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The Case for War

Fraser Campbell | 11.02.2003 15:11

"...the US economy needs oil, like a junkie needs heroine."

Last week saw Oxford's contribution to the anti-war movement across the world: a candlelit vigil in Cornmarket Street. Such smug Western complacency seemmingly knows no bounds: there is certeinly no better inspirarion for becoming a hawk than such an illinformed, intellectually confused display of vague, anti-American pacifism. Thwe case for war on Iraq is indisputable, with every objection being either irrelevant or just plain wrong. First, why must er toople Saddam? Second, why are the whinges of the anti-war lobby so pernicious and damaging?

Saddam must be destroyed for two reasons. Firstly, regardless of what the ludicrously under-resourced inspectors may find on this occasion, there can be no doubt that his is a regime bent on procuring weapons of mass destruction. The only question is wheter he is currently hiding them, or whether he has still to develop them. In either case, the main danger to the West lies in such weapons falling into the hands of terrorist groups who will use them to create as much destruction as possible. When acquired, it is almost impossible to guard against the use of theseweapons: amidst the tons of drugs succesfully smuggled into America, it would be easy to take a suitcase bomb. Saddam is succesfully smugled into America, it would be easy to take a suitcase bomb. Saddam is not the only potencial manufacturer of these weapons, but he is one with a history of aggression and a proven willingness to use them, even on his own people. He must therefore be stopped as soon as possible, and certainly before he gains nuclear capacity, by which time it may be too late. North Korea shows the danger of allowing a despot to develop nukes and thus the world to ransom. And Al-Quedais not the only organisationcapable of delivering terror: if the weapons are available, there will undoubtedly be some section of the terrorist world ready and willing to use them.

Secondly, even disregardingthe whole question of threats to the West, Saddam must be toppled out of an humanitarian empahty with the people of Iraque. Yes, innocents would suffer in any way. But far more innocents do, and will continue to, suffer under a regime where goverment outrages and well-intentioned sanctions only further the plight of the peple. Brutal human rights abuses, systematic violence and a bloodthirsty regime can only end with Western force. The internal opposition in Iraq might just be strong enough to form a credible future government (with plenty help) but there is no realistic chance of an internal revolt ending in anything other than bloody supression. Even if we are prepared to risk our own destruction, we fail in our duty as human beings if we allow the status quo to continue unchecked.

So, what are the objections to war? `America is only doing it for political reasons/for oil/for an easy target`. Maybe. But doing the right for the wrong reasons is still doing the right thing. And while andlelit vigils may be able to survive without oil, the rest of Western life grind to a halt. `We were the ones who funded Saddam and gave him lots of weapons in the past`. True, to an extent. And therefore we are under an even greater duty niw to rectify our mistakes and avert the dangers allowed to develop under past policies. `It will destabilise the Middle East`. An ominus sounding phrase: but what does it actually mean? There are few greater of instability than an armed-and-dangerous Iraqi regime. Problems such as the Arab-Israeli conflict will not be solved by war with Iraq, but crucially there will ve a real chance of ceating a truly liberalised and democratic Arab country. Arabs living under neighbouring despots will see how freedom can work, and if this destabilises their undelected and unaccountable leaders then so much the better: I have yet to hear a convicting argument that spreading freedom is a bad idea. And in terms os anti-Western feeling, the long-term result of regime change will be the ending of sansactions, one of the key stimuli for Islamic discontent. Finally, `the authority of the UN will be undetermined by unilateralism`. If the US and UK gain Security Concil support then this will not arise. If the y don't, then so what? A war is not made morally right or wrong by whether diplomatic horse-trading does or does not result in declarations of support. If Saddam is a clear and present danger both to the West and to his own people,and if the UN fails to get its act toghether and stop him, then perhaps it deserves to lose its authority. The question should not be consequences on the US of losing UN support, but rather the consequences for the UN of losing American support. Doesn't anybody remember the League of Nations?

In short, Saddam Hussein is brutal, oppressive despot who would glady destriy most of the rest of the world if he could get away with it. Now the spectre of extranatinal terrorist organisatiins giver him exactly that oportunity: supply the means, but not risk his own destruction since he himself would not deliver the blow. If well-meaning protestors are prepared to wake up to reality, they should turn their minds to ensuring that proper post-war support is given to the new Iraq. But first, let's make sure we are all behindd the brave troops who will soon get rid of the old one

Fraser Campbell is President of the Oxford Union and European Debating Champion.

Fraser Campbell

Comments

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MORE OIL!!!!

