Ziggy Stardust wrote:His only point (and a fair one) is that it is a false dichotomy to claim that the ONLY possible options for Iraq are either Saddam or ISIS. If the US had deposed Saddam but NOT been criminally negligent and incompetent post-invasion, we wouldn't be having this conversation. Proper causal thinking relies on considering the counter-factuals; not blithely assuming that the historical course of events was the only single possible course of events.
Yes, I'm aware things didn't
have to turn out so badly, given the starting point of a 2003 invasion. The only point
I'm trying to get across is this:
The human factor here is really what matters. For the average Iraqi, none of the bullshit we're talking about here matters. The only thing that matters is that 15 to 20 years ago, they had a stable, functioning society with free education and healthcare. They enrolled in Universities, got jobs, started businesses, got married, lived their life.
We took all of that away.
I've met so many Iraqi professionals - doctors, scientists, dentists - highly educated women and men, really smart people with degrees from Baghdad or Mosul University, people with families and careers and lives ... all of that is gone. Some are dead (many educated professionals are kidnapped for ransom as a daily occurrence, or outright shot for literally no reason), others were lucky enough to successfully get out of Iraq, and now live in places where there are large Arab communities, like Toronto, Detroit or LA - but they are the lucky ones who already had family abroad. The Iraqi Christian population (Chaldean/Assyrian) is decimated, gone ... some escape to Jordon, others are refugees elsewhere, many just plain dead.
What happened to Iraq is literally as if, say, an advanced alien species suddenly showed up to Earth, decided they didn't like President Bush, so they invaded the United States, blew up all our bridges, highways, hospitals and power plants, dissolved our military, let all of our prisoners out, and then just got bored and left us like that.
Again, I'm not trying to argue that Saddam's regime was great or something. Iraq was really never the same after 1991 - which again, surprise surprise, is also mostly the fault of the United States. H.W. Bush gave false signals to the Iraqi people that the US would support an uprising against Saddam. That never happened because once again we lost interest. So the uprisings happened, and Saddam reacted with utter brutality. Ever since that point, Saddam became more and more erratic and arbitrary, executing people for the flimsiest reasons, secretly bugging everyone's office, recording everything... Certainly, Saddam Hussein was a problem that needed to be solved. But blasting Iraq back to the stone age is
not a solution. The technological and social infrastructure that Saddam created was mostly good, and should have been built on - not destroyed.
And for anyone who claims they'd rather be free in anarchy than comfortable under a paranoid dictator, you're probably lying to yourself, or else you've been brainwashed by too much Western idealism and never actually had to live for an extended time period in 3rd world conditions with no electricity, constant water shortages, and zero public safety.