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Sarwar Kashmeri

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Iraq -- a Trillion Dollars Worth of Nothing

Posted: 10/22/11 05:30 PM ET

For many Americans, news that the nearly 9-year-old war in Iraq is finally over will evoke feelings of relief but also revulsion. Relief, for the families of the military women and men that are coming home. And revulsion, for the officials and politicians that lacked the courage to prevent this unnecessary war. For me personally, the memory of the Iraq war will always be bookended by two quotations.

A few days before the American invasion of Iraq I happened to be sitting in the Washington office of one of the country's most accomplished foreign policy practitioners. A Republican, who has served in senior positions for a number of American Presidents. He had been trying his best to convince the Bush administration to not invade Iraq. As we sat across from each other that day, talk of war swirled around the corridors of the Capitol. "Surely the reports that war between the United States and Iraq is imminent are wrong," I remember asking him, "At the end of the day we won't pull the trigger. Will we?" His words will forever be etched in my memory. He leaned over and told me that the White House wouldn't even take his calls any more, "They have pulled the trigger this morning," he said sorrowfully.

The other bookend to the war was another quotation. From an interview with Colonel Jack Jacobs, a Vietnam War Medal of Honor recipient, and an acquaintance. He was interviewed on the MSNBC evening news on Friday, October 21, 2011, the day President Obama announced all American troops were coming home from Iraq. When asked about fears that Iraq would not be able to remain stable, Colonel Jacobs said he believed those forecasts. But, he went on to say that the instability would not result from what any other country does, but because of what America has done to Iraq. In other words, he believed America broke Iraq and put it on the road to instability by invading it. A devastating coda to what I believe was one of the worst foreign policy blunders in American history.

Nearly 4,500 Americans and between 150,000 and a million Iraqis died in a war that cost America almost a trillion dollars and converted Iraq, albeit a brutal dictatorship, into a failed state. A war that overthrew Saddam Hussein, but also upended the balance of power in the Middle East and left Iran as the de facto regional super-power. It was a war of choice that began the downward spiral in America's credibility and stability, a trajectory that continues to this day.

All American troops will come home from Iraq in time for Christmas this year with their heads held high, President Obama told the nation as he announced the end of American presence in Iraq. The troops are the only ones who have earned the right to hold their heads high on this momentous occasion. For the rest of the chain of command, from the then leadership of the Defense and State Departments, through the halls of Congress, and to the then Administration, the decision to go to war in Iraq was a decision that will haunt the United States, and damage its reputation and security for decades.

 
 
 

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For many Americans, news that the nearly 9-year-old war in Iraq is finally over will evoke feelings of relief but also revulsion. Relief, for the families of the military women and men that are coming...
For many Americans, news that the nearly 9-year-old war in Iraq is finally over will evoke feelings of relief but also revulsion. Relief, for the families of the military women and men that are coming...
 
 
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07:31 PM on 10/23/2011
It's my understanding that the invasion of Iraq was a response to 9/11. Is that true?
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Sarwar Kashmeri
05:39 PM on 10/25/2011
The neocon group then very influential within the white house and the Defense Dept. were convinced that American force should be used around the world, and especially in the Middle East to remake countries in the U.S.'s image. There was not the maturity or depth or political courage in the Bush administration to counter this simplistic and totally ridiculous idea. So off we went into Iraq. American tempers were in a boil after 9/11 and political leadership disappeared. The Army Chief of Staff was cut off at the knees when he suggested in Congressional hearing it would take a few hundred thousand soldiers to handle Iraq, and it would not be a cake-walk.... Etc. Etc.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
calloy
goo goo g' joob
10:37 AM on 10/23/2011
george w. bush invaded iraq for revenge. with that motivation, nothing good can follow.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
messy
artist, writer, adventurer
01:46 PM on 10/23/2011
It's all Colin Powell's fault. ALL of it. He convinced Cheney and Bush, Sr. to abandon the rebels in 1991. He also convinced Reagan and Weinburger not to go after Hizubullah after they blew up our troops in Lebanon in 1983.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
calloy
goo goo g' joob
03:03 PM on 10/23/2011
haha...what a laugh. bush invaded because he wanted to. anything anybody did before, from colin powell to moses didn't matter.

