10 Years Later, A Reflection On The Invasion Of Iraq Or: The Day I Realized The Extent Of America’s Power

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March 19th, 2003, a young, future dick joke writer with a far less tainted liver is laid up in the basement of his suburban St. Louis home after a surgery. On the table next to him is a sandwich. In front of him is a TV tuned to Fox News. The invasion of Iraq had begun. Shock and Awe was underway, and the United States Military was giving the people of Iraq a pyrotechnic show, the likes of which they had never seen before (unless you count the first invasion of Iraq, ahem). It was big, it was loud, and it was powerfully, yet surgically destructive. Frankly, it was impressive. It had everything but those fireworks that explode into the shape of a cowboy hat. If only some smart-ass pilot had deployed a few of those over the skies of Baghdad, it would have been a hilarious “Eff you” to Saddam and friends. Goose would’ve done it. RIP Goose.

The invasion of Iraq was one of the most intriguing things I had ever, or will ever, watch, and I’m thankful that I was home sick from school for the two week period it began, and thus able to watch it in its entirety. It says something about a nation’s power when that country’s citizens can watch their armies run train on some far away sandy b-hole from the comfort of their living rooms, likely while eating snacks.

Of course, this was nothing new for me. I was five-years-old for Desert Storm. I have a few conscious memories of watching that on TV. Granted, I didn’t have the same appreciation for our first go-round with Saddam. Mostly I remember complaining to my dad that there was nothing good on TV, to which he angrily replied, “Have some GODDAMN pride in your country you ungrateful little shit. Those men are out there bleeding for your freedom and you wanna watch cartoons?!? Eat some popcorn and shut the fuck up! WOOO look at that sandcastle burn! U-S-A! U-S-A!” Then my mom brought out a tray of meats and cheeses arranged to look like an American flag, but she used bleu cheese for the blue and my dad complained that bleu cheese was too French. Then they got into a big fight and I sort of just repressed the rest of it.

The first Desert Storm was an impressive display of American power, to be sure. Most readers may not realize this, but in the lead up to that invasion the American military was estimating tens of thousands of casualties in the initial assault, and Iraq was doing a lot of talking. It was sort of like this past BCS National Championship game, in that once everyone took the field the game was never in doubt, but the lead up was outrageously overblown. In this analogy, SCUD missiles are the Manti Te’o.

Hell, the invasion was such a success that Ted Turner ended up making millions off of it thanks to CNN’s unprecedented war coverage. Eventually (I assume) Turner would use that money to sign Greg Maddux to his Atlanta Braves, who helped lead them to the 1995 World Series title. God Desert Storm was awesome.

As impressive as that Desert Storm victory and the coverage of it was, I didn’t fully realize that America was the most powerful entity in the history of the universe — yeah I said it, the universe, and the warlike race of lizard aliens who read this in 50,000 years can just deal with it — until I watched the 2003 invasion, or rather, until I stopped watching it.

You see, there was something else happening around the time we decided to destroy Saddam’s WMDs liberate Iraq. That something was the 2003 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament. The first weekend of that tournament had started the day before, March 18th. It would just so happen that evil would be defeated twice that spring, as while America was adding yet another dictator notch to its freedom belt, Carmello Anthony and the Syracuse Orangemen would be doing a service to the world by preventing kansas from winning a national title.

What I remember most about following the invasion coverage was that, when there was a lull in the action, I would simply flip over to the tournament. Think about that for a second. There I was in my basement, eating a sandwich and watching my country obliterate a nation halfway around the world. Meanwhile in Iraq, families were huddled in their basements praying for their lives or fleeing towards the borders in the hope of avoiding the war. Back in ‘Merica, my lazy ass was flipping between live footage of Tomahawk missiles raining death on the Ba’ath Party and checking to see if I called my 12-5 upset right.

How many other people were watching basketball instead of the invasion? I assume quite a few. You better believe fraternity houses across the country had a pledge dutifully manning the TV, flipping between CBS (for the games) and Fox News.

