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#11
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![]() (Yawn) There werea multitude of reasons to go to war. First among them was no compliance with terms for our ceasing conflict in the first one. Those terms were set by the U.N. and it was up to the U.N. to determine if the violation of those terms was cause for military action. It is not OK for the U.S. or any other nation to unilaterally decide that a U.N. resolution has been violated and take military action based on said U.N. resolution. There was no unilateral decision. I suppose getting England to go along with us makes that true technically. I think it is fair to say that the U.S. decision to invade Iraq was unilateral. 30 countries is not unilateral. 30 countries invaded Iraq? I know of two, the U.S. and England. Please feel free to cite the other 28. We did not look for permission from any other country. We were happy to have England join us but I think it is fair to say we did not rely on their aproval of the decision. Because they and the others agreed with us. Balony. Many countries did not agree with us. Have you forgeotten why people poured out expensive French wine that had already been payed for and started serving "freedom fries?" We did what we did regardless of what other countries thought. The decision for the U.S. to invade Iraq was clearly a unilateral decision. So the coalition of countries that support us there are an illusion? They were irrelevant to our unilateral decision to invade Iraq. But please feel free to cite the other 28 countries that invaded Iraq along with the U.S. and England. Then feel free to cite the other countries that were involved in our decision to invade Iraq. |