“Hell, if the Iraqis wanted to get rid of Saddam and have a civil war, what's that got to do with us…. Really, I've no idea how any of that could effect the US. Dumb of me, really.”
>>Whether or not that could affect the United States is an entirely separate issue than whether or not the US should have acted to depose the Baathist regime by military force. You’re offering a false dichotomy by suggesting that we had only two alternatives with respect to Iraq: Invade and conquer or sit on our hands and do nothing. There were, of course, other alternatives—chiefly, as others have pointed out, acting in concert with and through the United Nations rather than unilaterally.
I’d say rather than invade we should simply have maintained sanctions in place. They were working: Saddam was contained, much as he desired them lacked access to the resources necessary to develop, produce and stockpile WMD’s, was neither a regional or global threat, had no ties to Al Queda (indeed, al Queda considered Saddam and Iraq an obstacle to achieving their goal of a modern caliphate, as it was a westernized Islamic nation that ruthlessly suppressed Islamic fundamentalist organizations.) At the time that Bush et al elected to invade Iraq posed no greater threat to the US or the World than it had at any time in the preceding decade, and far less of a threat than it had prior to the Invasion of Kuwait.
What has our expenditure, in both lives and resources, bought us in Iraq exactly? How are we as a nation better off today, how are we as a nation more secure today, by virtue of having invaded and deposed Saddam? Be specific.