gut;1298770 wrote:It's quite a bit more complicated than that.
First off, bad intel or not, the position on Iraq was hardly original. Everyone pretty much THOUGHT Saddam had WMD's, there was debate over the threat, debate perhaps skewed by various economic interests in the region. And it's not as if he wasn't in violation of several UN resolutions which, as an alternative to the US playing world police is also problematic with an impotent security council.
Oh he definitely was. Hussein was certainly not as pure as the driven snow.
Again, though, we have WMDs as well. Autonomous nations, and all that. Breaking rules or not, it's not our place to enforce, you know?
The economic reasons make us sound more like world raiders than world police. Either way, that's not something I think makes for a viable defense.
gut;1298770 wrote:And he had acted up before. Hardly a stretch to think that would happen again.
Hell, it's the Middle East. EVERYONE has acted up before. Turmoil there is part of life. It's been happening for thousands of years.
gut;1298770 wrote:And the broader issue of the Middle East, a flourishing democracy there is likely part, maybe the necessary prerequisite, of a long-term viable solution. I would hardly characterize as some great reversal of course, much less paranoia (especially when viewed thru the prism of 9/11).
After the thousands of years of violence, I think the idea of a "viable solution" over there is a short-sighted pipe dream. It would be nice, so I certainly don't blame people for really wanting it, but I don't think history allows for a viable solution.
And actually, I'd suggest that the prism of 9/11 is precisely what catalyzed such paranoia.
Compare it to a person walking down the street who gets sucker punched right in the nose. The nose swells up and impedes the vision in both eyes. Instead of going to get a splint on his face to protect the nose from getting damaged while it heals, the man sticks around and begins flailing about, trying to hit anything that he perceived SOUNDS like it could be another punch coming his way. He does not hit his assailant until the fourth connection.
He has now assailed three people in his effort to hit the fourth because he overreacted.
I would suggest that, at best, it would appear, in hindsight of course, that America was that guy.
The talk of "spreading democracy" and arbitrarily picking dictators to take down is what seemed to, at the very least, turn the flailing into becoming the law enforcement of planet earth.
gut;1298770 wrote:You may disagree with even most of that, but it was hardly an illogical position or representative of a complete 180 - what Bush is poo-pooing in that video is really US exceptionalism, a completely separate issue from national security.
Oh, I agree that there is a definitive distinction between national security and an almost ethnocentrism. You won't hear any argument from me on that.