Secondly, the alleged harboring of the Al-Quaeda, the terrorist organization responsible for the 9/11 bombings, provided an additional justification which was also in line with the preemptive argument offered by Kaplan and Kristol. The Al-Quaeda were, according to the thinking of these two writers and the leaders of the Bush administration, obviously using Iraq as a platform for engaging in further attacks against the U.S. And the American government had a moral responsibility to be preemptive in its efforts to protect the American people by unilaterally invading Iraq. The potential for a possible attack similar to the events of 9/11 was there so the United States was morally justified in taking preemptive action. Finally, but not until after it was categorically established that Iraq did not have the weapons of mass destruction that intelligence reports alleged they had, the purpose behind the invasion of Iraq was altered to prepare the Iraqi people for democracy. Through this process, the Bush administration would be implementing the foreign policy initiative proclaimed by Kaplan and Kristol as the solution to minimizing the possibility of further war in the Middle East. Democratizing Iraq would be a step toward worldwide democratization which, in the end, would result in world peace.
This foreign policy approach advocated by Kaplan and Kristol and put into place by the younger Bush administration fails for a variety of reasons. It is morally depraved in that it attempts to justify unilateral military actions based upon perceived possibilities. As in the case of the War in Iraq, the possibility that Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction was used a justification; the possibility that Al-Quaeda was being harbored inside Iraq and was planning further bombing attacks was used as a justification; and, the possibility that Iraq was a potential threat to the region was used as a justification. There was no attack upon American soil or American citizens. There was no indisputable evidence that Iraq had any weapons of mass destruction or even that there was any form of military build-up and there was no clear evidence that Osama Bin-Laden or any other Al-Quaeda members were being harbored inside Iraq. Yet, the United States found a way to justify its unilateral invasion based upon the argument of preemption.
The approach also fails in regard to forcing the concept of democratic rule upon the Iraqi people. As has been demonstrated in the years since the original invasion, the Iraqi people are likely not equipped or ready for maintaining their own democratic government. Although time may prove otherwise, the initial indications are that once the American military presence has been lessened the fragile nature of the Iraqi government will be exposed and that a return to the conditions present in Iraq prior to the American invasion will reappear.
The fact that imposing democracy on the Iraqi people required military involvement highlights another problem with the Kaplan and Kristol approach. If the goal is to spread democracy throughout the world, then the U.S. government is destined to be engaged in endless conflicts for many, many years. Even if one ignores the...
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