Which part of Iraq? Was it up North
So FG, are you incapable of reading the excerpts I posted, too? Is this just a common affliction of people on your side of this debate?
A good case could be made that the Bush admin wouldn't have given a damn about such an attack, since they took no action against what they were told was a chemical weapons lab under the control of Zarqawi.
That's a distortion of the facts. Bush didn't ignore the threat those camps posed. The Bush administration simply made the decision not to make the same mistake that Clinton made when he lobbed a few cruise missiles at bin Laden's camps. Because bombing (even with precision guided warheads) carried no guarantees of killing any specific person or closing the camps. Clinton's missiles didn't kill bin Laden and they didn't close the camps. And just a few years later we experienced 9/11 at the hands of people sent there by bin Laden himself … people who trained in those very camps Clinton had bombed.
Instead, Bush wisely decided to end the threat of al-Qaeda in Iraq once and for all by toppling Saddam and taking over the country … including the area where those camps were located (btw, did you ever take the time to read the first hand account of the soldiers who led that attack?). Because Bush knew that the problem of terrorists in Iraq extended far beyond the camps in Northern Iraq. Bombing the Northern camps would made an invasion later almost impossible. It would have created a firestorm of opinion at home and abroad (mostly negative, one should point out, from folks on the left). So Bush decided to prevent (with certainty) the possibility (strong likelihood) that one day Saddam (or one his sons) would turn crazier than they already were and decide to surreptiously arm al-Qaeda or some other group of terrorists with WMD to use against us. He decided to hold off and invade.
Now you will fault Bush for that decision, but I certainly don't. In hindsight, he was absolutely right. Because of the invasion we found out (according to the ISG) that Saddam had every intention of reconstituting his WMD arsenal the moment the UN left the country and the sanctions ended (and that was only a matter of time considering that so many UN nations … like Germany … had already negotiated arms for oil deals with that expectation in mind). Because of the invasion we found out that even with the UN ready to bless Iraq's cooperation with inspections and give it a WMD clean bill of health, Iraq was only 6 months to a year away from being able to reconstitute chemical weapons (according to the ISG). And we found out just how crazy Saddam was … crazy enough to let his country be destroyed rather than give up his WMD ambitions. Crazy enough to have ordered the use of WMD against a non-combatant (Israel) in an earlier war (we found an audio tape of him doing that). Crazy enough to hide in a dirty hole in the ground to keep on fighting what was a hopeless fight.
But thanks to Bush's strategy, Saddam is dead, his sons are dead, his regime is gone, the possibility of Iraqi WMD is gone, al-Zarqawi is dead, the northern camps are gone, the back of al-Qaeda in Iraq has been broken, and Iraq is on the road to becoming a modern western-friendly muslim nation. A pretty remarkable accomplishment that the left is to petty to properly acknowledge.
It's been ignored the other times I've seen it posted on this forum.
Actually, it's not been ignored. I said pretty much the same thing on those occasions too. Now
my response was ignored or just dismissed out of hand then, however.
By the way, I wish you folks on the anti-war left could make up your mind about al-Zarqawi. I couldn't count the number of times that pre-war the left dismissed the idea that al-Zarqawi was any sort of serious threat at all. Dismissed the idea that al-Zarqawi and his band of terrorists were involved in any way with chemical or biological warheads. Dismissed the idea that he was in Baghdad at any time. Dismissed the idea that he was connected to al-Qaeda in ANY way. And now here you are claiming that Bush made a mistake by not TRYING to kill him before the war by lobbing a few cruise missiles in the same way that Clinton TRIED to kill bin Laden (and didn't)?
BTW, what would have happened to Saddam's army if he had sent it north to take out Zarqawi?
LOL! Must I point out again that the 9/11 Commission reports clearly states "There are indications that [by 2001] the Iraqi regime tolerated
and may even have helped Ansar al Islam against the common Kurdish enemy.” Must I point out again that a 2002 CIA document summarized its overall view of possible Iraqi complicity regarding al-Zarqawi's presence and activities this way: "The presence of al-Qa'ida militants on Iraqi soil poses many questions. We are uncertain to what extent Baghdad is actively complicit in this use of its territory by al-Qa'ida operatives for safehaven and transit.
Given the pervasive presence of Iraq's security apparatus, it would be difficult for al-Qa'ida operatives to maintain an active, long-term presence in Iraq without alerting the authorities or without at least their acquiescence." What makes you think Saddam had any intention of taking his army north and wiping out Zarqawi?
