By

Cami McCormick /

CBS News/ March 19, 2013, 4:35 AM

Iraq war: Was it worth it?

U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Luke Parrott touches the headstone of a fellow soldier and friend in Section 60 at Arlington National Cemetery November 12, 2012, in Arlington, Virginia. A veteran of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Parrott was injured in an IED blast in Baghdad in 2005.

U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Luke Parrott touches the headstone of a fellow soldier and friend in Section 60 at Arlington National Cemetery November 12, 2012, in Arlington, Virginia. A veteran of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, Parrott was injured in an IED blast in Baghdad in 2005. / Getty

WASHINGTON The war in Iraq still divides many Americans, but in 2003, when the invasion began, there was a groundswell of support. A combination of Sept. 11 still being fresh on American minds, and Saddam Hussein's "madman of the Middle East" status made for a then-compelling argument to go to war, even if the claims about his weapons of mass destruction never panned out, according to Michael O'Hanlon, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution.

"It's fascinating to look back on the decision because I don't think you find too many enthusiastic proponents any more. A lot of people have decided it's easy to blame President Bush or those in his administration who were most enthusiastic, like Vice President Dick Cheney or Donald Rumsfeld, but in fact, we had half the Democratic Senate caucus voting for the war," notes O'Hanlon. "At that moment, for whatever reason, our psychology after 9-11 was different -- and also the prospect of overthrowing a genocidal dictator didn't seem like such a horrible idea."

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Iraq invasion: 10 years later

But after the vivid images of the U.S. military's "Shock and Awe" campaign, and the dramatic toppling of Saddam's statue in Baghdad's Firdos Square, a more complicated reality set in.

Iraqis gathered in the same square every day after that initial phase, demanding jobs. Electricity was in short supply. Sectarian frustrations boiled over. And al Qaeda in Iraq seized an opportunity. O'Hanlon, who initially supported the invasion himself, blames poor U.S. planning for what came next.

"Notably, not being ready to stabilize a country that we invaded," he says. "The notion that you could essentially decapitate the government and then not be accountable or prepared for handling the aftermath violates International Relations 101."

While the U.S. fought a growing insurgency, it also battled for support on the international diplomatic stage.

"For most of us it turned out to be even harder than we might have guessed, and even more of a blight on American foreign policy than you could have imagined when you're thinking of overthrowing a genocidal maniac," says O'Hanlon. "It's sort of hard to imagine how that could have been seen by the rest of the world as a negative thing, but it largely was."

The last U.S. troops left Iraq in December 2011. The war left more than 4,000 Americans dead and 32,000 wounded. More than 100,000 Iraqis lost their lives, and the violence in Iraq continues today.

"There are some things that are very troubling," Gen. Lloyd Austin, who oversaw the withdrawal, recently conceded to the Senate Armed Services Committee. But he also insisted that in the face of the threats, Iraq's domestic security forces are holding together and remain loyal to the civilian leadership, in spite of its problems.

"A lot of Iraq experts that I know who are following this very carefully are quite worried. They do really feel that this is a little more than the rough and tumble of a country trying to do democracy right," says O'Hanlon. But he doesn't think another civil war is going to break out.

"Iraqis have now been there, and they have been through hell," says O'Hanlon. "Most of them will acknowledge that the role of an outside strong power (the U.S. military) was critical... and they're not going to get that again. We're not going back with 100 or 150,000 America G.I.s. So a decision to turn the low to medium-grade violence that continues to afflict Iraq into open civil war would be stupid."

How Iraq's future will play out is anyone's guess, but for now, O'Hanlon believes passions in the U.S. are still too heated to rate the war's real success or failure.

"I do believe and hope that over time some of the angry edge about the debate will recede," he says. "Obviously, Americans are angry about this. Those who lost loved ones have a right to be angry. The whole country has felt like this was a far more consequential decision than we were told at the time and that the preparations for this effort were minimal, compared to what should have been done.

"But you can also take a broader perspective, and say that what we were doing was going after one of the most brutal dictators of the late 20th century. And even though this is not necessarily a defense of the Bush administration's decision and not necessarily a defense that it was worth the cost, nonetheless it was not as badly intentioned as some people have wanted to argue."

CBS Radio News correspondent Cami McCormick covered the Iraq war from the front lines, and is now based in Washington D.C.

© 2013 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
164 Comments Add a Comment
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Ice41000 says:
Worth it? Not for killed Iraqis and Americans, not for victims of Abu Ghraib, and not for those living in ruined country. But for huge contractor corporations that sell arms and equipment and trade in oil it was not only worth it, it was great! Simple really.
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BigBlivefromny says:
Iraq War worth it? Is that a joke? Was it worth the lives of thousands of brave men? Was it worth the lost limbs of many thousands more? How about TWO TRILLION dollars down the drain....and right now Sunni and Shia Iraqis slaughter each other senselessly just like before we arrived in 2003!! No, the WAR was in Afghanistan and really, Pakistan where Bin Laden was killed. We could have won in Afghanistan..maybe, if we hadn't gone off stupidly to Iraq.
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FOX_PARROTS_LIE says:
DRUNKINPOLITICIAN says:
"Did anyone really think the Iraq war was going to end well for anyone."