11.02.2003 16:06

It is probably the case that the US wants the oil of Iraq. I´m shure they´ll be happy to buy it from a future democratic Iraq, as the US obviously isn´t willing to buy as much from the ruthless fascist regime of Saddam Hussein as they theoretically COULD buy - and that is, as we all know, just because that regime is a expasionistic fascist regime that have attacked three of its neighbour countries; Iran, Kuweit and Israel. The limited US purchase of iraqi oil is due to the present sanctions against Iraq.
The CIA once helped Saddam to power. Most people - among those aware of this fact - in the US now realise this was a major mistake.
Saddam is a threat to the RELATIVE peace in the Middle East. Therefore, most people around the globe want to get rid of him, even though a lot of individuals are opposed to a war. I can assure you the Bush administration would regard Saddam as a major threat even if they were a country without any valuable natural resource - just like the US now also threatens North Korea with war, DESPITE THE NORTH KOREAN LACK OF VAST NATURAL RESOURCES!!
Don´t belive every word Bush and Blair tell you, but don´t let Saddam grease your mind up with his oily propaganda neither!

Same ol´ propaganda war!


I agree - but only so far!

11.02.2003 16:17

Candlelit vigils are a bit smug really. Surely we should be storming parliament or bringing about insurrection? Unfortunately this is quite impossible, and would not be welcomed by people in general.Revolutionary times are not upon us yet! Instead, opposition to the war has to take forms which liberal democracy finds favourable.

And thats where agreement ends. Your argument that Saddam is an 'evil', 'twisted' dictator, maybe true. He probably is. What he not worth however are the deaths of 80,000 people and more than a million displaced Iraqis displaced (UN estimates); do you support asylum seekers - I think not. Why not prosecute previous US adminstrations for their backing of genocide (3 million Commies killed - read Pilger) in Indonesia. Or the dropping of the Atom bomb, or their massacres backed by terrorists trained at their training camps (School of Americas), or their support for the UN convention breaking, assassinating, murderous Israeli governments?

I suggest you debate this with some historical perspective and analysis of causes and effects, rather than bleating on like an emotional right-wing record player.

Zz


bollox...

11.02.2003 16:43

hk


Emotions?

11.02.2003 17:05

What emotions is it that you find so very annoying and "right wing"?
The passion displayed for truth? The aversion expressed against stupid myths about oil/Bush/the US?
Educated individuals high esteem of reason and facts won´t go away because of any lazy mind´s third rate rethorics.
Didn´t you know?
Why don´t you deliver a more, shall we say thoughtprovoking and pertinent statement instead?
You might even gain respect by producing a relevant contribution to this important matter - If only you dared participate in such a communicative activity...

No left No right bullshit


some questions

11.02.2003 17:55

Some questions:
1) Which country has bombed more countries in the last 50 years than any other country in the world?
2) Which country has more weapons of mass destruction (chemical, biological, nuclear) than any other country in the world?
(hint - the answer is not Iraq)
3) On which statistics is the argument based that the majority in the world supports this war?
4) Has anyone actually asked the Iraqi people if they want the kind of post-war government that has been planned for Iraq, ie. US military government to start with and then bringing in a civilian leader, the US candidate being General Schwartzkopf who led the US troops to the Gulf War (according to the Observer 09/02/03)?
5) How would a strong US military presence in the middle East make the region more peaceful?
6) And how would a strong US military presence and a war against an Arab country actually discourage terrorism? What do you think is the main cause of anti-American terrorism?
a) because they're all evil, those muslims
or b) the imperialist, ruthless and unilateral (oh except Blair's support even though the vast majority of British citizens oppose the war) policy of the US government and its support to Israel, a country that has broken and is breaking a lot more UN resolutions than Iraq?
Answers please!

smug anti-war protester


If we prosecuted...

11.02.2003 17:55

Dan


Real terrorists

11.02.2003 22:30

"There will not be a safe place in Bhagdad." says the Bush regime.
And Madeline Albright commenting on the deaths of 500,000 Iraqi children through starvation from the sanctions.
"We think its worth the price"
Its easy to sacrifice sdomeone's life isn't it?
"YOU have to die for the greater good"
As the bombs start falling, I'm sure the Iraqi mothers will whisper soothingly to their frightened children.
"Don't worry darling. We're dying in a good cause.Our dictator might or might not have some weapons of mass destruction which he might or might not use against American children."
"Mama, you mean I'm being killed in a good cause? Hooray! God bless America! But mama - doesn't the US also have an unelected dictator? Doesn't he also have weapons of mass destruction? Didn't he also kill 3,000 of his own people on Sept 11 2001?"
"Yes dear, but he's allowed to do that - he's an American."

