Was it worth it?

Do you still think it was a good decision to attack Iraq?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • No, not anymore!

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    1

Redleg

The fire is everything
Staff member
Several months has gone since Bush declared that the war in Iraq was over on (May 1).

But more US service members have died after the war was "over" than during the war.
And it's still no sign of Saddam, or any weapons of mass destruction.

Between March 20 and May 1, 138 US service members died, 116 in combat.
But from May 1 until today 139 has died (the last one today, from 130th Engineer Brigade), 61 in hostile actions.... (Numbers from cnn.com)
And we are seeing an increase in hostile actions against other nations too.

I'm just curious if you think it was worth it to attack Iraq at that point?

Is the world a better place now, is this a cause worth dying for???

My personal opinion is that the weapons inspectors should have been given more time....

Do not misunderstand me in this post, as a soldier who has been abroad several times I have the deepest respect for those who served, and those who are serving in Iraq now!
I just think that the trigger-happy politicians who decided to attack Iraq should have been sent down to the frontlines themselves to see what it’s all about!! :twisted:

I know I would have been seriously pi..ed-off if me or a good friend was wounded, or even worse, killed, for some fake weapons reports and some hasty decisions…

....Phew.... Just had to let some steam out here, I tend to get wery upset everytime I watch the news and see that more good men has been killed or wounded down there...... :evil:
 
To be honest, I wouldn't have cared if the reports were fake (which I must VERY strongly stress I do not believe to be the case), although it would have of course lowered those involved in my esteem, I still would have supported the decision to go to Iraq. I believe that what we have accomplished and will accomplish there has and will further justify the war. The thousands upon thousands who have died under Saddam and would almost certainly have continued to die as a result of his "reign of terror" demanded action. Our position as a super power makes it, in my opinion, our duty to act in the defense of those who do not have the ability to do so themselves (De Oppresso Liber, right?). Obviously there is no way for us to "clean up" the entire world, but when we have the opportunity to clean one corner of it while at the same time increasing international security (a point many would like to argue, but one that I feel must not be declared either way until more time has passed, neither Rome nor peace were built in a day), there is no excuse for NOT doing everything in our power to do so.
I know that it may seem as though I am playing armchair quarterback, and no doubt some will dismiss my opinion as the result of "not having been there," I am not wholly out of it. For myself, I am requesting a station in the middle east with the Armored Cavalry upon completion of my ROTC, and at that point it is in the Army's hands. One of my buddies that I grew up with WAS actually wounded in action during his service with the 3rd ID in Iraq, and many of my friends are still over there. I pray for their safe return, and I stand 100% behind what they are fighting for in Iraq.
(Not to say the war and the post-war situation have been run perfectly, but they are about as good or better than any such situation has ever been throughout history.)
 
I do partially agree with you Redneck....

If the main reason to attack Iraq was to help the Iraqi's I would have agreed with you, but I don't think it was....

"Saddam, the biggest threat to world peace to day" "Just one year away from having nuclear weapons" "Chemical weapons hidden around Baghdad (and the rest of Iraq), ready to be released in the event of an attack"...
Those where the reasons I saw on the news everyday before the attack.
If the reason for attacking Iraq was that Bush felt sorry for the people in Iraq, then I believe that there were several other regimes around the world, which threats their people much much worse than Saddam did, who deserved to be attacked first....

But they do not have oil!!

I have become wery skeptic to news from wars after serving in Macedonia and Bosnia before, during and after the Kosovo campaign..
What I saw down there, and what I saw on the news was two completely different things..
And I'm sorry to say that CNN was worst..
Euronews was the most "neutral" one, but the news wasn't right all the time there either.

I'm just saying that one thing is defending and dying for your own country, but one other thing is to be sent to a foreign land to fight for some unknown cause...

