
PeaceNik: Why did you say we are we invading Iraq?
WarMonger: We are invading Iraq because it is in violation of security council resolution 1441.
As well as many other resolutions passed before, during, and after the Gulf War, which are still in effect.
A country cannot be allowed to violate security council resolutions.
This is debatable. Why should the U.N. have total sovereignty over another nation? U.N. resolutions are not binding by themselves; they're expressions of the consensus of will of the Security Council.
PN: But I thought many of our allies, including Israel, were in violation of more security council resolutions than Iraq.
Many of those resolutions passed against Israel were unjustified (relating to defense and capture of critical territory), and again, the U.N. doesn't have sovereignty over anyone.
WM: It's not just about UN resolutions. The main point is that Iraq could have weapons of mass destruction, and the first sign of a smoking gun could well be a mushroom cloud over NY.
Iraq
does have WMD. We know because we've seen it use them.
PN: Mushroom cloud? But I thought the weapons inspectors said Iraq had no nuclear weapons.
WM: Yes, but biological and chemical weapons are the issue.
Not just the weapons themselves - Iraq
finances terrorist organizations, who could themselves buy WMD.
PN: But I thought Iraq did not have any long range missiles for attacking us or our allies with such Weapons.
They do, because the inspectors found them (!) and they used them once Gulf War II started.
WM: The risk is not Iraq directly attacking us, but rather terrorists networks that Iraq could sell the weapons to.
PN: But couldn't virtually any country sell chemical or biological materials?
Yes. Such as Russia. This is why we have nonproliferation treaties.
We sold quite a bit to Iraq in the eighties ourselves, didn't we?
Iraq was fighting against Iran at the time, and we believed Iran to be the nastier foe. And I'm not positive we sold them WMD.
WM: That's ancient history. Look, Saddam Hussein is an evil man that has an undeniable track record of repressing his own people since the early eighties. He gasses his enemies. Everyone agrees that he is a
power-hungry lunatic murderer.
A valid reason why we should remove him even if he had no WMD.
PN: We sold chemical and biological materials to a power-hungry lunatic murderer?
And during WWII we allied with another cruel dictator who killed his own people - Stalin. Because Germany was the bigger threat.
Anyway, shouldn't we want to correct previous mistakes?
WM: The issue is not what we sold, but rather what Saddam did. He is the one that launched a pre-emptive first strike on Kuwait.
That was not a pre-emptive first strike.

It was an invasion to seize Kuwait's oil assets. Unprovoked.
PN: A pre-emptive first strike does sound bad. But didn't our ambassador to Iraq, April Gillespie, know about and green-light the invasion of Kuwait?
No information about this.
WM: Let's deal with the present, shall we? As of today, Iraq could sell its biological and chemical weapons to Al Quaida. Osama Bin Laden himself released an audio tape calling on Iraqis to suicide-attack us, proving a partnership between the two.
Not just al Qaeda, but any terrorist organization.
PN: Osama Bin Laden? Wasn't the point of invading Afghanistan to kill him?
We may have actually done that, but we can't confirm it so we swept it under the rug.
WM: Actually, it's not 100% certain that it's really Osama Bin Laden on the tapes. But the lesson from the tape is the same: there could easily be a partnership between al-Qaida and Saddam Hussein unless we act.
PN: Is this the same audio tape where Osama Bin Laden labels Saddam a secular infidel?
bin Laden wanted to instigate a war anyway - he knew that the U.S. would wipe out the "Iraqi infidels" if a war came to pass. Then the Muslim world would be angry at the U.S. Two birds with one stone.
WM: You're missing the point by just focusing on the tape. Powell presented a strong case against Iraq.
PN: He did?
WM: Yes, he showed satellite pictures of an Al Quaeda poison factory in Iraq.
PN: But didn't that turn out to be a harmless shack in the part of Iraq controlled by the Kurdish opposition?

