Yes. And we all know how much the world
knew and cared about conditions in Iraq prior to the invasion.
Going back decades to the beginning of the Baath revolution (though we could ask ourselves how much the British cared for the average Iraqi a hundred years ago) you're right.
Which is why its preposterous to assert that an unbroken line of callous Western policy all of a sudden "switched" to a policy of humanity towards the Iraqi people.
Just as it is foolish to argue whether 100 000 or 800 000 Iraqi deaths were "worth it" - does an American really have any idea of what the same per-capita death rate would do the the fabric of the United States?
Whats it like dodging a cruise missile or a sedan packed with explosives?
Whats it like kneeling on the floor with your hands on your head in your living room while 19 year old Americans shout orders at your wife and children on a faulty tip from an informant?
Whats it like to have to boil your water every day for years on end?
I argue that prior to 2003 - that the world did pay a lot more attention to Saddam's atrocities - heck, we had 12 years of repetition on the horrors of his regime from defectors, politicians and media personalities.
But the context was usually missing and drawn with broad strokes - often failing to note that the 12 years prior to 1991 he was doing the exact same stuff but with little to no comment at all. The campaign of demonization was more about how bad Saddam was (because it served policy ends) rather than what life was like for Iraqis, or how cruel the sanctions regime was for the "little guy" (most concerns with the sanctions program revolved around its effectiveness re: WMD, and corruption, with little focus on the abhorrent increase in child mortality and decreases in life expectancy, deaths to treatable disease, etc).
The Iranian threat was deemed severe enough that the Iraqi people could pay the price for the rest of the world to live without an empowered Iran in the 80s.
I wonder if Canada or Belgium were asked to make the same sacrifice to contain Iran - if they'd think it was "worth it".
In the 90s, we talked a bit more about torture and "repression" - but the end was to demonize Saddam - not to work at an understanding of life for the average Iraqi.