And again, I'm NOT anti USA, just a bit anti Bush.....
The war did happen, and now we must do whatever we can to stabilize Iraq, and make it a better country to live in! And I do support the troops down there 100% in their work!
I just don't support the reasons why to attack Iraq...

(And I'm curious about what you think in the States. It's easy to sit here in Norway and criticize the decisions when we did not have any 9/11 or any increase in hostility towards us....)
 
I am really very split. My feelings were mixed going into the war actually, and I thought the job could have been done differently, but still with force. As a Catholic, I really couldn't say I was for war, but also as a Catholic, I felt the world had a responsibility to free the Iraqi people. I say the war was needed, but Franks and Shiniski (spelling?) made blunders coming into the war. They fought it to conventionally, and should have turned to counterinsugency ops as soon as they new these Feddeyen guys meant buissiness. And if you wondering about the WMDs, check this new report out, Redleg might no a little about this place: http://www.military.com/Intel/Details/0,13839,,00.html#34782

Redleg, I can summon up US news...

CNN: Obviously a left-leaning news source until the war started and then they hired a bunch of Generals (Including former NATO Commander Wesley Clark) and telivised the war like a sporting event.

Fox News: Had one of there guys give away the position of the 101st and was expelled from the country.

And on whole this is what it looked like. It seemed all the sources took up anti-war and perhaps anti-Bush sentiments before the war, and then jumped on the Bandwagon once things started to look up again, declaring themselves are patriotic. Now they have gone back to there opposition. I cant stand getting US news anymore, cause they have istorted the wars image. Remember the smiling Iraqi kids? There still there, but the news has focused all attention on US opposition, which has made a real moral problem. I dont even listen to US news anymore, get everything I need off the internet.

Lastly, Redneck brings up a very good point, that we have an obligation to help, as I belive. Looking back at Clintons administration, you will see that he 1) Ignored genocides in Rwanda 2) Pulled out of Somalia without stabalizing anything 3) Intervened in Kosovo after millions were already dead.

I just don't belive thousands upon thousands have to die in far away places without us doing anything. This is my biggest gripe with the left over here. There always talking about being against war like there good people or moral, but they fail to acknowledge the killings in far off places, fail to show any compation. It's fine to say you dont like Bush because of this war, but put yourself in the iraqi's shoes. It's not all about us, and I think we need to take a step back and realize that if everyone is truely equal as they say, we have a responsibility to protect people subjected by tryanny.
 
GuyontheRight said:
It's not all about us, and I think we need to take a step back and realize that if everyone is truly equal as they say, we have a responsibility to protect people subjected by tyranny.

I do totally agree with you there.

But I do not think that's the reason why Bush decided to attack Iraq.
When he said things like "I'm going to finish what my father started", he sounds too much like a cowboy to me...
I don't think Clinton would have done it, and even a veteran like Norman Schwarzkopf was against it.

If I had been asked to go down there I would probably have gone.
For as you say: "we have a responsibility to protect".
And as Patton once said: ”I am a soldier, I fight where I am told, (and I win where I fight.)".
And I could have pretended that I was there to liberate the Iraqi people.

As for the WMDs, I really hope that they find some evidence of that soon.
I do believe that he had something, but not that they were as big a threat to the world as we first were led to believe.
And they are probably hidden outside Iraq, maybe in the Bekaa Valley, or on ships (as reported before the war).
But the world needs proof now, or else I think there will be a heavy increase in hostility towards USA in the near future....



And it is good that we finally have a discussion here again.
And it's not just me and GuyontheRight chatting.. :D

What do the rest of you think:?:
All opinions are allowed here :!:
 
Remember that President Bush was targeted by assasination for Saddam, so in a personal matter between Bush and Saddam we probobly cant understand. Of course Clinton wouldn't have done anything, but how long would people like him just hit Iraq with sanctions. Like it or not, you cant stop the flow of everything into Iraq, and if action was never taking, 20 years downt he road we could have had Uday in charge with a whole new arsenal.

