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1.
Starting an Unnecessary War
When
George W. Bush took office in 2001, the
war with Iraq was already in progress,
because Saddam Hussein was ignoring at
least 17 U. N. Resolutions from the 1991
Gulf War; Hussein had agreed to cease
production of nuclear and biological
weapons, but he would not allow
verification that he was doing so. This
lack of cooperation meant that the war
in which the US and coalition forces had
engaged to liberate Kuwait was not
concluded.
So, in fact, President Bush
did not actually “start” the war; he
continued it, and because of the troop
surge late in his second term, he
virtually ended it. However, with the
new president Barack Obama set to
withdraw U. S. military from Iraq, there
could easily be an escalation in
violence, as recent bombings are
indicating.
9/11
After
the September 11, 2001, attack on the
United States, government officials in
the Executive and Legislative branches
along with the CIA and other
intelligence offices were scrambling to
find out who the perpetrators were and
how they managed to launch such an
attack. They wondered how they could
have been blindsided, and they
especially wondered what to do to stop
any further attack.
War on
Terror Started Under Clinton
Administration
They
quickly focused on the terror training
camps in Afghanistan, because they had
known about them since the early Clinton
administration. What many Americans
even now fail to realize is that the
“War on Terror” actually started under
the Clinton administration.
Osama
bin Laden declared war on the United
States in 1996, and the Clinton
administration had tried several times
to kill him in Afghanistan, but every
time they had a chance to accomplish
that act of war, they hesitated and bin
Laden escaped. There is usually little
difficulty understanding that the bin
Laden terror network based in
Afghanistan was at war with the U.S.,
and therefore most Americans had no
qualms about the Afghanistan theatre of
the war.
Salman
Pak
Because
of the relatively recent and actual
on-going war with the rogue tyrant
Saddam Hussein regime, government
authorities realized that even if Saddam
Hussein was not directly responsible for
9/11, he had the capability to aid and
abet the terrorists who completed the
attack. For example, the site at Salman
Pak near Baghdad has a fuselage, which
could be used for no other purpose than
training of the kind that the 9/11
hijacker would have required.
Paying
Families of Suicide Bombers
Saddam
Hussein awarded Palestinian families
$25,000 for each family member who
offered their services as suicide
bombers. He used biological weapons on
his own Kurdish population. His sons
raped and tortured their own Iraqi
citizens. The Saddam Hussein regime was
a constant destabilizing presence in the
Middle East. Iraq citizens could not
vote for anyone but Saddam Hussein.
The
Iraq War Resolution clearly spells
out all of the reasons for engaging
Saddam Hussein and removing him from
power. If the war was, in fact, not
necessary, and the U.S. government had
accepted that premise in 2003, then
today’s Iraq citizens would not be in
the process of attaining a government in
which they can participate while freely
choosing their own ways of life. They
would still be living under the
oppression of a tyrant.
Just as
American soldiers fought and died to
liberate Europe from the tyranny of
Adolf Hitler, they fought and died to
liberate the Iraqi people from Saddam
Hussein. Brave soldiers and presidents
who fight wars do not need the love or
agreement of the citizens they fight to
protect, but they should, at least, get
the respect they deserve.
2.
Bush Ignored Science
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