WM: And a British intelligence report...
PN: Didn't that turn out to be copied from an out-of-date graduate student paper?
Plaigiarism, which was unfortunate. But that doesn't make it false.
WM: And reports of mobile weapons labs...
PN: Weren't those just artistic renderings?
No information on this.
WM: And reports of Iraqis scuttling and hiding evidence from inspectors...
PN: Wasn't that evidence contradicted by the chief weapons inspector, Hans Blix?
Who may have been bribed. People are wondering about that. And Blix has had several "slips of the tongue" that could be interpreted as showing that he's not letting on everything he knows.
WM: Yes, but there is plenty of other hard evidence that cannot be revealed because it would compromise our security.
More complicated than that, but essentially yes.
PN: So there is no publicly available evidence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq?
WM: The inspectors are not detectives, it's not their JOB to find evidence.You're missing the point.
Exactly. The inspectors are there to supervise the disarmament, not to go treasure hunting. The onus is on Iraq to disarm. Other countries who have disarmed haven't gone through the gymnastics that Iraq is doing.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/01/20030123-1.htmlPN: So what is the point?
WM: The main point is that we are invading Iraq because resolution 1441 threatened "severe consequences."
And other resolutions, as well. Or you could argue that we're finishing Gulf War I. The end of that war was predicated upon Iraq's cooperation.
If we do not act, the security council will become an irrelevant debating society.
PN: So the main point is to uphold the rulings of the security council?
WM: Absolutely. ... unless it rules against us.
The main point is to follow through with what we started earlier (Gulf War I and the initial establishment of disarmament) and to show terrorists and terrorist states that they don't have carte blanche to get away with stuff.
PN: And what if it does rule against us?
Which, by the way, would be abandoning its earlier position. And we shouldn't even NEED a second resolution. Nor a Resolution 1441, for that matter.
WM: In that case, we must lead a coalition of the willing to invade Iraq.
PN: Coalition of the willing? Who's that?
WM: Britain, Turkey, Bulgaria, Spain, and Italy, for starters.
And about forty others.
PN: I thought Turkey refused to help us unless we gave them tens of billions of dollars.
A bit of blackmail, that. So we withdrew the offer.

WM: Nevertheless, they may now be willing.
PN: I thought public opinion in all those countries was against war.
Public opinion was against WWII during the 20s and 30s.
WM: Current public opinion is irrelevant. The majority expresses its will by electing leaders to make decisions.
PN: So it's the decisions of leaders elected by the majority that is important?
Not necessarily. Leaders have responsibility to lead. This may mean going against the will of the people if it's important enough. Both Blair and Bush are risking their political future over this.
WM: Yes.
PN: But George Bush wasn't elected by voters. He was selected by the U.S. Supreme C...-

