bcvillastwo
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2002
- Messages
- 649
But when lives are put in harms way I do believe one should go the 'extra mile' to ensure that all the t's are crossed and the i's dotted.
As I recall, this approach has been tried in the past and it wasn't very successful. Does anyone remember the "peace in our time" quote. As I recall, Prime Minister Nevell Chamberlain said this after coming back from signing a treaty with Adolf Hitler. Shortly thereafter WWII started. Winston Churchill later commented many times that the war could have easily been averted if the people in power had been more proactive (my words not his).
So, fast forward to our time. You are the President, you know you have a bad actor in Saddam Hussein, you are getting what you think is good intelligence about WMD, you know he's used WMD on his own people in the past, you know he's killed thousands of his own countrymen, and you've got the events of 9-11 not to far behind you in your rearview mirror.
Do you act or not? Do you take the risk of acting or not? If you act you are going to be 2nd guessed by 1/2 the population if you don't act and something bad happens that could have been stopped, everyone 2nd guesses you. So, in almost every way you are damned if you do and potentially even more damned if you don't.
Take a few moments, read about the history of WWII and it's aftermath. How many millions of people were eventually killed directlu and indirectly by the war. We can't change the past but I happen to agree with Churchill's view that if action had been taken by the free world before 1938 or so, it's very likely the WWII would not have started and millions of lives would have been saved.
It's damned easy to 2nd guess other's decisions but it's damned hard to be put into that kind of decision making position and to know what to do.
History will tell if President Bush was correct with respect to his decision to invate Iraq, just as history has and will continue to pronounce its judgement on the actions that leaders took before and during WWII.
