10-17-2010, 05:16 PM | #1 (permalink) | |
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Location: essex ma
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new wikileaks cache of defense department documents about iraq
this is pretty self explanatory---just note that the section in bold below is a side-bar if you chase the link. it's probably easier to read the piece that way...
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i wasn't aware that this was on the horizon, but guess that we'll all likely know something relatively soon about this cache of documents about the war in iraq. at this point, the thread is largely a heads up that might acquire different focus once the materials are released. for myself, i'm looking forward to reading this material. there's been information available for some time that reveal aspects of the realities behind the wall of mirrors created by press pools and a 24/7 infotainment combine that has lots of time to fill and prefers to do it on the cheap. whence the preference for pre-packaged infotainment, you see. and the lack of meaningful investigative work about what's on the other side of the mirror. i don't really buy any of the "you're endangering the troops" arguments that came up around the afghanistan release as meaningful criticisms of the release itself. i think most of the damage that did was political, and i expect this to be worse. and given the illegitimacy of the war to begin with, i look forward to it. also, the united states has had nothing remotely compatible to the chilcot inquiry in the uk, which, depsite it's limitations, was at least a serious sustained reckoning with the problems of launching a war on the basis of bogus claims, illegitimate evidence, etc. the united states seems incapable of facing up to what the bush administration did because the only way that could have happened presupposed the collusion of most factions within the oligarchy. but i retain a slight glimmer of optimism that something like chilcot could happen here--or something different, with teeth. maybe this release will trigger moves toward that end. what do you anticipate coming of this? will you read around in the documents when they are released? do you see a need for some sort of reckoning within the united states on the question of the war in iraq? shouldn't it be illegal to launch a war on fraudulent grounds? what does illegal mean if nothing happens? shouldn't launching a war on fraudulent be met with something beyond stern disapproval and election for a second term?
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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10-17-2010, 05:40 PM | #2 (permalink) |
Eccentric insomniac
Location: North Carolina
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I think these documents should not have been released. However, I don't think they will endanger US troops or Local Nationals to the same degree of the Afghanistan leaks.
For better or worse we are winding down our involvement in Iraq and the country has a (mostly) functioning government and a less active insurgency. I argued different for Afghanistan because we are still very much at war in a country largely controlled by the Taliban. Any information leaked is information given to our enemy who will use it to their advantage. The Iraq leaks will still cause damage, but are less likely to get sources executed or American Soldiers killed. That said, the Military is an institution that was given a very complex problem. If you bust out the pitchforks every time you find documented evidence we have made mistakes the Military will be unable to prosecute future conflicts due to fear of witch hunts following their conclusions. These leaks were the reports available theatre-wide (just like the Afghanistan Leaks) and represent incidents the Military documented. If they were trying to hide or look the other way following mistakes they would not have been so thoroughly databased. War is Chaos, you cannot expect everything to be rainbows and butterflies. These reports will almost definitely consist of tactical decisions and ground-level reporting. I don't think the reporting will prove to have any relevance on your final question regarding whether the war was fraudulent and/or illegal. As far as I am concerned we had a cease fire agreement following the first Gulf War that Saddam Hussein broke in every way possible. Doing so invalidated that agreement and gave us the right to resume hostilities. Just because some people in this country latched onto bad information does not invalidate that fact.
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"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery." - Winston Churchill "All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act out their dream with open eyes, to make it possible." Seven Pillars of Wisdom, T.E. Lawrence Last edited by Slims; 10-17-2010 at 05:47 PM.. |
10-17-2010, 06:18 PM | #3 (permalink) |
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Location: essex ma
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well, two different things.
