Now that is starting to sound as if someone is trying to have things both ways. On the one hand, Bigred is trying to bring up the issue that Saddam would never do anything that would risk a direct attack upon him that would flatten him, yet the argument is also now made that he is ruthless and self-interested to the point of total defiance with tens of countries about to pounce on him.
Bear in mind that the had one of the largest conventional forces in the world at the time, nice short supply lines and a fortified position.
Whereas rather than "tens of countries about to pounce on him", he was facing a part of the US armed forces and token assistance from 33 other nations. 74% of the 660 000 odd coalition troops were US troops, and I believe most of the non-US troops served behind the front line.
The total number of Iraqi troops was in the same ballpark.
As I said earlier, before the war, it wasn't completely ridiculous to think that the Iraqi army could have made a go of GW1. It turned out that US air power, especially stealth, was totally decisive but nobody knew for sure in advance that it would work out that way.
Hussein was very badly wrong, but he wasn't a lunatic.
How decisive is not as important as the final outcome -- Saddam loses big. Blundering is the action of flawed reasoning, not flawed information. Saddam might get away with thinking that the world was not going to react the way it did -- but when the showdown materialized he behaved quite irrationally. And his behavior afterwords was quite unexcusable.
They commit inexcusable atrocities, we understandably and with deep regret bulldoze hospitals in trenches and bomb civilian infrastructure (both war crimes)?
Just how many nukes did Saddam have in comparrison to China?
I don't understand your point.
This cannot go unchalleneged. The exact interpretation(s) with April Glaspie to Saddam kept referencing that the US had no opinion on the Iraq and Kuwait disputes -- not go ahead and do as you wish with regards to an invasion. This meant that we took no sides or did not have enough information to formulate a resolving opinion.
Sure it did. Hussein masses his troops on the border, calls an emergency meeting with the US ambassador, and asks "So, what would the USA think if I invaded?".
The ambassador replies not "That would give you way too much oil, and put you way too close to important bits of Saudi Arabia, so if you tried it we'd organise and international coalition and bomb Iraq's civilian infrastructure into the dark ages", but rather "Eh, that's an internal Arab matter, we have no opinion".
Saying the USA had no opinion, when it very clearly had a very strong opinion indeed, cannot possibly be characterised as an accurate and honest response. Either the ambassador was catastrophically wrong (an error leading directly to a terrible war) or they were lying.
Yes ... Saddam could have backed down. His defiance was absurd, and his torching of the Kuwait oil fields showed his hand quite clearly.
As I said, this is the US post-war revisionist version. Hussein had a decent hand and he played it out, which judging by his history is exactly what you would expect him to do.
I would give Saddam the overwhelming majority of the blame.
Well of course you would. That way the USA doesn't have any blame for the seven figure death toll. It was all that nasty Hussein, deliberately misinterpreting the US ambassador, not backing down unconditionally when told to,
making the USA bomb civilian water and electricity supplies inside Iraq,
making the USA specifically embargo life-saving drugs after the war... What a terrible man!