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14 September 2010
By Jacob G. Hornberger One of the most morally obscene aspects of the Iraq
War has been the cost-benefit analysis in which war
proponents claim that the war has been worth the
hundreds of thousands of Iraqi people killed in the
operation. Since the U.S. government has brought
democracy to Iraq, the argument goes, the deaths of
countless Iraqi people, while regrettable, has been
worth it. I imagine that there are more repugnant positions,
morally speaking, but for the life of me, I can’t
think of any. In fact, ever since the invasion of Iraq
I have found it absolutely astounding that Christian
ministers all across the land have exhorted their
congregations to pray for the troops in Iraq, knowing
that such troops were killing Iraqi people. Would they
have done that if the troops were committing abortions
in Iraq? Take a look at this photograph [http://www.comayala.es/
Articulos/guerrabush/ colaterales/Ali%20Ismail%20Abbas.jpg]
of Ali Ismail Abbas, a small boy who lost both his
parents, including his pregnant mother, and both his
arms when two American missiles slammed into their
home during the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003. Iraq War proponents say that Ali’s loss of both
arms and both parents have been worth it — that is,
worth the effort to bring democracy to Iraq. Can you think of anything more morally repugnant
than that? The lives of the Iraqi people didn’t belong to the
U.S. government and, therefore, the U.S. government
had no right to sacrifice them in the process of
attempting to bring democracy to Iraq. No one can place a value on the life of another
person. Yet, that’s precisely what U.S. officials have
done and continue to do. They’re saying that the lives
of countless Iraqis were worth less than the value of
achieving democracy in Iraq. How do they arrive at that cavalier calculation? I
don’t know. But it has to be among the most morally
repugnant calculations ever made. In fact, I find it fascinating that so many
Christians who eagerly condemn Muslims, Islam, and the
Koran, claim that there is nothing wrong with
sacrificing the lives of other people — countless
other people — for the sake of a political goal such
as democracy. How do they reconcile such a position with
Christian principles? They can’t. In the eyes of God, every single person’s life is
sacred, whether he is Catholic, Protestant, Jew,
Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, atheist, or agnostic. God
does not permit one human being to kill another human
being for the sake of achieving democracy in other
country. It is this fundamental wrong that all too many
Americans have yet to confront — that their
government, operating through its military and
paramilitary forces, has broken God’s sacred
commandment against killing with its invasion of Iraq.
I would be remiss if I failed to point out that
democracy is actually just a ruse anyway, one that
U.S. officials use to justify their killing (and
maiming) of countless Iraqis. (They’re countless
because the U.S. government steadfastly refused to
keep track of the Iraqi dead, even while claiming that
the invasion was being done for them.) The war was always about regime change, pure and
simple — one intended to oust Saddam Hussein from
power and install a U.S.-approved ruler in his stead.
After all, if the invasion was really about
democracy-spreading, would the U.S. government have
supported such non-elected rulers as Saddam Hussein
himself (during the 1980s), the Shah of Iran (until he
was ousted by the Iranian people in 1979), Pervez
Musharraf (the unelected military dictator of Pakistan
until the Pakistani people ousted him in 2008), and
many other non-democratically elected rulers around
the world? The U.S. government attacked and invaded Iraq, not
the other way around. That makes the U.S. government
the aggressor power in the conflict and Iraq the
defending nation. The U.S. war on Iraq was a war of
aggression against the Iraqi people, a type of war
that was condemned as a war crime at Nuremberg. The
situation is aggravated by the fact that it was waged
without the constitutionally required congressional
declaration of war, making the war illegal under our
form of government. Most important, the U.S. government had no
legitimate authority to sacrifice even one Iraqi life
— not one single Iraqi life — for the sake of
democracy in Iraq. The U.S. government’s sacrifice of
the Iraqi people at the altar of democracy violates
the principles of every major religion, including
Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Jacob Hornberger is founder and president of The
Future of Freedom Foundation. |