Friday, March 21, 2008

Hitchens on Iraq and an Easter break....

11:06 AM | Comments (2)

Slate magazine asked the best-known "liberal hawks" who originally supported the war in Iraq to answer the question, "Why did I get it wrong?". In typically provocative style Christopher Hitchens adds the suffix 'I didn't' to his essay.
"We were never, if we are honest with ourselves, "lied into war." We became steadily more aware that the option was continued collusion with Saddam Hussein or a decision to have done with him. The president's speech to the United Nations on Sept. 12, 2002, laying out the considered case that it was time to face the Iraqi tyrant, too, with this choice, was easily the best speech of his two-term tenure and by far the most misunderstood...."

Hitchens doesn't doubt the "unarguable hash that was made of the intervention itself". But
"I would nonetheless maintain that this incompetence doesn't condemn the enterprise wholesale. A much-wanted war criminal was put on public trial. The Kurdish and Shiite majority was rescued from the ever-present threat of a renewed genocide. A huge, hideous military and party apparatus, directed at internal repression and external aggression was (perhaps overhastily) dismantled. The largest wetlands in the region, habitat of the historic Marsh Arabs, have been largely recuperated. Huge fresh oilfields have been found, including in formerly oil free Sunni provinces, and some important initial investment in them made. Elections have been held, and the outline of a federal system has been proposed as the only alternative to a) a sectarian despotism and b) a sectarian partition and fragmentation. Not unimportantly, a battlefield defeat has been inflicted on al-Qaida and its surrogates, who (not without some Baathist collaboration) had hoped to constitute the successor regime in a failed state and an imploded society. Further afield, a perfectly defensible case can be made that the Syrian Baathists would not have evacuated Lebanon, nor would the Qaddafi gang have turned over Libya's (much higher than anticipated) stock of WMD if not for the ripple effect of the removal of the region's keystone dictatorship"

And finally, he ridicules the idea that in March 2003 we could just have walked away or continued with sanctions:
"But the thing to remember about Iraq is that all or most choice had already been forfeited. We were already deeply involved in the life-and-death struggle of that country, and March 2003 happens to mark the only time that we ever decided to intervene, after a protracted and open public debate, on the right side and for the right reasons. This must, and still does, count for something."

And with that, I'm off for an Easter break. No blogging till Tuesday...
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2 Comments:

Blogger Bretwalda Edwin-Higham said...

March 2003 happens to mark the only time that we ever decided to intervene ...

Er, Liam, wasn't there also the little matter of the gulf war?

7:40 AM  
Blogger Cassilis said...

You're taking the line out of context:

"March 2003 happens to mark the only time that we ever decided to intervene...on the right side and for the right reasons"

If you read his whole piece he acknowledges many interventions since the late 60's....

7:59 AM  

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