Obviously I had already known America was the most powerful country on Earth, there was no denying that. Still, when I really took a step back and realized what I was doing, changing the channel between basketball and precision bombing, it took me to a higher plane of Ameri-consciousness. It was an epiphany, and a fucking awesome one at that. America was unfathomably powerful in that moment, and still is today. Part of me wants to celebrate that right now, and I probably will, but I have to check on my bracket first.

God Bless America.

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    1. CodenameDuchess

      Personally, no; and that’s only in hindsight.

      But we did overthrow a ruthless dictator and made it clear to everyone in the Middle East that we could still fuck shit up. Tough question really.

      12 years ago at 2:06 pm
    2. Jon M Fratsman

      Invasion aside, people will bitch to the high heavens right now about how terrible the Bush family dynasty was, but in a decade they’ll remember the Bush era as the Golden Years of the millennium economically. Mark my words.

      You can kiss 4% unemployment goodbye probably forever.

      12 years ago at 2:14 pm
    3. Ferris

      One of W’s priorities when entering the White House was dealing with Saddam since Clinton didn’t do anything. After 9/11 happened, we dealt with that and dealing with Saddam became much more urgent. It was the right call at the time to remove Saddam but staying and establishing democracy is the real problem

      12 years ago at 2:15 pm
    4. Douglas MacArthur

      Nope, I tend to lean toward non-interventionism so I support having a strong military, but dislike that many people believe we should be the world’s police. I also think that the UN is worthless and the world would be minimally affected if it dissolved.

      12 years ago at 2:18 pm
    5. Rob Fox

      I disagree, the UN definitely oversteps its bounds but it’s a good meeting ground/set of base rules to keep lesser countries in order. For America, China, and basically most of the security council it’s pointless though.

      12 years ago at 2:20 pm
    6. Rob Fox

      Plus without it you’d probably end up with countries going back to organizing themselves in a pre-WWI type of alliance system, mostly because small countries want to matter, want protection, and want influence. It was a couple shithole nothings that caused Europe to rip itself apart the first time around.

      12 years ago at 2:22 pm
    7. BamaForRomney

      I’m agree with staying isolationist. We’re America. We should have a military so strong, we never use it. The only time in American history that we were justified in war was the Revolutionary War, and probably WWII. Although I’m not positive about WWII. For all I care, France could have gone to Germany, the Soviets could have had millions more die, and the UK could have collapsed economically. That’s not our problem. Was our national security truly threatened if we didn’t get involved? It’s a tough question, but I think yes. Iraq, though, just wasn’t necessary.

      12 years ago at 2:27 pm
    8. Jon M Fratsman

      ^ You might recall that we didn’t really “choose” to get involved in WWII – the Japs kinda made that call for us. Plus history dictated that we couldn’t just let the Brits fend for themselves, the “special relationship” (google it) doesn’t really allow for it.

      12 years ago at 2:31 pm
    9. Rob Fox

      Yeah, the UK never falls. That’s American foreign policy numero uno IMO. Luckily that’s not likely.

      12 years ago at 2:35 pm
    10. 5 To 5

      ^ Yeah that’s a good point. One of the best foreign policies in my opinion was Teddy Roosevelt’s who said “Speak softly and carry a big stick”. God he was fucking awesome

      12 years ago at 2:37 pm
    11. Douglas MacArthur

      To put the resource draw of the UN metaphorically, our role in the UN might would prevent the blood loss from a gunshot wound that is a major war, but with all these minor conflicts we are drawn into, we are dying a death by a thousand paper cuts. In my opinion, at no point should protection and humanitarian aid for another country be above maintaining the economic health of our own country. At this point, our involvement in the UN and world affairs has gotten to the point where it is a tradeoff of whether we support domestic or foreign endeavors.

