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    Saturday, February 15, 2003

    Quackery: The BMJ equates disarming Iraq with quackery. Let them know what you think of their facile analysis by hitting the "Respond to this article" link, it's like a comment page on a blog, but it takes twenty-four hours to show up on the site. And it gets previewed for suitability . Be nice. Be polite.

    I do wish, though, that this physician would give them a Rapid Response:

    I write this to protest against all those people who oppose the war against Saddam Hussein, or as they call it, the "war against Iraq". I am an Iraqi doctor, I worked in the Iraqi army for six years during Iraq-Iran war and four months during Gulf war. All my family still live in Iraq. I am an Arab Sunni, not Kurdish or Shia. I am an ordinary Iraqi not involved with the Iraqi opposition outside Iraq.

    I am so frustrated by the appalling views of most of the British people, media and politicians. I want to say to all these people who are against the possible war, that if you think by doing so you are serving the interests of Iraqi people or saving them, you are not. You are effectively saving Saddam. You are depriving the Iraqi people of probably their last real chance get rid of him and to get out of this dark era in their history.

    My family and almost all Iraqi families will feel hurt and anger when Saddam's media shows on the TV, with great happiness, parts of Saturday's demonstration in London. But where were you when thousands of Iraqi people were killed by Saddam's forces at the end of the Gulf war to crush the uprising? Only now when the war is to reach Saddam has everybody become so concerned about the human life in Iraq.

    Where were you while Saddam has been killing thousands of Iraqis since the early 70s? And where are you are now, given that every week he executes people through the "court of revolution", a summary secret court run by the secret security office. Most of its sentences are executions which Saddam himself signs.

    I could argue one by one against your reasons for opposing this war. But just ask yourselves why, out of about 500,000 Iraqis in Britain, you will not find even 1,000 of them participating tomorrow? Your anti-war campaign has become mass hysteria and you are no longer able to see things properly.

    Locum consultant neurologist, London


    Oh, and another thing. The editorial posits that half a million Iraqis are likely to die in the war. I seem to remember similar predictions being bandied about before the Afghan war. They didn't come true then, and there's no reason to believe they'd be true now. Besides, as Josh Clayburn has pointed out, war (at least war with the United States) has its benefits.
     

    posted by Sydney on 2/15/2003 07:51:00 AM 0 comments

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