Are you so pathetically uninformed on this issue as to not know the nationalities of the people who attacked us? They weren't Iraqis. They were mostly Saudi, one or two from the UAE and also Egypt as well. Maybe one or two other middle eastern nationalities in there, but none from Iraq.
Are you once more so pitifully ignorant of the facts to not know that one of the things about Iraq that was different was their tendency toward secularism, at least by Middle Eastern standards?
9/11 was no justification for the invasion of Iraq. However, I'm not sure that the invasion will end up being wholly bad, only time, and history, will tell. As it is, the ME looks drastically different: Libya gave up its arms program voluntarily, Iraq IS a better place (though the question is 'at what price?'), Afganistan is a work in progress, etc.
Iraq didn't go as well as it should have. Politicians ignored the brass, and EVERYONE paid a heavy price. Things would look MUCH different if they had followed Tommy Franks advice instead of Rumsfeld, and there'd be a whole lot less disgust and angst over Iraq all around. In other words, a large part of the problem with Iraq is not the invasion itself, but how it was carried out.
It is the topic at hand when you try to imply that violence and nonconformity to the 'modern world' are the sole purview one religion and not all of them. It is also relevant to this discussion because of the high correlation between zealous Christians and NeoCon foreign policy leanings favoring mass military interventionism around the globe.
I never said 'sole'. However, suicide terror IS the domain of Islam, with VERY few exceptions.
I'm not a fan of Neocon-ism, however...Iraq was their only mistaken military intervention (and even that, however mistaken it may or may not have been, was a cluster becaue of mismanagement, not spite).
You can't equate Islamic terror in over twenty countries targeting largely innocents, to US military interventionism which does not deliberately target innocents. You may not like either, but there is a distinct difference.
Just as would happen here if, per chance, Muslims decideds to occupy significant portions of our land and kill a few million of us. You'd find partisan differences fade rather quickly when the topic of Muslims came up were that the case. That people like you seem to miss the fact that even moderates are inflamed by our presence there, just as moderates here would be inflamed by their presence here were that the case, is one of the major problems informing ourt failed policies.
Many Iraqis are very grateful to the US for ousting SAddam. The problem, again, is HOW we went about it. WE went in severely under-manned, at Rumsfelds orders, and this cost us several YEARS, several thousand dead US troops, billions of dollars, and TENS OF THOUSANDS of dead Iraqis. It could easily have been much quicker and cleaner, in which case no one would be bitching. Hey, no one is hauling mass numbers of girls out of their home and raping them, or wood-chipping fathers for disagreeing with Saddam under their breaths.
Iraqi's want us out, and we're slowly leaving (as quickly as possible). We would still be seen as liberators if we hadn't come in blazing, to make up for a lack of manpower, then used rogue soldiers like BlackWater to make up the initial difference. THeir behavior cost us the goodwill of the Iraqi people.
So it's not as simple as saying 'they hate us', or 'we inflame the moderates', when speaking of Iraq specifically.
You have to take each country and its peoples on an individual basis. Jordanians have no problem with the US, in general. Egypt's leadership very much enjoys our monetary support ($2-4b a year), and our carrot keeps the peace very nicely in that respect. Egyptians are more hardline Islamist than their gov't, but the gov't keeps them on a short rope.
It's all very simple in the end. Very few people want to be helped so bad they'd tolerate an invading/occupying force. Those who do want help are usually incompetent and will need it in perpetuity, meaning a permanent military presense in whatever area is in question which guarantees a majorly pissed off indigenous population. Those competent ones who neither need or don't want help resent it when it is forced upon them at gun point. In other words a foreign policy based on anything but defense against clear and present dangers is doomed to fail.
I'm just not so sure it's that simple, see my comments about Iraq above. You do the Iraqis a disservice when you say 'Those who do want help are usually incompetent and will need it in perpetuity'. Iraqi's aren't lazy and incompetant by nature, which is what that implies. They have a steep learning curve, but they'll get it.
Kosovo was NO danger to the US. We did a good thing. I don't believe in total isolationism.
Whether they have another way to express their outrage is irrelevant. The point of the matter is it would not be directed at us to such an extent, nor would these 'leaders' be able to recruit so easily, were it not for the thousand if not millions of dead our policies in the middle east have resulted in.
