I think this form of historical revisionism is difficult because you can keep going back to an earlier point and say that X would not have happened if Y did not happen, and it removes blame from groups that are actively contributing to terrorist attacks.
I think we can safely say that going into Iraq was the worst foreign policy decision in the entire 240-year history of America.
A metric ton of it to be honest. It will probably be remembered as one of the worst mistakes the US government made for the first half of this century unless Trump wins in which case we'll have record numbers of disasters to tell our kids about.
I don't think that trying to uncover cause and effect and put events in a historical perspective is removing culpability or blame from the direct actors. In another context, it's perfectly valid to convict and sentence a person of murder but also to look at the influences that shaped that person's life so that we as a society can learn from experience and reform the environment that youth grow up in to maximize their chances of becoming productive members of society instead of criminals.
I think we can safely say that going into Iraq was the worst foreign policy decision in the entire 240-year history of America.
Also us going around and replacing governments with our puppet governments makes for pretty easy causes to rally against us.
The Iraqi government weren't puppets so much as the US didn't even know who they were propping up there. They literally would take almost anyone. No idea what they were doing. Of course the guy the US went with ended up being the crazy antagonist that they were hoping to avoid.
I could make an argument that the Middle East was stabilizing and mostly peaceful until the Iraq invasion. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict was about the only major hot point. The rest of the region was stable. People forget that Bin Laden was in Afghanistan not Saudis Arabia.
But we tried to create puppets. That's the problem.
Who forgets that Bin Laden was in Afghanistan...? The Taliban harboring Al Qaeda was one of the primary reasons for going to war in Afghanistan.
Beyond that, though, the Middle East wasn't "mostly peaceful" prior to the Iraq invasion... unless we're taking a salaciously broad view of what constitutes "peace." Afghanistan had been in continued conflict since the fall of the Soviet Union, Israel and Palestinians were in open conflict with the First Intifada, Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990 and there was a region-wide war (and that only followed an almost 10-year-long war between Iraq and Iran), Lebanon had just emerged from a decades long civil war, there were two civil wars in Yemen over ~10 years, there was open warfare in Iraq between northern Kurds and Ba'athists throughout the 1990s, the second Intifada started in 2000, the US had open hostilities with Saddam Hussein including a bombing campaign in 1998 or 1999, and, of course, prior to the IRaq War, the US, 4 other Western countries, and a handful of other actors, declared war on Afghanistan in 2001.
This isn't peace or "relative peace."
Further, arguing "relative peace through dictatorships," probably shouldn't be a peace worth striving for. It's very Kissingerian, though, who once said (paraphrasing) "I would rather have order without liberty, than liberty without order." And it seems true, as today the Middle East seemingly has neither.
Not true. The US really wanted minimal influence in the creation of their government, which was a mistake.
The big mistake was al-Maliki. The US just couldn't find anyone else, and they had no idea he'd go after Sunnis behind the US's back, which escalated the violence and antagonism with the US.
Disagree. Everything you mentioned was resolving itself. Saddam was actually repairing his relationships. Yemen was stabilizing, Lebanon was stabilizing, Algeria (North Africa) was stabilizing.
The bombing campaigns in Iraq then were US created over the same false pretenses.
The Middle East was getting better but then an unnecessary invasion happened. It created chaos that ultimately led to what we have now.
Your entire argument is based on there is dictators. My response is so what? There has been dictators for millennia.
Disagree and you just contradict yourself in your second paragraph. You admit that America stuck someone there.
Not by a lot. Yes isis wouldn't have existed if not for the Iraq invasion, but isis grew out of al Qaeda, which existed well before the invasion. In general, ISIS, nusra, al Qaeda, they're just the flavor du jour of a trend that started with the Iranian revolution. Military Islamic hardliners jamming their fingers in the side of the West. Religious hooliganism in order to scare decadent kaffirs. The terrorists of the last strikes don't even originate in the middle east.
What are you talking about? ISIS was an affiliate of Al Qaeda in Iraq before it broke away from Al Qaeda in 2014.Al-Qaeda is an enemy of ISIS, and the groups who ended up forming ISIS were fighting alongside the US against Al-Qaeda in Iraq.
What are you talking about? ISIS was an affiliate of Al Qaeda in Iraq before it broke away from Al Qaeda in 2014.