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jetpower3

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#1 jetpower3
Member since 2005 • 11631 Posts

[QUOTE="Victorious_Fize"][QUOTE="-Sun_Tzu-"] And what are those serious repercussions? -Sun_Tzu-

Looking at the Libyan situation, a no fly zone.

That was the same exact repercussion that Saddam faced way back in 1992 after the Iraqi uprising. And it had no effect on Saddam or his treatment of Iraqi's. In some ways he was even more brutal in the mid and late 90's after the uprising than he had ever been.

Do you think the west would have agreed to lift the sanctions without major concessions on Saddam's part that could have weakened him long-term?

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#2 jetpower3
Member since 2005 • 11631 Posts

[QUOTE="-Sun_Tzu-"][QUOTE="Victorious_Fize"] As it has been in many countries back in the day, just look at Hama. Using chemicals against a civilian population causes for serious reproaches in this new millennium, the new Assad doesn't even dare to think about it. Given Iraq's resources, I can very much see why the West would gamble on the democratic revolutionaries, much like how they did in Libya.

Victorious_Fize

And what are those serious repercussions?

Looking at the Libyan situation, a no fly zone.

And even if the sanctions were quickly removed after 2003, I'm sure the west would just as happily reimplement them when the time was right (again, Libya's case).

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#3 jetpower3
Member since 2005 • 11631 Posts

[QUOTE="SEANMCAD"]

[QUOTE="jetpower3"]

The more the Arab Spring progresses and the more we see just how much a blunder the invasion of Iraq was, I wonder what would have happened if it never took place. I am pretty curious actually as to whether Saddam would have been overthrown internally instead of completely by intervention. I also wonder how differently current events would have turned out without the war ever happening.

I must say, I believe the Arab Spring could have happened years earlier if the Iraq War never took place. The complete mess the country became and the cycle of violence it is still consumed in has seemed to served as sort of an example as to what would happen to Arab nations if their respective dictators/strongmen were overthrown. It gave their people a reason (real or not) to rally around them, and even today, we have seen people like Syrian President Assad largely using this card to maintain his key support (as well as Gaddafi and his supporters for awhile).

Yes, hindsight is 20/20 and this is all hypothetical and after the fact, but you have to wonder and reassess history constantly.

kuraimen

the oil markets would have moved to the euro and oil right now for us would be much higher and Iran, Russia, and I think France would be doing very well right now.

the war was 100% about oil

This, the wars also complicated things even further and created a new generation of resentment against the west in the middle east that will undoubtedly come back to bite them in the ass.

Which "wars" do you refer to? Iraq?

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#4 jetpower3
Member since 2005 • 11631 Posts

Also, it's not there hadn't been large-scale uprisings in Iraq before. There were large-scale uprisings immediately after the Gulf War (when Saddam was arguably at his weakest) and he crushed them with ease. -Sun_Tzu-

Pile on years more of sanctions, economic and military decay, and a re-galvanized/organized opposition movement. Syria too had an uprising in the decades before the Arab Spring. They crushed the first, yet the latter seems quite tenacious with minimal external support thus far.

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#5 jetpower3
Member since 2005 • 11631 Posts

[QUOTE="jetpower3"]

[QUOTE="-Sun_Tzu-"] No because if the sanctions were lifted Saddam would've been able to reload militarily. -Sun_Tzu-

Eight years or less of reloading militarily isn't going to cut it. Gaddafi had about the same amount of time, and that wasn't enough to save himself.

It took US intervention to overthrow Gaddafi. I don't know why you would use him as an example.

Well, intervention was already sort of happening in Iraq, right down to the days preceding March 20th, 2003 (no-fly-zone bombings). You could debate whether this would have kept up for ~8 more years, but if the U.S. seemed pretty determined to see him go in 2003, I'm sure they would have loved to do so with a lot less cost to them in 2011 or so.

Further, we still don't know what would have happened if the U.S. did not intervene. By this point, much of his Gaddafi's regime had already hemorrhaged. Just because he was toppled with intervention doesn't mean that the uprising would have been automatically defeated without it. There's no guarantee in the least he would have been able to hold on.

