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Of those who supported the U.S. invasion of Iraq 20 years ago — not just warmongering neocons like yours truly but also plenty of liberals, such as the current president of the United States — most have disavowed it.
A few of the arguments for doing so are strong. Others, I think, are wrong. And one is dangerous, in ways that misshape our foreign policy debates today.
Among the strong arguments, one is especially compelling to me. If nearly every U.S. government bureaucracy is slow, wasteful and frequently incompetent in America, how much more so would it be in a country as distant and complex as Iraq?
The problem in Iraq wasn't simply a matter of faulty decisions, of which — as in every war — there were many. It was of faulty systems. Around the 10th anniversary of the invasion, the special inspector general for Iraq reconstruction painted a devastating picture of our efforts. Billions of dollars were wasted on projects that were rarely, if ever, completed. Uncle Sam, whose cruise missiles could destroy Iraqi targets with astounding precision, couldn't keep the lights on in Baghdad.
Bottom line: Nation-building may have been something Washington could do in 1945 in places like Japan, under leaders like Douglas MacArthur. A core lesson of the Iraq war is that we shouldn't trust ourselves to try it again. We do better as a cop than as a savior.
Those are arguments about the aftermath of the war. What about its conception?