With Saddam and his troops refusing to be shocked and awed by the combined might of the United States and Britain, the war in Iraq is turning ugly. In the age of high-tech stealth bombers and cruise missiles, Saddam has managed to draw the coalition forces into conventional and guerrilla warfare. He has made sure collateral damage from the coalitions fire wont be confined to the Chinese embassy.
Unable to match the coalitions firepower, Saddam has used the most effective shield: his own people. Instead of getting civilians out of harms way, he has made sure his people would protect him whether they like it or not. That spells disaster for the people of Iraq. US President George W. Bush has vowed that the "day of reckoning" for the regime of Saddam Hussein is drawing near. The way the war is unfolding, however, the day of reckoning may not be near enough for the Iraqi people.
United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan has sounded an alarm for the humanitarian crisis now emerging in Iraq. It is a crisis that nations in the coalition, with their combined economic resources, may be able to address by themselves once the war is over. But it is a crisis that can be better met by the combined resources of the international community. The legitimacy of this war will be debated for a long time. No matter where nations stand in this war, however, the world must come to the aid of the people of Iraq.