are you the revisionist history blogger or something?
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10:22 AM on 10/23/2011
Follow the money, then and now...
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
06:24 PM on 10/22/2011
Um...it's more like 3 TRILLION...........................you are vastly underestimating this.
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ChasG
Unborn, unchanging, undying Universe
01:03 AM on 10/23/2011
You must be including indirect costs and future costs committed but not yet spent (such as long-term care for our veterans of that war). The $1 trillion is an accurate accounting of direct costs to date. There are legitimate disputes about the extent of indirect costs, costs of servicing debt , and estimates of the future costs of medical care for the wounded. These other costs are highly debatable as to methodologies and assumptions, but your point that there are more costs than just the direct costs is apt. The $3 trillion guesstimate is just that-- a guess.
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Sarwar Kashmeri
09:35 AM on 10/23/2011
As you and "Inthedesert" rightly point out there are after-costs. Their size however is open to debate which is why I have not included them in this column. In hindsight perhaps there should have been a reference.
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charleyvldm9
He thinks outside the box.
05:45 PM on 10/22/2011
Do you know Rick Perry is against Obama"s decision to return all Troops. Is this also the Republican Party"s viewpoint ? If so,there we go again, with dumb Presidential Contenders willing to put American lives at risk for nothing.They are true Warmongers.
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Grendl Jones
05:17 PM on 10/22/2011
Yes Iraq was a blunder of epic proportions.

Attacking a country wholly unrelated to the 911 attacks just proved how dunderheaded United States politicians were to the Muslim world. Failing to differentiate between the people who attacked us, declaring in essence a holy war in the process Bush and Co. bolstered every stereotype of white privileged maledom.

But then came election of Barack Obama, who opposed the invasion. And the Muslim world noticed this, plus the fact that we elected an African American for the first time in this nation's history. And with the progression of social media, the revolt in Tunisia and the Face book revolt in Egypt, people inside those country's got a glimpse at the beauty of democracy in action. Mad King George was ousted, because this country, eventually listens to its conscience and the dictates of common sense.

In retrospect, with Qaddafi dead, and the Arab Spring still in bloom, Osama Bin Laden's egregious acts and Bush's knee jerk reaction may have led to something glorious ultimately. Say what you will about instability, many a dictator and their evil spawn have been removed from power. And the world is a better place for it.
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Sarwar Kashmeri
09:45 AM on 10/23/2011
Let's not forget that it was Mr. Bush who worked out the agreement with the Iraqi's to pull all U.S. troops out by end 2012. Pres. Obama is just following through on the agreement. Though if Mr. Obama had his way we'd still have a few thousand troops in Iraq. But the Iraqis just wanted an end to the Americans occupation and nixed the idea. And who can blame them?
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No More Left
The end of a mistake in 2012
10:13 AM on 10/23/2011
Good,point
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messy
artist, writer, adventurer
01:47 PM on 10/23/2011
Beginning of 2012.
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Richard Pearce banned
Never let them tell you it can't be done.
11:26 AM on 10/23/2011
Yes, the 'Muslim world' noticed the election of Obama, who pledged a change in US attitudes and practices, and then noticed him backing Mubarak's regime until it was obvious that the Generals couldn't save it in that form, and now backs the Junta that has replaced him but kept to pretty much the same policies (and the question of whether the 'transition' period will be stretched the same way the 'emergency' period was is not settled yet) praising the Bahrain regime for 'reforms' that he calls laughably inadequate when the Syrian regime offers the same (and a bit more) 'reforms', while the Bahrain regime continues to attack its own people, backs the Saud regime while it oppresses and attacks its own people, and all the rest of the usual policies.

Which is why, while they celebrate the end of the rule of the dictators that have been toppled, they notice what all but one of the still standing dictatorships have in common, and that is US support.
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messy
artist, writer, adventurer
01:49 PM on 10/23/2011
The Khamenei dictatorship in Iran has NO US support, and neither does the Assad dictatorship in Syria. The rest don't actually count as dictatorships.