although unbeknowest to most Americans, Argentina is our country's biggest oil supplier.
It's probably unbeknownest because it's not our biggest foreign oil supplier. Canada is. Followed by Mexico, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela. I don't think Argentina is even in the top 50. I know it's not in the top 25.
Anyway...how about some more truth.
The "War on Terror" has never been a war on an "abstract idea" look at the firestorm when Bush recently noted that it was on Islamofascists. It's always been a war against Islamism. Debating semantics doesn't negate the justification of any war. We called the first world war "The War To End All Wars" before we had that second one pop-up.
-There were never "attacks taking place on our soil, killing thousands" for the people bin Laden recruited. The largest killing of muslims in the last few decades has been by muslims (Iran-Iraq War, Kuwaiti Invasion and The Hussein Massacres head the list) and bin Laden wasn't declaring war on them anymore.
-300,000 innocent civilians WERE killed in Iraq, by Saddam Hussein. But that was prior to the 2003 operation. Let's clarify that number post-operation because "Iraq Body Count" which includes terrorist attacks puts the number below 50,000.
-We know where bin Laden is, he's in the border of Pakistan and Afghanistan, if he isn't dead. We haven't seen the fucking guy in years, his "number two" does all the video tapes.
-It is true that the majority of 9/11 hijackers were Saudi's, but that doesn't mean we should attack their country. If some Aussie shoots a bunch of people in Germany, should Germany attack Australia? Saudi Arabia does support Islamism, but it wasn't harboring al Qaeda members like Afghanistan and Iraq.
The case for ending the war in Iraq in 2003 was this:
Saddam had violated 17 UN Resolutions, the sanctions were beginning to collapse, he possessed WMD programs and had in the past protected WMDs themselves, he had invaded two of his neighbors, he massacred on his own soil, supported terrorism, harbored terrorists including al Qaeda members (even put one on the government payroll!), in a post-9/11 world it could no longer be accepted to leave him in power with sanctions collapsing allowing him to restart WMD programs.
If Saddam had not been toppled in 2003, he would be joining NK and Iran in going nuclear within the few years. We would still be in Afghanistan (this time with Iran sending all it's forces over that border instead of splitting them) bumming around there.
Even if bin Laden was/is captured/killed, it is nothing more than a symbolic victory. He's long left being the operational head of al Qaeda (ever since it stopped sucking) and with his finances gone he's little more than a figurehead (that you don't even see anymore) for them. His capture/death doesn't end the war against Islamism, anymore than Stalin's death ended the Cold War. With the Taliban toppled and bin Laden captured, there's still Iraq, Iran and Syria out there.
Because of the decision to end the war in Iraq in 2003, there's one less on the list today.