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Worse Than War
ISSUE 63
FRONT PAGE
Feature
Somalia and Survival in the Shadow of the Global Economy - Part 6
Headlines
UK Support For Somaliland Presidential Election

Mistakes by Interior Minister to Cost UDUB Votes

Terrorists Use Somalia As Hub

Health
Drug - The Double Edged Knife (Part Three)

Cholera Outbreak Confirmed In Mogadishu

Daktari: The Flying Doctors Of East Africa

Editorial & Opinion
The International Community and Somaliland's Presidential Elections

Taking the Tiger by the Tail: The National Electoral Commission and the Presidential Elections

Put The Brits In Charge - The Best Postwar Iraq Plan

Worse Than War

War Is Ugly; Do We Need To See It Up Close On TV?

Aerial War Has a Short, Nasty History

40 Million Africans Face Starvation

Somaliland And The Crises In Puntland

International News
Iraqi President Appears In Public Walkabout

US Commander Relieved Of Post In Iraq

Fierce Clashes For Control Of Baghdad Airport

History Warns Cost Of Urban War Is High

Killing The Few To Liberate The Many Is A Line Most Iraqis Reject

Britain, US Drift Apart

Peace Talks
TNG Says It Will Not Leave Kenya Peace Conference

SRRC Opposes Harmonisation Committee


War kills, but Saddam's "peacetime" regime is even more bloody

Marvin Olasky 

In 1951 Douglas MacArthur told Congress that "Old soldiers never die, they just fade away." In 1954 Bing Crosby sang in White Christmas, "What do you do with a general when he stops being a general?" Today, the answer is obvious: Old generals don't fade away, they go on cable networks and complain about current strategy, often kissing up to media pessimists by acting like Boston Red Sox fans who yell "Down the drain" after the first inning.

After a few days of major league baseball and two weeks of war, it was still early to conclude either that the New York Yankees will win the pennant or that the U.S. Yankees will lose the war. But one New York team, Columbia University, was having problems in its bullpen. Anthropology professor Nicholas De Genova went too far by telling a "teach-in" that "The only true heroes are those who find ways that help defeat the U.S. military. I personally would like to see a million Mogadishus." (That's when the forces of a warlord in Somalia killed 18 American soldiers and dragged their bodies through the streets.) 

Mr. De Genova said he hopes for "a very different world than the one in which we live-a world where the U.S. would have no place." Other radical professors embedded at major universities agree with him, but it's impolitic to say so at a time when demonstrators are trying to win friends beyond their leftist base. 

But academic comments on the Iraq War aren't all bad. Three University of Chicago professors-Steven Davis, Kevin Murphy, and Robert Topel-produced a study concluding that Iraqi income per person has fallen by at least 75 percent since Saddam Hussein came to power in 1979. One chunk of that decline is due to United Nations sanctions imposed after the 1991 war. (Those would have been lifted had Saddam kept his promise to disarm.) But dictatorial policies have been the main contributor to Iraq's transition from upward mobility to poverty. 

War kills: Probably 10,000 Iraqis died in the 1990-91 Gulf War, although estimates vary. Regimes kill: The policies of Saddam's regimes have led to an average of perhaps 200,000 Iraqis dying per year through brutal repression, slaughter by chemical weapons, government-forced poverty, and so forth. It's right to ask about war, "What is it good for?" It's wrong to conclude, "Absolutely nothing." Regime change could save lives and allow oil-rich Iraq to prosper. 

Of course, regime change would hurt many people, and not all of them are French. Saddam since 1991 has apparently built 50 new palaces for himself and his entourage, at a cost of $2.5 billion. Those who specialized in installing gold faucets in those lavish digs would have to look elsewhere for work, as would Saddam's "internal security" spies. Some of the regime's stalwarts might die at the hands of their newly empowered victims, but others would just fade away, which is fine. We already have too many shrieks echoing in the night. 

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