The Iraq
war began about one year ago with the swift and decisive overthrow
of Baghdad and the Hussein regime. We are only beginning to understand,
however, the true scope of our ongoing occupation of a nation
rife with civil, ethnic, and tribal conflict. July stands as the
deadline for our provisional government to relinquish control
to an emerging Iraqi government, but we are kidding ourselves
about just how long American forces will need to remain involved.
More than
580 Americans have died in Iraq; roughly 10,000 have been wounded.
American taxpayers have spent hundreds of billions of dollars.
We must not be afraid to face these facts and understand the terrible
cost of war.
Were these
sacrifices worth it? To answer that question, we have to look
at the justifications given for our invasion of Iraq.
One justification
was that Saddam Hussein ignored United Nations Security Council
resolutions. Whether this was true or not was none of our concern.
America should never act at the behest of the UN or help enforce
its illegitimate edicts. America should never commit troops to
any UN action. We should not even be a member of the UN, but rather
should ignore it completely. Membership in the UN is incompatible
with our Constitution and national sovereignty. It was nonsensical
for conservatives suddenly to cite Iraqs purported lack
of cooperation with the UN as justification for war.
The second
justification for invading Iraq was that Mr. Hussein posed a threat
to the United States. This was not true. Hussein had only a small
army, and virtually no navy or air force. He had no long-range
weapons and no ability to strike the US 6,000 miles away. He was
not working with bin Laden or al Qaeda terrorists. He was a despicable
tyrant at home, but the liberation of Iraq from his clutches was
given as a new justification only after the American public had
absorbed overwhelming evidence that he posed no threat to us.
Is America
better off as a result of our war in Iraq? The young men and women
who were hurt or killed certainly are no better off. Their families
are no better off. Taxpayers are no better off. Whether we are
safer from terrorism here at home is an open question. We all
hope and pray nothing happens. But even our own intelligence forces
cautioned that an invasion and occupation of Muslim Iraq could
breed resentment among sympathetic Muslims and serve as a recruiting
tool for al Qaeda. As commentator Lew Rockwell states, It
is not caving in to the bees to stop poking a stick into their
hive.
Are the Iraqis
better off? Saddam is gone, along with his murderous cohorts,
and that certainly presents a positive opportunity for the Iraqi
people. But we cannot be sure that the Hussein regime will be
replaced by something better. Iraq is still very unstable and
divided between Sunni, Shiite, and Kurd factions. Civil war could
ensue upon the departure of American troops.
Even
if we assume that anything will be an improvement over the Hussein
regime, the fundamental question remains: Why should young Americans
be hurt or killed to liberate foreign nations? I have never heard
a convincing answer to this question. If we sacrifice 500 lives
to liberate Iraq, should we sacrifice five million American lives
to liberate the people of North Korea, Taiwan, Tibet, China, Cuba,
and countless African nations? Should we invade every country
that has an oppressive government? Are nation-building and empire
part of our national credo? Those who answer yes to these questions
should have the integrity to admit that our founders urged the
opposite approach, namely a foreign policy rooted in staying out
of the affairs of other nations.
March
23, 2004