April 27, 2009
“Third: Recognize that the main ‘benefits of success’ are not specific or tangible. The United States went to war in Iraq not to seize territory, oil, or military bases, but to end the threat the Iraq regime posed to the region, the United States, and the world. If this fundamental goal is achieved–if that regime is replaced with a reasonably stable government that poses no such threats–it would make the United States safer and improve international security. Above and beyond this, if Iraq should one day build stable democratic institutions, it might spur political reform in the Muslim world–an even more valuable accomplishment that could help curtail the appeal of Islamist extremism. Success in Iraq would also demonstrate that the United States is capable of persevering in a costly effort to defend its interests. This would increase American credibility, making it easier in the future to win cooperation from other countries.
But the largest benefit of success is avoiding the horrific costs of failure. Preventing calamaties is one of the most important and least appreciated functions of government. When an evil is averted–perhaps as a result of insight, intensive effort, and administrative skill–the result is that nothing happens. It is easy, after the fact, for critics to ignore or deprecate the accomplishment.” – Douglas Feith, War and Decision, p.523.
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Foreign Policy, Iraq, War on Terror |
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Posted by christocentrist
February 25, 2009
“The 9/11 attack was a new phenomenon, and not just because it hit Americans on American soil. It was not an act of political theater; rather, it was the first successful case of terrorism of mass destruction. Though the al Qaida hijackers killed only–only!–around three thousand people, one had to assume that the terrorists would have been glad to kill all thirty thousand people who worked at the World Trade Center, and even multiples of that number.
This was why keeping weapons of mass destruction out of the hands of terrorists became, suddenly and inevitably, a far more pressing and higher-order concern than it had before. It concentrated the minds of U.S. officials on the threat from states that both coveted WMD and supported terrorists.
Iraq was such a state. Its singular history of aggression, and its defiance of the world’s many efforts to constrain it, made Iraq stand out even among such other WMD-coveting, terrorist-supporting states as Iran and North Korea.” – Douglas Feith, War and Decision, p.214.
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Posted by christocentrist
February 3, 2009
Prof. Douglas Feith, one of the planners of the Iraq war, deals with this issue in four points. Here is the first.
“First: Formulate a realistic goal–that is, a reasonable definition of success. The achievement of stable democracy is not a sensible goal, because it is not likely to be accomplished in the near term. It may be possible fairly soon, however, for Iraq to reach the point where, despite the inevitable ongoing problems of building a new society, its government can manage its own affairs with only a limited amount of outside help. That is a realistic goal.” — Douglas Feith, War and Decision, p.522.
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Posted by christocentrist
January 19, 2009
“One sign of the poor job the [Bush] Administration has done in describing and explaining its actions is that the public debate on Iraq reflects little understanding of the Administration’s actual rationale for overthrowing the Saddam Hussein regime. Many believe the war was based solely on the erroneous information about chemical and biological weapons stockpiles. Some maintain, against all logic and evidence, that the war was fought to gain Iraq’s oil–as if the U.S. had expected to take money out of Iraq instead of putting billions into the war and reconstruction effort.
Above all, there is little awareness of how Iraq fit into the broader strategy against terrorism. Given Saddam’s role as an important problem for the United States–since his rape of Kuwait in 1990–it was clear that Iraq, along with other state supporters of terrorism, would have to be addressed within a comprehensive strategy for the war on terrorism.” — Douglas Feith, War and Decision, p.514.
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Posted by christocentrist
October 16, 2008
“Why did President Bush decide to overthrow Saddam Hussein? In short, it was to end a range of threats. No other contemporary leader–and a few in history–had a record of aggression to match Saddam’s. He had started major wars of conquest. He had brutalized his citizens and killed them in enormous numbers. He had given aid and support to terrorists. And, in violation of treaty obligations, he had not only pursued mass-destruction weapons, but used them, on his foreign enemies and on his own citizens.
The problem of Saddam Hussein predated 9/11. It had become a principle U.S. preoccupation when he seized Kuwait in 1990. Saddam survived the Gulf War, and Iraq remained a danger throughout the 1990s–one the UN Security Council had tried to contain by imposing economic sanction and weapons inspections. In August 1998 Saddam generated a crisis by shutting down the UN weapons inspections. Two months later, the U.S. Congress–concerned that the Iraqi hreat was growing, while the world’s resolve to ‘contain’ Saddam was weakening–passed the Iraq Liberation Act, which called for regime change in Baghdad:
‘It should be the policy of the United States to support efforts to remove the regime headed by Saddam Hussein from power in Iraq and to promote the emergence of a democratic government to replace that regime.‘“ – Douglas Feith, War and Decision, p.181-182.
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Posted by christocentrist