Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

20 years later, Iraq war was wrong

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During his infamous “mission accomplish­ed” speech in May 2003 from the USS Abraham Lincoln off the coast of San Diego, President George W. Bush announced victory in the American war in Iraq.

“The transition from dictatorsh­ip to democracy will take time, but it is worth every effort,” he said. “Our coalition will stay until our work is done. Then we will leave, and we will leave behind a free Iraq.”

Hindsight is 20-20, but it's important to look back at major government efforts and compare the promises to reality. As Americans commemorat­e the 20th anniversar­y of that war, few analysts consider it a success, and the idea of a free Iraq seems prepostero­us.

The U.S. largely withdrew in 2011, but then sent troops back after the rise of Islamic State radicals.

The Biden administra­tion finally ended the nation's longestrun­ning war in 2021, but 2,500 troops remain and may serve in an advisory role for years. The current Iraqi government receives among the world's lowest scores for freedom. Islamic Iran gained great influence after our pullout.

According to a recent Reuters report, the United States spent nearly $3 trillion (including ongoing costs of veteran health care) on its wars in Iraq and Syria.

It cost 4,500 Americans their lives — and directly led to nearly 600,000 deaths in the region. And for what?

The mission was not accomplish­ed.

During the run-up to the war, the Bush administra­tion convinced a nation still scarred by the Sept. 11 attacks that the coming invasion would combat internatio­nal terrorism, force Iraq to rid itself of so-called weapons of mass destructio­n and, then, create a democracy in a region governed by tyrants.

The administra­tion's connection between 9/11 and Iraq proved particular­ly flimsy and cynical.

We still recall war boosters — including pundits like Max Boot, David Frum and Bill Kristol — depicting the administra­tion's evidence as incontrove­rtible.

This editorial board consistent­ly opposed the war, leading critics to question our judgment and patriotism.

Yet in hindsight, the best way for Americans (and the media) to commemorat­e this anniversar­y is to resolve to be more skeptical of such hubris in the future.

Biden's gun control won't work in the real world

Re “Biden peddles nonsense with gun policies” (March 17):

President Joe Biden's BandAids for gun control will not work because they don't address the real problem, which is not gun control but criminal control. The punishment­s for crimes perpetrate­d while using a gun need to be stern enough to dissuade criminals from using them. A gun in my hands is no more dangerous than a marshmallo­w. It's not the guns. It's the criminals.

— John R. Whited, San Juan Capistrano

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