The Iraq war was absurd and thousands of young men and women were dispatched abroad and were injured as they lost their lives or were murdered in a coffin. I applaud the service of all the people of the army, and I will never look down on soldiers. In fact, my best friend's brothers entered the US Navy from high school and served for three years; he is currently in the aircraft carrier. I share the same feelings about the Iraq war. I continue to ask myself if thousands of injured or dead men and women do not know the purpose of this war.
I was asked to discuss Iraq war as a 3rd grade high school student. Specifically, my job is to insist that the Iraq war is justified. At that time public opinion was overwhelmingly opposed to war. We have not found weapons of mass destruction We are tired of war. Furthermore, I and my very free teacher (judging the argument) believe that the war in Iraq is reasonable. However, I won the argument. That moment, and many other people in my life, I will say that the discussion is very good, regardless of whether I believe my argument or not. Even if you do not believe it, what is the meaning of the discussion? Power? arrogance?
Opponents of military intervention to Iraq cast doubt on the evidence used to prove the justification of the war and objected to the justification of the war while challenging the justification of the war. We predict that more urgent security priorities (ie Afghanistan and North Korea) and war will impair the stability of the Middle East. In 2010, the Dutch government established an independent investigation committee and UN resolution 1441 provides "the authority to enforce Individual Member States to comply with the Security Council Resolution (as the Dutch Government did) I can not reasonably explain things. " The committee concluded that the intrusion was in violation of international law.
On September 13, 2002, the American Catholic bishop signed a letter to President Bush and stated that it was irrational at the time that "a preemptive one-sided use of force to defeat the Iraqi government" was irrational. They reached this position by assessing whether the attack on Iraq was in line with the criteria of warfare defined by Catholic theology. The Vatican also opposed the war in Iraq. Former United Nations special envoy Renato Raffaele Martino, the chairman of the Committee of the present Justice and Peace, the war against Iraq constitutes a "war of aggression" and therefore a preventive war that does not constitute a war of justice Told reporters. Foreign Minister Jean-Louis Taurang expressed concern that the war in Iraq would offend the anti-Christian feelings of the Islamic world. On February 8, 2003, Pope John Paul II said.