on your last point, i should have maybe been clearer. i dont expect anything in the wikileaks material to bear on questions of the manufactured case for war. those problems are evident---just how evident was clarified by chilcot. but there's more to the manufactured case problem. i take it as a political matter and a quite high order political matter. one of those instances that folk may well look back on later and point to as a moment where something basic slipped away from the american empire. a moral thing i'd say, if i thought that word signified anything in politics. on the other matter, the "war is chaos" thing is a straw man. war is legally sanctioned barbarism. i'm not a pacifist, but i think that the decision to go to war should be a weighty one and not something taken in the cavalier way that comes from blinkered imperial arrogance, the kind of arrogance that comes from seeing war as some manly activity involving Heroes in Uniform--the reverse abstraction from the straw man of rainbows and unicorns, every bit as uninformed and ridiculous, but the sort of uninformed that is expedient for the military as an institution because it's that kind of illusion that keeps the bloated levels of funding coming. but really, it's barbarism. i think it's better that people know more than less. and i think that iraq was a tremendous, costly, brutal fuck-up. and this without for a minute falling into the binary thinking that conservatives like to impute to others, the binarism that would result in a claim that to oppose bushwar was to think saddan hussein a swell guy. but it's also possible to call to mind despots around the southern hemisphere that the united states has found useful in the past, useful enough to overlook brutalization of people on a far more vast scale than saddam hussein. and i think the military should be impeded in the unfolding of its organized barbarism as a political matter. this is simply the reverse way of stating the above--because the reality of war has no relation to any of the nice, empty flag waving words that it's political champions impute to it, because it pulverizes the ideals that it's waged in the name of, because it's psychotic and brutal and stupid it shouldn't be unleashed on the basis of something as shabby and ridiculous as the imperialist pipe dreams of the assholes in the project for a new american century.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
10-17-2010, 06:28 PM | #4 (permalink) |
Eccentric insomniac
Location: North Carolina
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Ok,
The first part of your post: What? I'm sorry, I've got a college degree and am not illiterate or 'uninformed' but the only thing which comes to mind when I try to read your post is "Non Sequiter" I don't claim that the Iraq War wasn't a fuck-up...It was. I would even say that we probably should not have gone to war in Iraq in the first place. However, that does not change the fact that there was nothing illegal about waging a war against the man who tried to kill a sitting president and who was paying 10,000 dollars to the family of every suicide bomber who killed an American. Likewise for your argument about sitting despots: Just because we decline to give them the boot and offer the people in those countries a chance for self-rule doesn't mean we would be wrong to do so. I absolutely agree the Military should be 'impeeded' in a political manner. It is, was and continues to be. The Military does not enter into a conflict without being ordered to do so by the (civilian) President with backing and funding by the congress. Beyond that and some basic oversight you are simply a living room quarterback who seems eager to pick apart every hint of poor action without EVER offering anything in support of all the things that have gone well.
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"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery." - Winston Churchill "All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act out their dream with open eyes, to make it possible." Seven Pillars of Wisdom, T.E. Lawrence |
10-18-2010, 06:15 AM | #5 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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slims---there's a choice about how to proceed. we could find any number of "arguments" to exclude the other from speaking. you could continue the tack you adopt at the end of the last post. i could go after your academic credentials. but we are on a message board, so what's the point?
i am not inclined to see anything "good" coming from the war in iraq because it never should have happened. all that is possible are less-awful outcomes. the operation was incoherent from the beginning--any space in which the wolfowitz "plan" was confused with a Plan is not a space populated with competent people. and that space was, in the end, a civilian space populated by a republican administration that rationalized what they were doing in abstract pro-military language. in terms of "good" things that followed: i see the whole of the conflict as an absurd imperialist fever-dream. the *only* good outcome is that it ends. within that context, the "good" that comes is basically people who try to survive the psychosis of war survive it and manage, somehow, to get by that psychosis and build something in which civilized human beings can live. so make something that is the antithesis of war, particular war that had, from the outset, no coherent point. you could say the same kind of things about afghanistan. they'd only require more qualifications. basically there the united states finds itself party in a civil war and is looking for a face-saving way to declare the "mission" accomplished and get out. so the only "good" outcome there is the construction of a way to save face long enough to get out. because the war made no sense from the beginning. but we've had this discussion and don't agree. which is fine. i'll be interested to see what discussion follows once the documents are released.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
10-18-2010, 09:27 AM | #6 (permalink) | |
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Location: essex ma
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from today's washington post:
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also: washingtonpost.com so the ground is being plowed. downplay what's to be released before anyone knows exactly what's there and then ask that whatever it is not be reprinted even though it's not likely to be a problem.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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10-22-2010, 10:46 AM | #7 (permalink) | |||
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Location: essex ma
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wiki leaks has still not released the new cache of documents.
here, however, is an interesting piece from nieman journalism lab at harvard: Quote:
here's an ap story about the gates memo that undermines the (bogus) claim that american intel or military assets were put in danger by the last wikileaks action. it displaces the terrain of conflict from what was claimed to proactive political damage control.... Quote:
this link takes you to the story cited above in the link about the american war on wikileaks: The Internet War | Features | The Link from the article: Quote:
so what's at issue here isn't really an inside/outside matter that pits the military Insiders against those pesky civilians who imagine that the Professional Actions of Warriors should be subject to political control. the issue here is about information flows and who controls them. beyond that, the issue is about accountability. within that, it is interesting to find out about the lengths the american state is willing to go to in order to eliminate information sources that do not repeat the party line. war is peace. edit: this link takes you to a democracy now! interview with daniel ellsburg that outlines the war against wikileaks in more detail. http://www.democracynow.org/2010/10/..._intel_leak_in
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 10-22-2010 at 10:48 AM.. |
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10-22-2010, 11:36 AM | #9 (permalink) | |
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Location: essex ma
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WikiLeaks Iraq files to be released - Middle East - Al Jazeera English
it may be that the start of this process with go through al jazeera. this link to a video stream. this from the sydney morning herald: Quote:
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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10-23-2010, 02:42 PM | #10 (permalink) |
immoral minority
Location: Back in Ohio
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I'm not really sure what they are trying to do with these documents. The people who are against the war already knows most of the stuff, the people for the war won't care. Is there any 'real' news here? Did wikileaks pick some of the 'best' documents? Do any of these documents point any fingers of people high-up giving orders to violate the law or knowingly mislead Americans?
