Well that maybe true from the American perspective; although the two positions are not necessarily mutually exclusive. I mean one can be a staunch American patriot and still be concerned about the rest of humanity as well.
I think you misunderstood my point-it is my contention that American intervention in Iraq benifited the Iraqis in the medium to long-term, so opposition to the Iraq war (by American patriots) on humanitarian grounds should not be an issue, except insofar that A.) it wasted resources which could be put to more effective ends (humanitarian and otherwise) elsewhere, and B.) the occupation phase was FUBAR, largely because of terrible intelligence and even worse executive judgement. I assure you, I was not trying to say that Americans should be unconcerned with the rest of humanity.
To Tiny Army:
The war was undertaken due to a combination of Iraq violating the terms of surrender (intended to contain the threat it posed), terrible intelligence combined with deliberate misinformation by the Hussein regime (his own fucking Generals believed they still had WMD's), a failure to realistically access the cost versus benifits of an invasion without UN approval, and unrealistic "the mouse that roared" fantasies (in that sense we were the victoms of our own post-war successes in Japan and Germany). My point (regarding a topic that has nothing to do with the OP) is that the Iraq war is an example of well-intentioned American naivity, arrogance, stupidity, and yes, even percieved national interests-but not American perfidity.
Also, GWB was well-intentioned, stubborn, and incompetent, not a hilteresque embodiment of evil

As for the Hussein regime, it was bitterly opposed by about three-quarters of the population, for the past decade preceeding the war it had brought about economic disaster as a result of Hussein's policies, and if Hussein had not decided to play a self-defeating game of misinformation and deceptive defiance of arms inspectors we (i.e. Americans) would have been content not to militarily intervene in Iraq. As for Shariah law, you are right that that is a short-term downgrade from the previous regime (outside of Iraqi Kurdistan), but anything better is unsustainable under current cultural conditions. Secular despotisms tend to further radicalize the population in an Islamist direction over time, while democracy within orthodox Muslim countries tends to result in the implementation of Shariah law in the short to medium term, absent sufficient protections from an imposed constitution (even those are insufficient for some populations)-its a dilemma.