Here is what he said:Ickabod said:Well, for starters, Hitler had a military that Saddam could only dream of so these comparisons between Hitler and Hussein are just silly. Hussein was closer to Idi Amin than Adolf Hitler.
And besides that.......i dare you to ask me what Colin Powell said in February 2001. Go ahead, i double dare ya.
"...That purpose is every bit as important now as it was ten years ago when we began it. And frankly they have worked. He has not developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction. He is unable to project conventional power against his neighbors. So in effect, our policies have strengthened the security of the neighbors of Iraq, and these are policies "
But do you know what is significant about that statement? It was made on Feb 24, 2001.
That is the point I've been trying to make in this forum. You have to recognize that 9/11 changed everything in the US. What was regarded as an insignificant threat before 9/11 would be regarded as a major threat afterwards.
Before 9/11, the US had nothing major to fear from 19 terrorists, until they hijacked a bunch of airliners, killed 3000 civilians and tried to crash into the White House and Capitol Building. That would have happened except for the fight that occurred in Flight 93 and a relatively stupid terrorist pilot who couldn't find anything but the biggest building on earth, the Pentagon.
Before 9/11, Hussein's reputed attempts to weaponize anthrax were regarded as a threat but not a major one, which is the kind of small scale threat Powell was referring to.
After 9/11, it was recognized that even a medium or small sized anthrax production facililty could produce enough spores to kill hundreds of thousands of people and that much weaponized powder could be stored in five medium sized pieces of luggage. Before 9/11 Hussein had no reliable way of delivering the anthrax. After 9/11, with a supply of al Qaeda suicidal terrorists, a crop dusting airplane could have killed half the people in Washington. We're not talking about probabilities here either, we know that some of the 19 9/11 hijackers had made inquiries about crop dusting aircraft.
9/11 reduced the threshold at which the US would take lethal action. The reason is, the 19 9/11 hijackers seemed to pose such a small threat that no one was looking for them. After 9/11, even the smallest threat had to taken seriously because it's impossible to deter suicidal terrorists, you can't threaten them with death because that's what they want.
So Hussein's armed forces were a joke? So Hussein's WMD programs were small scale? So what? Look what 19 al Qaeda operatives did. What do you think might happen if the resources of a state like Iraq were combined with the supply of dedicated suicidal terrorists al Qaeda was able to provide?
You can't reliably defend against suicidal terrorists. The only hope was to go on offence and attack and remove the main source and supply of resources that might be directed towards al Qaeda. That only meant Afghanistan and Iraq, which exactly what the US did.
We're talking about the possibility of thousands or tens of thousands of US civilian casualties here, as the US found out directly on 9/11. This isn't a small scale threat any longer and if you're trying to make sense of US policies post 9/11, all you have to do is remember the image of the smoking ruins of the WTC.
It seems critics of US policy always want to assume that the US motives in their recents actions are somehow evil or stupid. But it's very simple to understand, the US doesn't ever want 9/11 to happen again and they'll do almost anything to prevent it.