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#6 jetpower3
Member since 2005 • 11631 Posts

[QUOTE="jetpower3"]

[QUOTE="-Sun_Tzu-"] No because if the sanctions were lifted Saddam would've been able to reload militarily. Storm_Marine

Eight years or less of reloading militarily isn't going to cut it. Gaddafi had about the same amount of time, and that wasn't enough to save himself.

Gaddafi wouldn't have been overthrown without western intervention.

Maybe not, but Saddam was under a no-fly-zone of his very own. Any new uprising would be very difficult to respond to in the same way as Gaddafi initally did.

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#7 jetpower3
Member since 2005 • 11631 Posts

[QUOTE="jetpower3"]

[QUOTE="-Sun_Tzu-"] No because if the sanctions were lifted Saddam would've been able to reload militarily. BossPerson

Eight years or less of reloading militarily isn't going to cut it. Gaddafi had about the same amount of time, and that wasn't enough to save himself.

Ghadaffi was very weak militarily, he had no real support among his army staff and he had to hire mercenaries for much of the dirty work. In Iraq, i'd assume the army would be stronger

As I recall, Iraq's military was also very weak by 2003. You still don't recover from 20+ years of military and economic decimation, internal uprising, and sanctions in 8 years.

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#8 jetpower3
Member since 2005 • 11631 Posts

[QUOTE="BossPerson"][QUOTE="-Sun_Tzu-"]I take the opposite view. I do not think that the Arab Spring would've been able to be as successful as it has been with Saddam still in power - especially if sanctions were lifted. -Sun_Tzu-
Because lifting the sanctions would make the people less desperate?

No because if the sanctions were lifted Saddam would've been able to reload militarily.

Eight years or less of reloading militarily isn't going to cut it. Gaddafi had about the same amount of time, and that wasn't enough to save himself.

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#9 jetpower3
Member since 2005 • 11631 Posts

[QUOTE="jetpower3"]

The more the Arab Spring progresses and the more we see just how much a blunder the invasion of Iraq was, I wonder what would have happened if it never took place. I am pretty curious actually as to whether Saddam would have been overthrown internally instead of completely by intervention. I also wonder how differently current events would have turned out without the war ever happening.

I must say, I believe the Arab Spring could have happened years earlier if the Iraq War never took place. The complete mess the country became and the cycle of violence it is still consumed in has seemed to served as sort of an example as to what would happen to Arab nations if their respective dictators/strongmen were overthrown. It gave their people a reason (real or not) to rally around them, and even today, we have seen people like Syrian President Assad largely using this card to maintain his key support (as well as Gaddafi and his supporters for awhile).

Yes, hindsight is 20/20 and this is all hypothetical and after the fact, but you have to wonder and reassess history constantly.

SEANMCAD

the oil markets would have moved to the euro and oil right now for us would be much higher and Iran, Russia, and I think France would be doing very well right now.

the war was 100% about oil

I'm sorry, but I can't buy Saddam's push for pricing oil in euros as a reason. He was under sanctions and had already lost so much of his credibility after years of a misguided war with Iran and Kuwait. Just because he wanted it doesn't mean he could have made it happen.

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#10 jetpower3
Member since 2005 • 11631 Posts

The more the Arab Spring progresses and the more we see just how much a blunder the invasion of Iraq was, I wonder what would have happened if it never took place. I am pretty curious actually as to whether Saddam would have been overthrown internally instead of completely by intervention. I also wonder how differently current events would have turned out without the war ever happening.

I must say, I believe the Arab Spring could have happened years earlier if the Iraq War never took place. The complete mess the country became and the cycle of violence it is still consumed in has seemed to served as sort of an example as to what would happen to Arab nations if their respective dictators/strongmen were overthrown. It gave their people a reason (real or not) to rally around them, and even today, we have seen people like Syrian President Assad largely using this card to maintain his key support (as well as Gaddafi and his supporters for awhile).

Yes, hindsight is 20/20 and this is all hypothetical and after the fact, but you have to wonder and reassess history constantly.