This, of course, is America’s fault and not at all the fault of Saddam Hussein, who let his nation’s infrastructure collapse for decades while he enriched himself, or the terrorists who fight against our efforts to rebuild Iraq.
GENEVA (Reuters) - Five years after the United States led an invasion of Iraq, millions of people there are still deprived of clean water and medical care, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said on Monday.
In a sober report marking the anniversary of the 2003 start of the war, which ousted dictator Saddam Hussein and unleashed deep sectarian tensions, the humanitarian body said Iraqi hospitals lack beds, drugs, and medical staff.
Some areas of the country of 27 million people have no functioning water and sanitation facilities, and the poor public water supply has forced some families to use at least a third of their average $150 monthly income buying clean drinking water.
“Five years after the outbreak of the war in Iraq, the humanitarian situation in most of the country remains among the most critical in the world,” the ICRC said, describing Iraq’s health care system as “now in worse shape than ever.”
The answer to this, of course, is to withdraw our troops and abandon the Iraqis to the machinations of extremist terrorists and their puppet masters in Iran and Syria. That will bring the Iraqis health care and clean water.
And, as Barack Obama’s reverend would say, God damn America for fighting a war to make things better for these people.