Not this again. No he wasn't. He was elected - publicly and openly - by the Electoral College. And as far as the Supreme Court goes, they ruled 7-2 that the system of recounts was unconstitutional. The 5-4 was only about what the court thought Florida should do next.
WM: I mean, we must support the decisions of our leaders, however they were elected, because they are acting in our best interest. This is about being a patriot. That's the bottom line.
Not blindly support the decisions. But think them through and come to a rational conclusion.
PN: So if we do not support the decisions of the president, we are not patriotic?
WM: I never said that.
You can protest - in fact, many have been doing so. However, protesting during a war is counterproductive. I'd call it treason... giving comfort to our enemies by showing them that the U.S. isn't totally behind this. As long as we're fighting the war, support the troops. Then when the war's done, show your dissatisfaction by voting.
PN: So what are you saying? Why are we invading Iraq?
WM: As I said, because there is a chance that they have weapons of mass destruction that threaten us and our allies.
PN: But the inspectors have not been able to find any such weapons.
Again, the burden is on Iraq, not the inspectors.
WM: Iraq is obviously hiding them.
PN: You know this? How?
Because THEY'RE NOT COOPERATING WITH THE INSPECTORS. If they didn't have them, they'd be only too glad to prove it. Instead, they're doing nothing and letting the inspectors run around the country.
WM: Because we know they had the weapons ten years ago, and they are still unaccounted for.
PN: The weapons we sold them, you mean?
WM: Precisely.
PN: But I thought those biological and chemical weapons would degrade to an unusable state over ten years.
Not all of them, not always, and nothing's preventing them from manufacturing more.
WM: But there is a chance that some have not degraded.
PN: So as long as there is even a small chance that such weapons exist, we must invade?
WM: Exactly.
Because Iraq is failing to live up to its 12-year-old agreement.
PN: But North Korea actually has large amounts of usable chemical, biological, AND nuclear weapons, AND long range missiles that can reach the west coast AND it has expelled nuclear weapons inspectors, AND threatened to turn America into a sea of fire.
WM: That's a diplomatic issue.
PN: So why are we invading Iraq instead of using diplomacy?
Because we've been trying diplomacy for 12 years and it hasn't worked. Iraq can't be reasoned with. It remains to be seen whether North Korea can be reasoned with.
WM: Aren't you listening? We are invading Iraq because we cannot allow the inspections to drag on indefinitely. Iraq has been delaying, deceiving,and denying for over ten years, and inspections cost us tens of millions.
PN: But I thought war would cost us tens of billions.
Which might be recouped with more oil being opened up for trade, but this is not certain. Anyway, from a strategic point of view invading Iraq is sending the world a message: don't mess with us. Which serves yet another useful purpose.
WM: Yes, but this is not about money. This is about security.
PN: But wouldn't a pre-emptive war against Iraq ignite radical Muslim sentiments against us, and decrease our security?
Possibly, but the more terrorism is rooted out, the harder it will be for them to do anything about it. But I doubt much will happen - there isn't much love for Saddam Hussein in the Muslim world. They're blustering, but they aren't doing anything.
WM: Possibly, but we must not allow the terrorists to change the way we live. Once we do that, the terrorists have already won.
PN: So what is the purpose of the Department of Homeland Security, color-coded terror alerts, and the Patriot Act? Don't these change the way we live?
Hopefully, not much, and hopefully, not for long. These solutions aren't ideal.
WM: I thought you had questions about Iraq.
PN: I do. Why are we invading Iraq?
WM: For the last time, we are invading Iraq because the world has called on Saddam Hussein to disarm, and he has failed to do so. He must now face the consequences.
We're invading because we're living up to the responsibility Gulf War I thrust upon us. We're not shirking from what is right.
PN: So, likewise, if the world called on us to do something, such as find a peaceful solution, we would have an obligation to listen?
No. But we've listened anyway. And we've been "peaceful" for
12 years.
WM: By "world", I meant the United Nations.
PN: So, we have an obligation to listen to the United Nations?
WM: By "United Nations" I meant the Security Council.
PN: So, we have an obligation to listen to the Security Council?
WM: I meant the majority of the Security Council.
PN: So, we have an obligation to listen to the majority of the Security Council?
We have an obligation to do none of these - the U.N. doesn't override a nation's sovereignty. On the other hand, the Security Council
unanimously approved 1441. They're going back on their word.
WM: Well... there could be an unreasonable veto.
PN: In which case?
WM: In which case, we have an obligation to ignore the veto.
PN: And if the majority of the Security Council does not support us at all?
WM: Then we have an obligation to ignore the Security Council.
PN: That makes no sense.
Because it's a straw man. See the previous point.
WM: If you love Iraq so much, you should move there.
Or be a human shield. And come back and tell us what you see.
http://www.portal.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fopinion%2F2003%2F03%2F23%2Fdo2305.xmlOr maybe France, with all the other cheese-eating surrender monkeys. It's time to boycott their wine and cheese, no doubt about that.

PN: I give up!
I wish you would.