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The United States has an atrocious policy of murdering human beings under supposed judicial sovereignty, including minors and the mentally retarded. While this is a gross insult to the notion of universal human rights, it is not of the exceptional and dire magnitude that would justify military intervention to unseat or transform the current US state apparatus. If, however, the US government began systematically murdering, say, large numbers of urban dwellers for whatever reason, then the action might rise to a magnitude where international military action against its government was acceptable.
The point being, that at the time of the illegal invasion, Saddam Hussein's state apparatus, while surely horrible, was no more horrible than many others, and perhaps even less aggregious than some. moreover, there was not a humanitarian crisis unfolding that could be prevented or ameliorated by military action (in fact, the military action itself had the potential to constitute and produce a humanitarian crisis far graver than any under way). Let's take the case of the Congo. One could say that military intervention would improve humanitarian conditions there, rather than causing them to worsen. the very opposite can be said about large swaths of Iraq (though not all). While the people are certainly free of the arbitrary despotism of the Hussein state apparatus, they are in as much - if not, in many cases - more danger from the arbitrary exercise of deadly force by US troops, seemingly arbitrary detention, and certainly the fortunes of an internal insurgent campaign that leaves its random bodies everywhere.
The question then is: have the conditions improved. the answer is yes, probably, in many parts of the country, but no, obviously, in others. I'd expect that one felt much more comfortable living everyday life in say, Samarrah, 1 year ago than today. Will these conditions improve in the future? Noone can tell, and not only because we don't have a crystal ball, but also because we have introduced a fundamental instability into the region. All these things could be factored into the definition of "exceptional and dire," and we can do without the mock outrage of the propagandists on this point.
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