      12 years ago at 2:38 pm
    12. Tommy Gufano

      ^ General Petraeus came down to my school to speak once and he was very clear that, although Saddam was ruthless, he bowed to US forces. Once he was overthrown, that’s when the shitstorm of the warring tribes made Iraq the godforsaken hell hole that it is today. Petraeus likened it to a champagne bottle with Hussein being the cork, every was under control under the cork was popped.

      12 years ago at 2:40 pm
    13. Jon M Fratsman

      General Petraeus is an American hero and the finest military mind of this generation, and throwing him under the bus for having an affair with some broad is a damned travesty, in my opinion.

      12 years ago at 2:45 pm
    14. Rob Fox

      If anything we should encourage it. Alexander the Great was one of the world’s most noted perverts, it worked out fine for him.

      12 years ago at 2:47 pm
    15. Douglas MacArthur

      @Fratsman, no, we made the choice for ourselves with the Japan oil embargo. You can’t grab someone by the balls and expect them not to respond. However, we did have to help the British.

      12 years ago at 2:48 pm
    16. Douglas MacArthur

      @BamaForRomney, Isolationism and non-interventionism are different in that isolationists want pure isolation in foreign relations while non-interventionism is open to diplomatic relations. Isolationists also support economic isolation while non-interventionists are more open to free trade. I didn’t know whether you are being loose with your terms or whether you fully support isolationism.

      12 years ago at 2:59 pm
    17. Jon M Fratsman

      @MacArthur: I dunno, man. I’m just not convinced that an oil embargo is on the same scale as launching an attack designed to strategically cripple an entire fleet and make possible the invasions of Australia and the Aleutians.

      12 years ago at 4:18 pm
    18. Douglas MacArthur

      ^^FDR told his Cabinet on July 18, 1941 that an oil embargo meant war because that would force Japan to seize the oil fields of the Dutch East Indies. However Dean Acheson (who also wrote the Truman Doctrine speech, convinced Truman to intervene in Korea, designed the Marshall Plan, and is considered the architect of the Cold War) drew up the sanctions in such a way as to block any Japanese purchases of U.S. oil. By the time FDR found out, in September, he could not back down.

      Acheson knew what he was doing, and FDR knew we going to war months before Japan attacked.

      12 years ago at 6:47 pm
    19. Jon M Fratsman

      I get the history behind it. What I don’t buy is the assertion that embargo = war. By that logic, was bombing the shit out of Pearl Harbor supposed to make us….what, roll back the economic sanctions? No way. Sanctions are sanctions, they obviously didn’t have any problem getting the oil somewhere else. We both knew war was coming eventually, but Pearl Harbor was the catalyst via Japan’s pre-emptive strike. One wonders, when would we have entered the war if it hadn’t been for Pearl?

      12 years ago at 9:07 pm
    20. TeBro Fd Your Mom

      BamaforRomney’s comment gave me aids. Were we threatened?!?!?! Have you fucking heard of pearl harbor you fucking peasant? If my grandpa heard you say that he would cut your dick off.

      12 years ago at 1:27 pm
  1. RisingFratstarOfTX

    Hey Bacon, while I have your attention here, can you lean over, punch the intern in the dick, and ask him where the fuck fail Friday is?

    12 years ago at 2:00 pm
    1. Alphonse Stilldrunk

      Yeah, I’m not even going to glance at this article until I see my FF.

      12 years ago at 2:20 pm
  2. broheimian

    “Sure, I’ve been called a xenophobe, but the truth is, I’m not. I honestly just feel that America is the best country and the other countries aren’t as good. That used to be called patriotism.” -Kenny Fuckin’ Powers

    12 years ago at 2:00 pm
  3. FratomicBomb798

    Jesus Christ did y’all kill the fucking intern? By the way, nice column.

    12 years ago at 2:16 pm
  4. NacabrochesTexas

    I come ready for fail Friday and I have to skim through this piece of garbage instead? Fact: I like balls in my face.

    12 years ago at 2:23 pm
  5. Born Wearing Sperrys

    Well put, Bacon. I’ll be sure to throw a few back for my love of this fine country.

    12 years ago at 2:25 pm