Lost_Warrior said:
I was actually going to quote that very sentence. The Liberals have all but scared the Canadian public when it comes to foreign operations associated with the US. In some cases with good reason, but in most others, out of vote grabs.
I respectfully disagree. The US campaign in Iraq has been shrouded in controversy and lies. The Iraqi's are no safer today than they were under Saddams rule (Some would speculate even less so)
This will probably get me crucified on this forum, but I believe the current state of Iraq today is far worse than what it was under Saddam. The right wing nut cases have trumpeted the number of dead under Saddam under his rule as thousands a year, but the fact remains, the number of Iraqi dead this year alone far exceeds the number who were murdered under Saddam during any year of his reign of power. If you want to take the current trend more long term, then more Iraqi’s will have been killed under US occupation than during the rule of Saddam. The country is in chaos and on the brink of civil war. I know many will come and counter this claim with pictures and stories of US forces accepting flowers and praise from the "Iraqi government" and Iraqi civilians, but for the majority on the ground, the situation is quite different.
I also know that a bunch of you will jump on me asking me if I have been there, and how I know. I have not been there. I have a friend from Washington who works for ABC news. He has been there for 3 years now. He went over during the beginning of the war, and returned home. He went back about a year ago to cover stories there. He told me the country is in a mess.
I think I understand where this perception comes from. But it is false. http://www.indexmundi.com/g/g.aspx?c=iz&v=26
From the CIA World Fact Book via this sight. The death rate in Iraq has been going down steadily.
6.40 Deaths per thousand in 2000
5.84 Deaths per thousand in 2003
5.49 Deaths per thousand in 2005
For what it's worth
France
9.08 Deaths per thousand in 2005
Netherlands
8.68 Deaths per thousand in 2005
Switzerland
8.48 Deaths per thousand in 2005
Canada
7.73 Deaths per thousand in 2005
Australia
7.44 Deaths per thousand in 2005
Now then Lost _Warrior, as for your assertion that only American approved candidates stood for election, this is an utter falsehood. I know that I'm offended by it and I'm sure that the clients I protect here would be as well. I've been in Iraq for the last 14 months. The client I presently work for and have worked for the last 5 months, is an NGO that is working on Iraq's political restructuring, with all the parties and coalitions thereof in the country. They've worked with the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI), the 555 party, The Iraqi Women's party, The Kurdish coalitions. I've had representatives from Shia parties, Sunni parties, Secular Parties, and Kurdish parties in my compound on the same day. As well my clients were instrumental in writing the constitution that was voted in by referendum last year.
I must respectfully ask that you check your facts a little more carefully and not just take the tripe offered by the BBC, CNN, CTV, CBC as gospel. Or as the whole story. It is not.
That said, I'm under no illusions that the reconstruction of this place is going at all well. Part of the problem is that Iraq's infrastructure was in serious disrepair before the invasion. Saddam spent copious amounts of money maintaining the facade that all was well, when in fact the infrastructure of this country was crumbling from underneath it. The Americans have just inherited these problems and are now dealing with them. Should they have forseen the insurgency? Sure. If only because nature abhors a vacuum. Is a civil war inevitable? That depends on the commitment of the Americans to stay the course, and have the flexibiltiy to take a long critical look at what's working here and what isn't. I don't have a lot of faith in Bush Administration or the American people, in that regard.