Sure....some of us knew that the Iraqi WAR debacle would end great for all the military-industrial complex WAR Profiteers!

Case in point, the top ten private firms that raked-in $72 Billion:

http://www.theweek.co.uk/business/iraq-2003/52058/top-ten-private-firms-made-72bn-decade-iraq-war#ixzz2O2CA1bGl
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FOX_PARROTS_LIE says:
BOBW101 replies:
"I will agree Bushy was a big time liberal"



Nah, george WMD bush was a social conservative, and dirty dickie cheney and his roving band of PNAC NEOCONS were bloodthirsty WARmongers, that used 9/11 as their catalyst for all the wrong reasons!
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vannuys says:
We all knew that Saddam Hussein was a brutal dictator AND SUPPORTED HIM ANYWAY! We knew what he was doing to his own people AND WE DIDN'T CARE! Cooler heads won out after the Persian Gulf War because they foresaw the mayhem in a post-Saddam Iraq. It was only after Bush's daddy was threatened that most of you supported the idea of overthrowing him without thinking of the disastrous consequences.

Yes, Saddam Hussein was a murderous thug, but he posed no threat to the United States and he kept everyone in line. NOW look at Iraq. Good going, guys! Way to think things through there!

LOL!

Hope you're all proud of yourselves!
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FOX_PARROTS_LIE replies:
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Quite telling that through the 1980s, saddam was our "friend," but by 1991 and later, both bushies used him as a scapegoat!
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vannuys says:
I am proud to have been an anti-war demonstrator. Are you proud of our boys and girls for what they did in Haditha and Abu Ghrib? What shining moments those were, huh?

NOT!

OF COURSE I'm going to rub your noses in it. It's what you get for questioning my patriotism and telling me to leave the country for opposing the Vietraq War (even though I supported the war effort in Afghanistan!)!

What really pisses me off is that, in addition to paying for this calamity (which was supposed to be financed by Iraqi oil revenues!), my tax dollars have to be wasted because of some grunt's PTSD! Hey, since this was an all-volunteer force, they should pay for THEIR OWN respective therapies.
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bobw101 replies:
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How in the world can someone call you unpatriotic because you don't support a roving gang of murdering thugs?

I am proud of you for being anti-war. I support people like you not morons who go to foreign lands and murder for god and country. Frankly it really disgusts me.

Peace = Prosperity
vannuys replies:
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That's what some fool's mother called me after she learned that I opposed the war. She said that her son was in Iraq and that I should leave the country. I responded by telling her that, she being old enough to remember Vietnam, should have known better and that "maybe you'll finally get it when your kid comes back in a box. Have a nice day!"

This is one liberal who doesn't believe in turning the other cheek. Wanna sling mud? Fine by me, but I must warn you that I will be the winner.

BTW, BOBW101, I humbly thank you.
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vannuys says:
Those of us on the left warned you that this war was a mistake, but you chose to question our patriotism. Now that we were proven to be correct, you all can kiss our *****.

BTW: Show me the WMD, LOL!
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webgone says:
Was it worth it ?

The Question here was intented to bring out resentments.

May be not such a bad question after all.

I am looking forward to see the same question after the next war.
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johnlockesghost says:
I think that the level of dislike for bush/cheney exceeds that of Obama, although Obama's closing the gap.
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raflin1 replies:
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NOT even close. Only Bush supporters dislike Obama. Obama actually GOT Bin Laden, and ENDED the mistake a war in Iraq that Bush/Cheney started.
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1pheasant1 says:
BOBW101 replies:
"Please describe in detail how the recession is Bushy's fault."
_______________________________________________________

Socialist Republican President George W. Bush brought us "too big to fail" and Wall Street Bailouts (TARP) as his cornerstones of Capitalism. Certainly, he can't be held accountable when his economic house-of-cards came collapsing down. Right, Bagdhad Bob? Hahahahahaha!
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bobw101 replies:
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To big to fail started long ago and although the bubble did burst on Bushy's watch, the seeds for the housing crisis were sewn in the early 90's.

But yes it was a house of cards that would have come down no matter who was president.

No true conservative and free market capitalist supported TARP.

I will agree Bushy was a big time liberal, that among other things is why I never voted for him.
FOX_PARROTS_LIE replies:
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BOBW101 replies:
"I will agree Bushy was a big time liberal"



Nah, george WMD bush was a social conservative, and dirty dickie cheney and his roving band of PNAC NEOCONS were bloodthirsty WARmongers, that used 9/11 as their catalyst for all the wrong reasons!
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