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  1. ROGER SCRUTON. https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/j.ctt1ppfwh.9. Two rival views of international relations now compete for influence among our political elites, the national and the transnational, and the war in Iraq has sharpened the conflict between them.

  2. 7 nov 2005 · Current debate over the motives, ideological justifications, and outcomes of the war with Iraq has been strident and polarizing. This book is the first volume gathering critical voices from around the world to offer an alternative perspective on the prevailing pro-war and anti-war positions.

  3. 16 set 2013 · A matter of principle ; humanitarian arguments for war in Iraq. Introduction: The liberal-humanitarian case for the war in Iraq / Thomas Cushman -- Reconsidering regime change -- The case for regime change / Christopher Hitchens -- Liberal legacies, Europe's totalitarian era and the Iraq war: historical conjectures and comparisons ...

  4. And now A Matter of Principle brings together 23 voices of critical support for the liberation of Iraq from both sides of the Atlantic. The editor, Thomas Cushman, Professor of Sociology at Wellesley and Editor of The Journal of Human Rights, has provided evidence to the broader intellectual community that despite the

    • Thomas Cushman
    • 2005
  5. The first two sections of the book outline the humanitarian argument for war. The authors suggest that the Iraq War is justified on the basis of protecting the Iraqi people from Saddam Hussein's oppressive government and shielding the world from dangerous weapons in the hands of a tyrannous regime.

    • Lisa A. Leitz
    • 2006
  6. 7 nov 2005 · Argumentation and Fallacy in the Justification of the 2003 War on Iraq. Ahmed Sahlane. Political Science. 2012. The present study examined how the pre-war debate of the US decision to invade Iraq (in March 2003) was discursively constructed in the US/British mainstream newspaper opinion/editorial (op/ed)… Expand. 18.

  7. By bringing together isolated, important, and at times iconoclastic voices on the issue of the invasion of Iraq, A Matter of Principle makes for critical and provocative reading."—Michael Barnett, Stassen Professor of International Relations, Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota