I never said that he won the Prime Ministry because he was immensely popular, but
Your source speaks for the Maliki government, which has experienced a severe loss of support in the past few weeks, with seventeen ministers pulling out of the cabinet. The Iraqi Parliament has several times passed resolutions calling for the immediate withdrawal of U.S. troops, and whatever government succeeds Makili will likely iterate that position strongly.
Here you make it seem like just because it was the Maliki Government it does not count that they still want the US troops in there because they lost support.
If it has lost the support of the Parliament, the representatives of the people, and of the people themselves, it is no longer legitimate. The Maliki government knows that without US troops they have no means of staying in power, so they want US presence to continue. The Iraqi people, which has withdrawn support from the government for precisely this reason, continues to want US troops out. There is no change on the horizon in terms of this opinion.
It increases the likelyhood of profiteering, which annoys people concerned about corruption. It engenders human rights violations, which incences just about everybody. Especially in the latter case, an injury to one is an injury to all, and most Americans are perceptive enough to see it.
If someone takes a government by force than it could go one of two ways. They could make it into a better government, or they could become corrupt, profiteering from the country, and they could violate many human right. Which by your own arguments means that if someone takes the government by force, and they take the latter course of action, it should affect the whole world .
It should, and it does effect the disposition of the public. But according to
current international law it is no business of the United States whether another country's government is democratic or despotic. It is instead the business of the
Iraqi people to better their own ggovernment and institutions, and they should only get material (rather than moral) help from the Americans if they ask for it.
The best form of government seems to be a benevolent dictatorship. The problem is finding someone that is benevolent and intelligent and won't turn into a meglomaniac.
This man has swallowed
The Republic in its entirety and is really not worth debating.