I'm going to spare you the history lesson on Iraq and just say that if the powers that be wanted to take out Saddam, it could have been done since the Gulf War. The Israelis had the capacity for quite some time - it's just that the potential replacements were worse. And when we're talking about the Baath Party, I'm not talking about something like the Conservatives, or Labour. I'm talking about an entire social/religious class of people that ostensibly ran the Iraqi government and military. They also comprised a large part of the military. There is a reason that regime change in Iraq would take more than just a guy with a rifle in the right place at the right time.
You might be confusing "not taking evidence" with "not making the evidence public information." Nevertheless, Al-Qaeda confirmed bin Laden's death as well, as did Pakistani authorities.
As for giving a timeline on occupying Afghanistan (and Iraq)... In order to occupy a country and ensure smooth transition - like Germany after World War 2 - hundreds of thousands or millions of troops are required, along with minimal cultural differences. To put this in perspective, Germany had more allied troops stationed there in 1946 and 1947 than Afghanistan and Iraq had rotate through for the entire duration of the ground wars. The only rational choice for Western politicians was to say we're either staying indefinitely (politically unpalatable) or give timelines for draw-downs and conversion to local forces (which they did). Those timelines were only given after local forces were starting to show they could function independently.
However, as I pointed out earlier, the point in all this conflict was not necessarily the installation of functioning democracies but the achievement of strategic goals, which have, to some extent, worked out.
Worse than Saddam? Oooh...
Do you mean the Baath party is more of a rank than a "party" as we in the West would interpret the word and the other parties were lower ranks?
From what I heard on the news, I interpreted it as they purposely took no evidence for some reason. I looked up Al Qaeda:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-13313201Interestingly, there's a note about conspiracy theorists in there too:
"The release of a statement from "the general leadership" of al-Qaeda may do something to undermine the conspiracy theories circulating in some quarters that Osama Bin Laden is not dead.
However, there will no doubt be some for whom even this will not be enough, who will argue it is not definitive proof."
I must admit I did think that Al Qaeda could just be using it to drum up support if he's already dead in the first place, and before they were pretending he still lived, but at this point we've gone past the point where I am suspicious enough to still think it was a cover up with various people actually coming out and stating they identified the body.
I think there's a third choice. Yes, you say it will take as long as it takes, but you keep the public updated, you make them see that progress is being made, that things are getting done. The media often make it look like all the soldiers are doing is patrolling around aimlessly getting blown up by IEDs. I know that's not the case, but it sure looks like it at times the way things are covered.
I think the US doesn't make enough of an effort to avoid a solution that doesn't involve war. Then again, when you're pumping in more money than the entire globe combined (I think that's right) into your military, I guess you're going to want a return on your investment from time to time.
Y'know, a lot of people like to espouse this view on the United States, particularly those of us not living there, but it actually ignores reality. The US has this reputation of being the great intervener in places where they aren't wanted, but the American government actually shows remarkable restraint in its military endeavours - and is frequently chastised for doing so. Look at the calls for intervention in Syria and Mali, or the old ones for Darfur.
Considering the last 70 years has seen the US, arguably now the world's only superpower, involved in only 6 actual 'hot' wars (WW2, Korea, Vietnam, Gulf War, Afghanistan, Iraq) - only 2 of which acted independently of a broad international consensus - I think they're doing rather well on the military restraint front.
I guess there is some selectivism there. Either they shouldn't be waging war, or they should be. But America will only go to war when it's in their own interests, and I only have "real time" experience with the last two, Afghanistan and Iraq. It seems to me in both cases, especially Iraq, they jumped in too quickly. Iraq is basically a war crime.