If you think every anti-circumcision activist will be happy with a law that merely requires some medical justification, when medical justification (the study I cited) is currently available to anyone who wants to circumcise their child for any reason, then it's a strawman.
Apart from the fact that your definition of "strawman" is completely wrong here (look it up if you don't believe me), it would be completely impractical and outright harmful to introduce a law that banned any practice for which there was an actual medical need. I don't see anyone here saying "Circumcision should be completely illegal even if it's medically necessary," so stop pretending that someone is.
And with that, I think there's very little point in doing more than simply stating my position in full, then leaving the thread.
My position is simply this:
It should be the universal right of all people not to be subject to permanent surgical modification, including the removal of non-regenerating tissue or the severance of tissue that will not heal, without having given their informed consent. This right should only be over-ridden when all of the three following conditions are met:
(1) The person is unable to give or withold consent, whether due to age, incapacity or any other reason;
(2) A properly licensed medical professional has identified a medical need for the procedure to be carried out, and;
(3) The legal guardians of the person have given their consent to the procedure.
From that starting point, the banning of routine infant circumcision, male or female, may be simply reached
as a conclusion from the current state of medical opinion.
And that, I think, is all I have to say.
Dave