 Originally Posted by 3FLryan
Yes, getting Saddam out of power was a good thing, I think everyone can agree on that. But there's just no way to say if it was good in the long run. Now, we have a situation that is steadily degenerating, and basically already in, a full scale civil war. Is that better than what there was? Now, a Shi'ite majority might dominate a Sunni minority. After many years of horrible oppression, there is no doubt that horrible things will start happening to Sunnis. The 22% of the people in Iraq who voted no when it came to the new constitution were almost exclusively Sunni. If our goal was toppling Saddam, and that's it, then yeah, mission accomplished. Victory. But its doesn't seem entirely clear that this is going to lead to a "better" Iraq. The situation in the middle east is EXTREMELY complicated and I don't think it is right to say that just because we toppled an opressive dictator and installed a government with laughable power that this is clearly the best route that Iraq could have gone.
[/b]
It will take a long time for the real results to show, but I think that we have most likely put them on the right path. Those people vote in higher percentages than we do, despite death threats. Think about that. That is how strong the spirit for freedom is. They now have a taste of it, and I think the will for freedom will win out in the end. Our presence there is making a lot of them uncomfortable and giving them reasons to not push as hard as they would without us there, but I think that when we are gone, a great deal of the country is going to say, "This is our little window in history to make freedom work. Let's make this happen!"
The Shiites and the Sunnis will have problems with each other for a long time, maybe even for decades or centuries to come. However, the more advanced and civilized a country gets, the less that type of violence tends to happen. The more democracy allows businesses to grow and general self esteem with it, and the more education spreads, the more advanced and civilized Iraq will get. The same is true of Afghanistan. If they can maintain the freedom and keep the government from becoming theocratic or a dictatorship, the country will succeed greatly. It's going to come down to how bad the average Iraqi wants freedom for his/her country. I am optimistic on that. The suicide bomber, religiously fanatical, pro-oppression mentality is something that comes with poverty and lack of civilization. The more that can be cured, the more the pro-oppression can be cured. I know how bad all of us in this forum would want freedom. I think it's a large part of human nature. My bet is that it will win.
|
|
Bookmarks