Earthborn said:
You have no evidence that he was going to start his nuclear program again, and you have no evidence what he was going to do with a nuclear bomb once he had one.
You're kidding, right? We do have evidence. We have the fact that he kept plans and parts for a uranium enrichment centrifuge hidden from inspectors. That's proof he was hoping to restart his program. And are you seriously trying to claim that Saddam with a nuke was an acceptable risk? Sorry, but I don't buy that for a second. Yes, we don't know what he'd do - maybe he'd try to crush the Kurds first, or maybe he'd try to invade Kuwait again. Maybe he'd try to blackmail the Saudi's into giving him money to rebuild his army. But none of the possibilities are acceptable risks.
I bet he did. He didn't invade Kuwait with the intention to kill people.
Again, you've got to be kidding me. The man was a butcher. Killing civilians probably wasn't a primary objective (it was however in his campaign against the Kurds), but he certainly never carred about civilian casualtied, even among Iraqis.
So you think Saddam prefers broken infrastructure?
I'm saying he never gave a crap about the wellfare of Kuwaiti citizens. Is that not obvious? And if he couldn't have the infrastructure, then yes, he wanted it broken. Hence all the oil fires he started in Kuwait.
Please provide evidence of looting.
I'm surprised that this is the sort of thing you're contesting, but OK:
http://www.iraqfoundation.org/documents/pdf/index.html
There's planty more tales of the looting that went on in Kuwait, but this should be sufficient for starters.
Don't forget the oil fires he set, or the oil he dumped into the gulf either, just to spite the world.
But I did. Any criticism on my plan is more than justified, but instead of giving criticism and suggestions that could improve my plan, you simply dismiss it and assume whatever is happening is the best course of action.
Your plan relies on being able to know if Saddam was restarting a nuclear weapons program. I already indicated that this is not something we can depend on. You have never provided a counterargument.
Read your own IAEA article. Looks to me like they knew very well what Saddam was up to, and he was not making any nukes.
They knew what he was up only after the war. They were completely ignorant of his activities before the war, and much of what they know only came from the partial (never complete) cooperation the Iraqis provided. Saddam did not build his first program to hide it from inspectors, only from external surveilance, and it worked. The IAEA had no clue. Knowing that he must contend with inspectors, you can be sure he would take greater pains to conceal his efforts. In other words, we cannot depend on the IAEA discovering his plans. They weren't responsible for uncovering his plans last time, and cannot be relied upon to do so in the future.
As for making nukes, well, that's really trying to wiggle out of the essential problem. He was not at the manufacturing stage, that is correct. But he was actively working on creating the infrastructure needed to enrich uranium for a bomb. He may not have been "making" a bomb, but he was certainly working on one. The distinction does not avoid the problem. And that comes from the IAEA documents.
The promises of rebuilding Iraq, without presenting any plans or asking the local population isn't good enough either.
And how, exactly, would one go about asking the local population under Saddam's oppressive control actually work? That's not something we could have done. Shortcomings on the specifics of how we plan to rebuild Iraq are justified, but they are also not the same as criticism of the basic decision to invade.
Ironically enough, some Iraqi's actually did greet invading troops with flowers. Certainly not all, but I never expected that. But in terms of the resistance, keep in mind also what that consists of. The resistance WANTS to make life miserable for ordinary Iraqis. It is not representative of the will of the Iraqi people.