Theres a growing attitude in the US military community that Schwarzkopf was an idiot, mainly flowing from exageratted points in the first Gulf War and a lie he told in congress about the Gulf War Illness. So some would say his opinion doesn't mean much...

I do trust Bush for doing the right thing, even though it may not have turned out right. Bush is not the stereotyped cowboy or war monger the world can make him out to be. Remember he is a man of great faith and integraty, who was dropped in some of the most extrodinary circumstances after 9/11.

BTW Redleg, id love to here more about your experience in lebanon, in particular what you heard or know about the Bekaa Valley. :)
 
Just wanted to let you know that I am not ignoring this issue, I just realized that I probably should steer clear of political discussions now that I have identified myself as being associated with the U.S. military. It kind of stinks, seeing as how I have a lot more to say on the subject, but I'm pulling out.
 
Everything I post here is my personal opinions, and NOT the opinions of the Norwegian people or the Army...

Thanks a lot for your posts GuyontheRight.

It is very hard for me to have any opinions about the political situation in USA, I do not know enough about it.
Most that I know comes from the news, and as I said, I do not trust them much in matters like this.
They tend to be either for or against Bush and the attack on Iraq. It's hard to find good and "neutral" news.
So it's very good to learn from guys like you.
That's why I started this discussion in the first place.

Check your PM GuyontheRight. (Lebanon)
 
Hey Redneck, Id like to hear what you haved to say, i can deffinetly tell we think alike in ways :D

I feel you Redleg, neutral news is hard to get, thats why i stick to ESPN. :D
 
Neutral news (let alone anything pro-U.S. policy) is even harder to find in Europe I would imagine, my only experience there is with the BBC, which is vehemently anti-U.S., and more specifically anti-Bush, but it is also difficult to get it here in the States as well. My solution is to watch both CNN (liberal) and Fox (conservative) and kind of weigh their perspectives with the facts given in both their reports.
About Clinton, after his pussy-footing in Somalia (as GuyontheRight mentioned) that caused the unneccesary deaths of U.S. servicemen (by not allowing them the proper armored support, which was available in the area, or even full-fledged gunships for air support) and then pulling out, giving the Somali warlords a "victory" over the U.S. and thereby making the loss of these men's lives a futile one, I don't think his opinion in a military situation is worth the powder to blow it to hell.
However, I do agree with your point:
But the world needs proof now, or else I think there will be a heavy increase in hostility towards USA in the near future....
But in all fairness I do believe that what we have found so far (the empty warheads with traces of chemicals in them, the remote labs which had been strangely sterilized [probably the cleanest thing in the country haha], and the massive amounts of pesticides, considering the size of Iraq's agricultural area, as well as the illegal al-Samoud and Scud missiles found around the country) is enough to justify our entry on the grounds of Iraq's threat to the countries surrounding it.
One thing that I have to say really gets in my craw is the "blood for oil" argument, to debunk the whole empire-building-oil-grubbing thing (if that is possible in this short of a space) is this: we were getting no oil from Iraq in the first place (I believe France was the only Western nation to be in that position, but I may be wrong) and the huge influx of new oil, once we get the country stabilized and producing oil again, will swamp the market, causing a surplus of oil, leading to lower prices and greater competition between oil companies. I'm not saying that it will be entirely bad for them, they will have new room to grow and expand, but I am saying that per barrel they will be making less money than they are currently.
I appreciate your opinions, Redleg, even if they're not as good as mine and GuyontheRight's (just kidding), and I appreciate the fact that you did ask us what was going on over here rather than just assume based on what you have heard over there (as far too many people do).
By the way, I'm back in haha.
 
Redneck, I agree with what you said about Clinton in Somalia, except that the order not to use Spectre's and Bradly's really had nothing to do with Clinton, but more his staff. Clintons mistake was pulling out after leaving our boys dead there, which erased any meaning of the mission. What bothers me the most is how some people always say he made the economy so strong, but yet they fail to see that 1)He sold military secrets to China (Read Year of the Rat for more info, and 2) Failed to monitor groups terrorists groups properly.

