I should say upfront that while everyone today considers the US-led intervention a huge blunder for many reasons including humanitarian, Iraq gov at the time was not at all something people sympathized with, and was widely considered to be corrupt, bullying, aggressive to neighbors, etc. Iraq invading Kuwait in the 90s is a closer parallel to Russia invading Ukraine than anything involving the US. (Iraq literally claimed that Kuwait had always been an integral part of Iraq and only became an independent nation due to the interference of the British gov)
At the time there were sanctions on Iraq, that had been there since the 1990s because of that invasion, and for perceived human rights violations. The US at the time considered these sanctions no longer particularly effective.
The US (well, coalition led by the US) invasion was based on faulty/fraudulent premises, but the goals were still ostensibly humanitarian, and the nature of the WMD talk was not proved to be faulty until years later. At the time by failing to disarm and submit to weapons inspections, Iraq was in violation of U.N. Resolutions 660 and 678, and the U.S. could legally (whatever that means) compel Iraq's compliance through military means.
If you are actually interested, you should probably read at least:
This is why I'm very happy that Russia is hit with maximum sanctions now. The world's unity against Russia's aggression is unprecedented, and my hope is that this firm response will also make future wars by other countries (including the US) less likely.
Noam Chomsky "Sovereignty & World Order"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mtBQ7iTyfBQ
Also regarding the other comments about WMDs (from Vox):
"To some extent, this is beside the point; even if they had been totally cautious and careful in characterizing the intelligence, the war still would’ve been a catastrophic mistake that took an immense human toll. But the truth also matters, and the truth is that there were numerous occasions when Bush and his advisers made statements that intelligence agencies knew to be false, both about WMDs and about Saddam Hussein’s nonexistent links to al-Qaeda. The term commonly used for making statements that one knows to be false is "lying.""
https://www.vox.com/2016/7/9/12123022/george-w-bush-lies-ira...
In 2003, there were protests for sure. But the background on why Iraq was invaded is different than Ukraine.
Gulf 1 was a United Nations mission ending in 1991 with a ceasefire. Breaking the terms of that ceasefire could happen if:
- no-fly zone violated
- weapons inspectors denied access anywhere
- material support for attacks outside the country
Saddam violated the first two and confessed to world media about having WMDs. It was a lie, but it wasn’t hard for W to keep it going.
- regime change became USA policy under Ws predecessor, allowing him to say this is not simply an oil play.
A better Saddam could have admitted he lied about WMDs and surrendered in order to spare his people.
I do not understand the skeins of justifications and circumlocutions around it; it seems very similar to "Might makes Right" with a (tall) froth of persiflage atop it to me. But there are people who hold faith with that fluff and find it a source of righteousness, and I don't say they're utterly wrong and disconnected from reality, either.
So if you’re the most powerful country on earth and you do something heinous, it’s unlikely to be considered a war crime, and definitely won’t be punished in any substantial way.
Pretty bleak!
So there are two questions: who could have imposed meaningful sanctions on the US? The answer is probably nothing short of a concerted international effort amongst many nations. And then, the more important question, who would have imposed sanctions? Nobody, because the Iraq war had a substantial amount of international support, at least within Europe.
To Summarize GWB's explanation: Saddam Hussain was threatening to orchestrate a terrorist attack on the US, similar to 9-11. Saddam was a dangerous dictator and orchestrating genocide. George W. Bush built an international coalition that all agreed that invasion was the appropriate response.
(Remember that the political climate at the time was that the US and the international community did not want another 9-11. Also remember that a lot of politicians panicked after 9-11.)
Bush's comments about the informant who passed us (the US) information about the weapons of mass destruction leaves a lot open for interpretation. He had to scrub confidential information out of the book. Remember, a lot of "defense" also means passing misinformation to your enemy, and if you are the recipient of misinformation, you want your enemy to think you believe it. Keep this in mind as you read Bush's explanation about the intelligence passed to us regarding the WMDs in Iraq.
(Edit: GWB gave Saddam ample time to voluntarily leave Iraq. There were arrangements made for him to have a large sum of money and protection if he stepped down.)
Amazon link: https://www.amazon.com/Decision-Points-George-W-Bush-ebook/d...
Was the war the right thing to do? I'll listen to historians who have full access to classified information.
Because the USA has the strongest army and the dollar is the world's reserve currency.
The US government actually threatened to sanction the International Criminal Court if they proceeded with any investigation of war crimes and the matter was dropped.
It was in an amusing sense textbook democracy.
But I think your question is really about the asymmetry and apparent hypocrisy of sanctions.
Sanctions run both ways so they require a power relationship to make sense.
If one guy whose ball it is, decides the game is unfair he can "sanction" the other 10 players by taking his ball home. If I sanction you by not coming to your party, it's probably me who loses out by cutting off my nose to spite my face.
Iraq II was s shitshow, utterly unfair and a result of the most awful foreign policy. But the USA has more to _offer_ the world, so it made no sense for international sanctions. Much as I like Russians as people, I'm quite good for vodka right now thank you. We will take a hit in fuel prices next winter for sure. Putin created an oligarchy that turned Russia into a relatively unproductive country unless you're in the luxury yacht or novelty poisons business.
I would like to ask people not to amplify that message while Europe is at war with Putin. Talk about it after all you like, it's a very reasonable question, but distracting the discourse while everybody is united over support for Ukraine is what he wants.
Do not signal boost him.
This is all just history repeating really.
Iraq did invade Kuwait of their own accord and fully annexed. UN security council fully condemned and demanded they leave kuwait. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Counci...
Gulf war starts and Iraq was defeated. They had to agree to stop being douches.
UN security council was defied: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Counci...
The videos showing the aftermath of the nerve agent wmds used by Iraq against civilians were crazy frightening. literally entire towns were laying on the ground unable to breath. Not dead yet, just unable to breath. While technically nobody knows if Iraq fired them or not... it pretty much is the case they are the only ones who would. Iraq terminated their relationship with the UN and ejected all the UN observers.
In super hindsight, those sarin and vx bombs ended up being used in syria. It's not really a question whether or not Iraq had these weapons. The whole yellow cake nuclear stuff was unclear but that wasn't really confirmed that Iraq ever got nukes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Counci...
Everyone voted for this. China, France, Russia, UK, and USA supported stopping Iraq.
Russia on the otherhand? What UN security council resolutions have they got to back up this invasion of Ukraine? Nazis?
They went and made good friends with China to use them as a shield for their invasion. Even Pakistan who hates Russia suddenly becoming their friends. Over what? Fear of the USA? The USA isnt even involved in this besides just being united with Europe's approach.
More like they are afraid Russia is going to nuke them if they dont comply. I dont know. Looks to me like they are surrounding India.
Really though. The USA's war exhaustion is maxed out. They've been at war for over 20 years. They need to withdraw from all their wars and focus back at home. Start talking about peace and the need to only help where the UN and their allies agree.