On Iraq, Echoes of 2003 – NYTimes.com.
Is this 2014 or 2003?
I’m flinching at a painful sense of déjà vu as we hear calls for military intervention in Iraq, as President Obama himself — taunted by critics who contend he’s weak — is said to be considering drone strikes there.
Our 2003 invasion of Iraq should be a warning that military force sometimes transforms a genuine problem into something worse. The war claimed 4,500 American lives and, according to a mortality study published in a peer-reviewed American journal, 500,000 Iraqi lives. Linda Bilmes, a Harvard expert in public finance, tells me that her latest estimate is that the total cost to the United States of the Iraq war will be $4 trillion.
That’s a $35,000 tax on the average American household. The total would be enough to ensure that all children could attend preschool in the United States, that most people with AIDS worldwide could receive treatment, and that every child worldwide could attend school — for the next 83 years. Instead, we financed a futile war that was like a Mobius strip, bringing us right back to an echo of where we started.
Jun 19, 2014 @ 23:35:09
After $4trillion, 4500 American lives, close to 500,000 Iraqi lives and countless families displaced the only thing one learns from the war is evidently that nothing was learnt. Its a sad case and if you don’t know your history you are condemned to repeat your past. Recent history shows that trying to bomb people into submission does not work just like using the cane in school never worked. Someone somewhere needs to get this message across.
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