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Is the
Iraq War Helping the War on Terror?
This is the question on everyone’s
mind. The results so far are not crystal clear but also
not promising. It has now become clear that Saddam did
not have the weapons of mass destruction (WMD) to provide to terrorists, even if
he had wanted to. It has become equally clear that Saddam never had any close
ties to al Qaida. He did provide payments to families of Palestinian suicide
bombers, which is support for terrorism in Israel. This is certainly despicable,
but I doubt that most people think a couple of dozen contributions totaling at
most a couple hundred thousand dollars is reason enough to launch a $200 billion
war. If so, we should be invading several other countries, including Saudi
Arabia, which probably contributes more money to terrorists than any other
country. We haven’t heard Bush suggest that, have we? This means that, after he abandons the
WMD and al Qaida claims, which have been proven false, Bush has two primary
arguments: (1) we are killing the terrorists in Iraq instead of here in the
U.S., and (2) once democracy is established in Iraq, it will provide a point of
stability in the region and a model for democracy for other countries in the
Middle East to follow. It is true that we have killed at least hundreds, and perhaps even a few thousand, Muslim militants and other insurgents in Iraq. But I think we need to separate the insurgents in Iraq into three groups:
Since the second and third groups of
terrorists did not exist before the Iraqi War, it’s not possible to argue that
the war is helping reduce their numbers, since their numbers were effectively
zero before the war. In addition, it is clear that the war
in Iraq is motivating many thousands of young Muslims to join terrorist
organizations. This means that the war in Iraq is increasing the number of
Islamic terrorists, not decreasing their numbers. In addition, the war in Iraq
is helping train these terrorists. And while American soldiers are also getting
experience in Iraq, this experience is not of the type that could be transferred
to defending the U.S., unless you want soldiers fighting in American streets and
ransacking the homes of American citizens here at home. This leaves the last remaining Bush
argument for the success of the Iraqi War, which is that a free and democratic
Iraq will help stabilize the region and provide a model for democracy and
freedom to other countries in the Middle East. The jury is still out on this, since
freedom and democracy have not been established yet in Iraq. I sincerely hope
that it will be, and I do think there is a significant chance that, in the long
run, at a cost of many thousands more lost lives and many billions of dollars, a
free and democratic Iraq might be established. However, the idea that a free and
democratic predominantly Muslim nation in the Middle East will cause a “domino
effect” of democratization in the Middle east ignores a simple fact. There
already is a relatively free and democratic predominantly Muslim nation in the
Middle East. Its name is Turkey and it is a U.S. ally and a member of NATO. Why
hasn’t Turkey’s example caught on? Pakistan also recently had a democracy until
Musharraf staged a bloodless coup a few years ago. That example did not catch on
in the Middle East, either. Why will Iraq be different? If on the other
hand, despite thousands of lost American and Iraqi lives and hundreds of
billions of dollars in U.S. taxpayer money spent in Iraq, a free, stable and
democratic Iraq is not established, then Iraq could serve as an example that
democracy does not work. There are many in the Middle East, including most of
the current governments of countries in the region, as well as Arab and Muslim
xenophobes, who want such a negative example to justify the status quo and their continued isolationism. How likely you think this disastrous
scenario is depends on who you listen
to. Bush and the interim government in Iraq, both of whom have an obvious political stake in being optimistic on the outcome of the Iraq War, indicate that things are going well in Iraq. Every other credible expert and even most of the senior Bush administration officials in the CIA, the military and the State Department are much more pessimistic. Bush and his spokesmen dismiss these dissenting voices as pessimists and naysayers, much as they dismissed the warnings about intelligence warnings about Iraq's WMD, the likelihood of a sustained insurgency and other experts' warnings that have since come true. Click HERE for an example of this disconnect
from conservative journalist Robert Novak. So, in summary:
So, do you think the Iraq War is
helping the war on terror? | ||||