Seeing daylight

Arab News columnist Fawaz Turki opposed the liberation of Iraq, but now he’s entertaining Revisionist Thoughts on the War on Iraq: Look, I have no illusions about the shenanigans and hypocrisies of a big power like the US, including its neocon ideologues, who are more cons than neos. Lest we forget, at the height of … Continue reading “Seeing daylight”

Arab News columnist Fawaz Turki opposed the liberation of Iraq, but now he’s entertaining Revisionist Thoughts on the War on Iraq:

Look, I have no illusions about the shenanigans and hypocrisies of a big power like the US, including its neocon ideologues, who are more cons than neos. Lest we forget, at the height of Saddam’s bloody reach in the 1980s, which saw the Halabja atrocities, Washington not only uttered nary a word of criticism of the Iraqi leader, let alone called for his overthrow, but provided him with political, military and economic assistance that, in effect, underwrote his survival and made possible the very repression that American officials now claim they want to banish forever from the land.

All true. Yet, the US may, just may, end up doing in Iraq what it did in war-ravaged European countries under the Marshall Plan. And if it doesn’t, well, what would Iraqis have lost other than the ritual terror of life under a dictator who had splintered their society into raw fragments of fear, hysteria and self-denial — a man who insisted that third graders learn songs whose lyrics lauded him with lines such as “when he passes near, the roses celebrate.”

Saddam ruled by “fear, repression, genocide, cult of personality and wanton murder”, and now he doesn’t. The only people who still condemn this war are so consumed with hate for President Bush or for America that they can’t see daylight.

See also: Roger L. Simon, Andrew Sullivan.

4 thoughts on “Seeing daylight”

  1. “The only people who still condemn this war are so consumed with hate for President Bush or for America that they can’t see daylight.”

    The only people who still support this war are those that want to ignore the fact that this was strategically a quagmire from the get-go.

  2. some people who condemn this war are those who read the news every week about people getting killed.

  3. “some people who condemn this war are those who read the news every week about people getting killed.”

    Not a donkey or an elephant, but an ostrich.

    There was no news about people getting killed in the first week of September 2001. How did you like the second week?

  4. what an ignorant response.

    my point is that there are those who aren’t in favor of this war for many reasons, and at least one of them is because people are still getting killed in a ‘war’ that was supposedly over already.

    I supported going there. I’m not happy we’re still there. You can’t convince me to be happy that old college friends are getting shot at by every random Suni bandit, every week. So contain your wiseass 911 remarks to relevant spaces.

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