Im glad this forum can put the stereotypes of all people aside, I definetly know i was anxiouse about travling through Europe in the wake of what I thought was almost complete anti-American sentiment, but found the people of both Austria and Switzerland very warm and receptive.
 
It's good the see that you're back Redneck. :)

(almost) All opinions are allowed in this forum.
I do not know what's right or wrong, I just base my opinons on what I hear and read here in Europe.
And as I said, it's hard to find any neutral news sources.
Most of them are either for or against USA in general...
But I try to watch both and trying to find the average between them...
That works in most cases...

And when it comes to proof, I think the world needs some pretty hard evidence before they belive that Iraq has/had WMD's...
Just because of the differences between the different news sources...
One says it was traces of chemicals, but another one claims that it may have been some traces of harmless chemicals from rocket fuel (or something like that)..
Or the labs were used for producing harmless agricultural chemicals, or they were used to produce chemical weapons....
The normal person in the street doesn't know who to trust anymore, and I'm afraid that traces of chemicals, some sterilized remote labs, or wheel tracks into the Bekaa Valley is not enough to convince much of the population (at least here in Europe) that Iraq did have WMD's....

Hard evidence is needed..
Perhaps some al-Samoud missiles with a large yellow and black nuclear sign on them is the only thing that helps, but I'm afraid that too can be manipulated into something harmless.

I do only trust first hand experiences from people I know in situations like this.
Media is making too much of a circus out of it!
Circus is funny and entertaining, but I do not want the clowns there to tell me about the political situation in the world......... :D
 
Perhaps some al-Samoud missiles with a large yellow and black nuclear sign on them is the only thing that helps, but I'm afraid that too can be manipulated into something harmless.

Hear, hear! haha that's the way I feel about it Redleg, mushroom clouds and green fog over Iraq are probably the only two things that will convince most people, and even then someone is going to swear up and down that we did it ourselves.

except that the order not to use Spectre's and Bradly's really had nothing to do with Clinton, but more his staff.

But you're forgetting that it was Clinton's policies that led to those rules of engagement. However you are entirely right in that after that first error, he compounded it by pulling out before we had accomplished anything.
As a sidenote, Mohammed Farah Aidid's son was a U.S. Marine at the time and was sent to Somalia with the United States forces.
 
Yes I know, I own the History channel true story, and was surprised to find his son once a marine, then return to take over the clan.
 
spilt about iraq one hand its hard to sit by and watch thousands of people die on the other hand i think would should have finished what we started with osama now we got 2 mad men on the loose that are gathering support and sympathy
 
Well I don't know if it was about oil or not. I wish it weren't because oil is going to become a useless source of energy in a few decades. Just to clarify one thing there has been planty opf evidence of WMDs the problem is they just can't find stupid things. Supposedly now too they have a definite link between bin Laden and financial backing from Saddam for 9/11 if that makes any difference to anyone. Just read the headline maybe a week or two ago. If anyone really wants the article say so and I'll try to dig it up.
 
I do feel it was right to remove saddam from power.but i feel one of the main reaseons why bush wanted to invade iraq in the first place was just a revenge tactic because saddam had threatened to kill daddy bush in the past. but one thing redneck, no weapons of mass destruction may have been found but there is evidence that saddam has used them in the past. As for me it is a split decision, and i also agree with you, whenever i see that more men were killed i tend to get upset also. but you know there really is nothing any of us can really do about it because we are not commander in chief.
 
Yes

Fighting tirany and injustice is always worth it. I thank our American friends for taking care of saddam and his assistance. I thank the American Soldiers, Airmen, Marines, Sailors who fought and died for freedom in a place some of them couldent recognise on a map.
 
Just to clarify, Bush never declared the war over ... just the end to major combat.
 
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