explained so far by Saddam's pocket-lining practices. I apologise for my liberal attitudes, but there isn't enough money going into the country, even through the back door, to justify each and every one of Saddam's arms expansion policies.
I'm sorry that you mistake my experience for naïvité, however it can't be helped completely by the fact that you can't seem to get your head around trusting a reputable source like the Times - however liberal they appear to be. I am completely aware that Saddam is indeed intelligent enough to build sites below the ground, much like the UK's purported missle production site at Portland, but don't you think that the US policy is a bit like a very facist one of Mao's (before you accuse me of not knowing that Mao was communist, let me assure you that I am well aware of this - only pointing out that many of his policies bordered on facist): "Enticing the snake out of its haunt only to cut off his head". Instead of finding real threats to the US (which, however far the Al Samoud 2 missles can go, is not far enough to reach Europe - Turkey is not in Europe - let alone the United States). If we give Bush absolute power as a nonelected official, what are we saying to the rest of the world? If we get rid of Bush like getting rid of Saddam, then there are several more facist and right-wing leaders jumping at the chance to take his place.
Please do not mistake my understanding of the so-called "crisis". It was a technique favoured at one time in the recent past by the CIA to rid Saddam, under practices that are perhaps a bit shady but nonetheless effective. Unlike you, I do not get all my news from CNN, and only read the Times at the weekend. I've tried to get as unbiased a view as possible, and with the information given by the Guardian, the Globe and Mail (Canada - which nobody can argue against it being a ridiculously right-wing paper) and colleagues of my father, I'm inclined to think that war, just like each and every Bush policy, is a complete shadow to cover the fact that his presidency is illegitimate. But then again, that's just my opinion as a discerning foreigner.
Please don't continue to believe that the US is the responsible big brother sent out into the world to bully the rest of it into compliance. Bush will run into war, guns blazing, with or without the support of the United Nations or other countries. Just because he can't find Bin Laden doesn't mean he has to keep the war machine running by turning his attention to Iraq. And when he's done there, he'll turn his attention to North Korea, and then just for kicks, he'll go for Cuba. If those aren't invasion policies, I don't know what is. So yes, I am uncomfortable about any nation having a nuclear arsenal, but I'm quite uncomfortable about the United States not disclosing their weapons program - they intend to invade Iraq, just like Iraq intended to invade Kuwait for something they wanted. Wake up and smell the crude oil.