Just think about the war today, whether you're for it or against it
End of quote
I was for it and I am for it.
I myself grew up in a country liberated from fascism by the USA and a land occupied by US troops for almost 50 years. I will never forget what the US did for me, my family, and my country.
The majority of Iraqis think that the invasion was a good thing and an even larger majority (namely all Shiites) believe that the removal of Saddam from power was a good thing.
As despressing as they are, the American deaths don't compare to Iraqi deaths under Saddam and Iraqi deaths due to terrorist attacks that would only increase if the Americans withdrew. (Popular opinion holds that terrorist attacks are caused by occupation and would stop if the occupation ends, but reality has simply shown that not to be the case.)
Journalists reporting from Baghdad paint a bleak picture of Iraq and somehow many blame the US for the deeds of Sunni and Shia terrorists. But those few journalists that dared to visit the rest of the country paint a much brighter picture.
Outside a few parts of Baghdad Iraq is a fairly normal country and outside the Arab parts Iraq is also completely safe (there was not a single successful terror attack in the Kurdish region in all those years).
People in Iraq are happy that Abu Ghraib now stands for minor prisoner abuse as they remember that tens of thousands of Kurds and Shiites used to be executed in that very prison under Saddam.
Shiites have finally had a chance to mourn their hundreds of thousands of dead relatives when coalition troops found Saddam's mass graves.
Kurds have used the opportunity to rebuild what Saddam destroyed, and although their past is dark (as many museums in the Kurdish region show), their future is now bright; IF the US don't leave.
I can already see the positive outcome of the invasion, I only wish it would have happened earlier. Had it been done in 1990, hundreds of thousands of Shiites wouldn't have died in vain.
You see 3990 and think it is a lot. And it is.
But it does not even compare to the numbers generated under Saddam in Iraq and under other Arab nationalist rulers in other Arab countries.
The only fundamentally regrettable things about the invasion are that it didn't happen earlier and that it happened only in Iraq.
The people in Darfur would be HAPPY if violence in Sudan was at the Iraq level.
If you think 3990 American deaths, think how many people in Iraq didn't die because of their sacrifice. Life under Saddam was not easy, but death was. The regime holds a record even for the middle east with literally millions of deaths and perhaps the only systematic gasing of members of a specific ethnic group outside Germany.
On the lighter side:
A Kurdish businessman tried to get a McDonalds franchise and was rejected. He has since founded his own restaurant chain and calls it "McDonells". It's very popular in Iraq and he still wants his chain to become a part of McDonalds.
And for a historical perspective on reporting:
http://www.netneurotic.net/Extrablatt/