What about the people who died trying to protect against the people western forces were killing. People trying to defend others against shock and awe described as having a similar effect of a nuclear weapon. Or the people who just wanted to have clean tap water which was impacted by western forces destoying sanitation, infrastructure, power. Or people defending others from being hit by "stray" missiles etc etc your logic is weird, you go in and invade a country which was fairly stable at the time, destabilise the crap out of it by killing or removing the political and social structure, then claim your defending ordinary Iraqis, the cheek!
War has collateral effects, Iraq is not unique, you can apply that to World War Two specifically...millions died as a consequence of the war. It is part of the reason why we remember our War Dead, as do other nations globally.
I'm sorry, but your idea of what actually happened on the ground in Iraq is coloured by your prejudice...Iraq was only a stable country if you were a Ba'athist supporter...thousands of Iraqis were killed, maimed and otherwise subject to the regimes suppression. The facts are that if there had been no insurgency and subsequent civil war as terrorist and sectarian groups fought for supremacy then the political and infrastructure rebuilding of Iraq would have been relatively quick...you are also misrepresenting what I said, I did not say we went to Iraq with the express objective of defending Iraqis from themselves, but that during the Iraq war people died defending Iraqi civilians from both the Iraqi Regime and the subsequent insurgent and sectarian forces. I also did not say that the war, or specifically the situation after the initial invasion was conducted in a competent way..there is much to criticise about the Iraq War, both the reasons for it and the actions of the Governments in assessing the risks and what was necessary to remove the Saddam Regime and create a stable, democratic state after his removal.
Who were we defending in the opium wars, in many colonial conflicts, slave trading etc heck I'm sure you could name more than my off the too of my head conflicts.
I you seriously suggest all conflicts Britain has been in were about defending others?
As I didn't suggest that all conflicts are about defending others, your point is irrelevant..what I said is that in any conflict there are people who defend others and deserve that remembrance of their sacrifice...how that manifests is not always apparent to the casual observer, and last time I attended a remembrance service, no mention was made of honouring those engaged in the Slave Trade or Trade Wars, although I suspect that even those events had people who died in defence of their brothers and families.
You said first it's about remembering soldiers in all conflicts, then remembering those who died in conflicts defending others. Just saying that the two are incompatible unless you think every conflict/war was just or in every war/conflict Britain was defending others. Given britains history of serving itself I cant see how you would be suggesting either.
Given Cameron apologised to India for britains colonial past is contrary to what you are saying.
You are misrepresenting what I said.....I said it is about remembering those who died in serving in conflict..both military and civilian. I specifically said it is not about the specific conflicts themselves or the reasons for them. subsequent answers to you have dealt with specific questions you asked and are framed from that point of reference and context, to conflate them into a singular answer in order to manufacture the appearance of contradiction is disingenuous and a game I have no wish to play.
Whether a subsequent Prime Minister apologises for our colonial past or not is not contrary to anything I have said. David Cameron did not apologise for Britain's Colonialism in any case..he simply expressed that a particular massacre in Imperial India was a shameful event, and rightly so...here is what he said on the matter:
In my view we are dealing with something here that happened a good 40 years before I was even born, and which Winston Churchill described as ‘monstrous’ at the time and the British government rightly condemned at the time. So I don’t think the right thing is to reach back into history and to seek out things you can apologize for. I think the right thing is to acknowledge what happened, to recall what happened, to show respect and understanding for what happened.
Somewhat different from the way you portray it.
Like I said, if you are so opposed to it, simply don't do it. Judging me or others who feel differently isn't really necessary. So I'll leave you with that before you lose your temper and begin to throw the usual insults about. Goodnight Craterloads, just follow your own conscience and do what you feel is right in your own mind, and give others the same freedom to the same.