I'm no student of middle eastern politics, but I can't accept the notion we went there to send a 'don't fuck with us' message. We sent that message the first time we went there, in spades, went we went through the 'invincible' Republican Guard like a hot knife through butter.
There is a difference between a. obliterating an army because they were fighting a war of aggression against an ally and b. invading, overthrowing and installing a new government unprovoked. This was a clear message to the rest of the Middle East (at the time), one that Bush started saying after 9/11: "You're either with us or you're with the terrorists." Well, Saddam with with neither, and he was hanging before it was all said and done. Believe me, despots notice when one of their own falls.
I kept hearing how we went there for oil, but I've never seen any evidence of that. I guess the bottom line is you believe that we went to war to get work for Halliburton, even though the government spent 1000's of times more on the war than they made cleaning up the mess? Bush was a dumb ass, but I don't think he was that dumb.
There's a difference between Halliburton and the government. Cheney has two million dollars of Halliburton money in his pocket when we went to war, and Halliburton and KBR (a Halliburton subsidiary) get over 8.2 billion dollars in no-bid contracts. This wasn't just about oil, it was about business.
Second serious question. Do you think the people of Iraq are better off now, or before we ousted Saddam?
I've never been to Iraq so I can't really say. I see this question a lot, and there are honestly too many variables to give it a definitive answer. Iraq is a diverse place, so there are certain populations, the Kurds for example, who are thrilled to have Saddam gone. They are no longer persecuted and they live in a relatively violence free area, so the war did not effect them as it did other people. For others, such as middle class Arabs living in urban centers, the war was absolutely life-altering and still is. If you had a job and house and kids and kept your nose out of trouble living under Saddam, you probably wouldn't opt for all out war to overthrow him. Then again, I met numerous Iraqis who fled to Syria that told me they loved America. So go figure. It's all in who you ask.
I cringe a little to ask this, but who else's business are we 'knee deep' in? I'll give you the country that allowed our sworn enemies a place to train their troops and plan their next attacks against us.
If you look at many of the issues in the Middle East today, it comes down to two places: Palestine and Saudi Arabia. We are knee deep in both. I'm sure you know the problem in Israel, so I don't need to go into why we are involved and why that is important.
Saudi Arabia is a problem because during the first gulf war, we placed troops there and then kept them there after the war was over. This is a problem because it is the holy land. To have foreign troops (especially American) occupying pieces of the holy land is unforgivable to many. Everyone knows how friendly Saudi Arabia and America are to each other, and people don't approve.
Besides those two issues, there's plenty of $$$ to be made by keeping the Middle East scared of us.
You know that KBR was sold off because it wasn't very profitable...
Whatever. Doesn't change what happened. Who said any of these crooks were good businessmen anyway?