Oh really? It is totally, and completely relevant. I don't give two ****s WHAT the suicide bombers motivations are or were when he stepped into the kiosk with my friend at Bet Leid junction in Israel, and blew up my cute, smart, funny friend Maya Kopstein and 21 others.
Whatever the grievances were or are, THAT is not the way to solve them. It's immoral, and counter-productive. In the case of Israel, if the Palestinians eschewed violence, marched peacefully en masses on Jerusalem, and demanded a 1 or 2 state solution, they'd have it in a month flat without a shot being fired. They know it, and Israel knows it. So why doesn't it happen? The majority don't want to live next to Jews. THey don't want peace with Jews, they want no Jews.
They have legitimate grievances, but when they purposely target women and clubs full of high school kids, they lose every shred of legitimacy they ever had. If they limited suicide terror to only IDF troops, I'd call that somehow legitimate, even though I wouldn't like it. But they target the weak, defenseless, and innocent. That's inexcusable, anywhere, and any time.
Because they choose to use these methods, they pic the stage for the battle. They kill women and children, and hide among women and children. They use women and children as pawns to inflict damage. And it's wrong.
It doesn't matter if its Israel or Indonesia or Iraq, Muslim against Jew, or Sunni against Shiite. It's wrong, and a failing policy. It rallies support against them, and hardens resolve, whereas a more measured approach would leave the enemy room to consider their plight or desires.
How many dead because of coups and counter coups when we were done ****ing around in Syria? How many dead and ****ed over under the British alliance with the Sunnis in the 20s? How about when we worked with Nasser in Egypt? Because of the Shah in Iran and our meddling there? How many screwed and/or dead because of our initial support for Saddam in Iraq? Because of our meddling in Lebanon in the 50s and 80s? In Libya in the 60s and 80s? The first Iraq war, the sanctions that followed, the second Iraq war? And now how many are going to die or be significantly worse off when we start actively ****ing around in Iran again which looks likely? The US and the modern west in general have damn a century of poorly thought out and often disastrous policies that have left significant amounts of people in the middle east impoverished, tyrranized, and/or just plain ****ing dead. I hate to break this to you, but they are humans and have a right to be pissed at us.
The US has had limited effect in comparison to Britain (which ****ed half the world for pure selfish colonialist gain), or ANY OTHER world superpower throughout history. The US is at the bottom of the list when it comes to damage done, and at the top when it comes to good done.
This is not to excuse the US and its indiscretions, it simply put them in the context of history, and its peers.
The ME has been ****ed for centuries. You can't just view the present, or the last century of their history, because they sure don't. THey see the last 2000 years, and themselves as being part of it. Americans don't and can't think this way. The Muslim world spent plenty of time ****ing the West to the fullest extent of their abilities, and would never have stopped if it weren't for them getting their asses handed to them eventually. Many Muslims still feel the sting of this. What's going on now is simply a continuation of 2000 years of history. At times they won; lately, they're on a massive losing streak.
If they spent more time educating their children about more than Islam, raising them to be tolerant and kind, and less time on hate and killing, and living in the past, reliving past failures over and over, maybe they'd be winning today. If they've been taken advantage of, they can take a majority of that blame. They're not passive partners in the transaction.
The objective is irrelevant. People don't care about your intentions when they're holding their kid's intestines in their hands or looking at the bodies of their dead loved ones being carted off to be burned en masse to avoid disease.
By that philosophy, Cambodians, Jews, most Africans, Burmese, Tibetans, and scores more peoples should be strapping on the bombs and lashing out by blowing up as many innocents as possible. I know Israelis who lost kids to suicide bombers, and NOT A SINGLE ONE is ready to go kill innocent Palestinians, and most don't even hate Palestinians. They hate the terrorists, but realize all of them aren't bad.
Arabs/Muslims are having it easy compared to those I mentioned above. And they're the only ones killing thousands of innocents worldwide every year.
There is NO justification. It's a terrible convergence of religious teachings, culture, and ignorance (as was Christianity during the Dark Ages and INquisition, the difference being Christianity pulled itself out of the ****ty hole it was in and does not condone that behavior or partake of it today).
And we have no ****ing business, not to mention zero constitutional authority, to use the US army to police the world and 'save' anybody. Ignoring for the moment that those we try and 'save' usually end up ****ed over worse than before we 'saved' them.
Sometimes, sometimes not. You can't make a blanket statement like that.