GH


quote

12.02.2003 03:55

To some extent the following applies to the original
poster:

"...War for him was an abstraction, and more than that,
a foreign abstraction, not blood, not viscera strewn
across a kitchen floor, not kids screaming in terror,
not the charred remains of children littering a street,
not brains blown out.

All of these horrors he knew happened in war, but he
preferred not to think about them, and he didn't really
have to think about them, because the wars his
government was so ready to inflict upon others and that
he was so ready to support as his patriotic duty were
not wars that would leave his 10 year old son a
paraplegic, would not leave his aged mother crushed
under the beam of a bombed out building, and would not
leave him whimpering in terror, huddled in some dank
corner of his basement, in the dark, as bombs
exploded outside, the noise deafening. Those fates
would be visited upon other people, not him, not
his neighbors, not his friends, not his family. He
could afford to be cavalier about civilian casualties.

What's more, the media -- that active reconstruction
of the world, molded to suit the purposes of
those who control it -- would never let the reality of
what his government was doing overseas intrude on
his enjoyment of Survivor, or a trip to the mall,
or the certainty that his country was engaged in a
moral mission of liberation, or was it a struggle
against terrorism, or a battle to restore the legitimacy
of the UN? The names for his country's acts of
aggression seemed to change every day.

He would never have to see the bits of crushed bone,
the smashed skulls, the entrails oozing from
bellies. We don't need to see that, say
Washington's grandees and America's network executives.
All we need to see, all we need to remember, are
3,000 killed on Sept. 11; think about Saddam's weapons
of mass destruction (oh yes, he has them, because we say
he does); think about his resolve to harm Americans (oh
yes, he intends to harm Americans, because he hates
our freedom and democracy and because he's evil.) 'All
you have to do is tell them they are being attacked...
It works the same way in any country.'..."

the above is quoted from
 http://iviews.com/Articles/articles.asp?ref=PP0302-1852

1. The threat of an unprovoked attack by Saddam Hussein
is vastly over-exaggerated. Most of the weapons he was
sold are accounted for, and the infrastructure required
to produce such weapons on a meaningful scale for military
use would be easily detectable. Besides which, you have
yet to describe a convincing motive.

In light of this, your argument is racist, in that it
justifies the killing of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis
in order to prevent an imaginary threat of what would
be, while horrible, a small scale attack on the West. In
other words, you seem to think Iraqi lives are worth less
than Western lives.

2. What makes you think an overthrow of Saddam would
be followed by a democratic regime? Such an assumption
is naive and flies in the face of historic evidence and reason.

In 1991, at the end of the Gulf War, the people of Iraq
rose up against Saddam. Rather than see a truly democratic
Iraq, Washington halted the allied advance, and allowed
Saddam to fly helicopter gunships which were then used
against the rebels. In short, they gave him all the
breathing room he needed to put down the rebellion.

There are other examples which illustrate that our
governments have no interest in seeing democracy triumph
in Iraq, but the above is probably the most pertinent.

There are other factors which make it unlikely that
a democratic regime would be installed, eg this would
encourage a Kurdish push for independence, which would
threaten Turkey, a valued NATO ally.

Governments have a history of lying bigtime to justify war.

The idea that our governments are motivated by the
threat of weapons, or love of liberty, is like believing
a serial killer when they tell you they suddenly have a
reformed character, and would you mind if they babysat
on Friday?

gtr
- Homepage: http://iviews.com/Articles/articles.asp?ref=PP0302-1852


War will be a complete disaster!

12.02.2003 07:53

Quote: "Saddam must be toppled out of an humanitarian empahty with the people of Iraque. Yes, innocents would suffer in any way. But far more innocents do, and will continue to, suffer under a regime where goverment outrages and well-intentioned sanctions only further the plight of the peple. Brutal human rights abuses, systematic violence and a bloodthirsty regime can only end with Western force."

Hundreds of thousands and perhaps millions of Iraqi people will suffer in a war to topple Saddam! The whole of Iraq is run like a giant refugee camp with people living on a givernment ration, if war breaks out the ration system will collapse leaving millions facing starvation. Then there is the vast number of casualties from the fierece bombing and then battles in and around Bagdad and other cities. The USA are already sending over 77,000 body bags so they are expecting very high casualty rates.

Most deaths in Iraq have occured through sanctions which have kept the Iraqi people extremely poor and also from the use oif depleted uranium during the last Gulf War, which led to massive numbers of cancers and horrific birth defects amongst the Iraqi people. As well the destruction of water and sewage treatment plants during the last Gulf War which led to massive outbreaks of water borne diseases which cannot be treated due to sanctions.

The reason the Iraqi people cannot overthrow Saddam themselves is because they are kept so poor through sanctions!

Harlequin