Just because the military withheld some information in order to win a conflict is not wrong. |
10-23-2010, 03:35 PM | #11 (permalink) | |
Paladin of the Palate
Location: Redneckville, NC
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I'm going to state this again, anyone who thinks we can wage a war in this modern age without collateral damage (i.e. civilians killed, structures destroyed, local economy damage) is an idiot. Wars have been fought since day one of human history and not one of them have been free of this kind of damage/killing. People all over history who had said, "I just want to raise my family and tend to my farm/house/business, not get caught up in this needless war" have been killed for just being in the wrong place at the wrong time/side/location/ect. The people who actually believe the news media spin about how these last two wars were "justified" and free of collateral damage to the local populace are not going to read these documents (or change their minds about it either). The people that are against the war are going to wave these documents around and yell about murder, genocide, big govement, and the rest of the bad things they yell about in rallies across the world. They are already set in the mindframe of "war is bad no matter the reason or who is fighting it". Basically, nothing is going to change. The people smart enough to understand what these documents entail, already know that we shouldn't be fighting these wars. The people dumb enough to believe the news media's take on this, won't read it because the news told them not to. I'm not sure why people are happy these documents are going to be released, it isn't like the government is going to step up and say, "Aw hell, guess you found us out. Alright boys, pack it up, let's get on out of here." When that happens, I'll be the first to say, "Well shit, I guess I was wrong." ***** I'm against the war and don't think we should be fighting it. Just throwing that out there.
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10-23-2010, 04:05 PM | #12 (permalink) | |
immoral minority
Location: Back in Ohio
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10-23-2010, 04:38 PM | #13 (permalink) | |
Living in a Warmer Insanity
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Location: Yucatan, Mexico
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10-24-2010, 07:47 AM | #14 (permalink) |
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Location: essex ma
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1.it's a bit curious that the content of these documents have already been evaluated before they've been read isn't it?
2. if you're serious about this "shit happens" approach, why bother with rules of war at all? torture? shit happens. massacres of civilians? shit happens. problems with accountability of mercenaries/contractors? shit happens. it's all good. shit just happens. 3. don't you find disturbing the idea that information flows are fragmented into myriad narrowcasts that enable consumers to customize infotainment to include only what they want to hear? so if you don't want to address a reality, you simply tune it out? so the war in iraq is a tv show that not everyone wants to watch. or think about. it's no different from glee, really.
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10-24-2010, 10:53 AM | #15 (permalink) | |
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Location: essex ma
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typically, not surprisingly, the best initial writing is not being published in american outlets.
this on the leak in general: Quote:
and this a startling, sickening litany of us collusion with torture in iraq: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010...torture-saddam
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 10-24-2010 at 11:10 AM.. |
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10-24-2010, 11:32 AM | #16 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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To those who support the wars: fucking listen to us next time because we know what we're talking about when we say, "Don't go to war." Every time we're ignored, shit like this is inevitable. Rampant torture and subsequent cover-ups, slaughtering innocent people, friendly fire, corruption, ignorance, extremism, hatred, cruelty and for absolutely nothing. Iraq in 2010 is worse than it was under Saddam and it will remain that way for the foreseeable future. Fucking listen to us next time.
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10-24-2010, 03:43 PM | #17 (permalink) | |
Living in a Warmer Insanity
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I would leave out the "it's all good" statement.
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10-24-2010, 04:03 PM | #18 (permalink) |
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Location: essex ma
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well, there's shit that happens and then there's stuff that goes way beyond shit that simply happens. read about the use of torture, how that "system" worked and what the role of rumsfeld et al...
Iraq war logs: US turned over captives to Iraqi torture squads | World news | The Guardian in the uk there's immediate calls for an investigation. in the states, there's football games to be watched. clearly the us politico-military order has suffered a very significant erosion of its legitimacy thanks to those fine fellows in the bush administration such that it's clear that there's concern about anything like an accounting or investigation or even honest statements concerning obvious problems to do with the iraq war---which are if anything worse than we knew---and that is one of the main revelations in these documents. the pervasive complacency/indifference----coupled with the lack of substantial media exposure (when compared with the independent, the guardian and al jazeera) seems almost an opinion management result.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
10-24-2010, 04:11 PM | #19 (permalink) | |||
Paladin of the Palate
Location: Redneckville, NC
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War will be nothing but puppies and sunshine because of these documents. If nothing else this will make governments of the world BETTER at covering their tracks. Quote:
War is not rational and the only rules set in it, are the rules set by the leaders of the war. If those in charge don't follow their own rules, then there are no rules. How many times in human history have we seen genocide and other atrocities like "salting the earth" that ruined land for generations. War /= Sunshine and Puppies. |
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10-25-2010, 07:52 AM | #21 (permalink) |
Living in a Warmer Insanity
Super Moderator
Location: Yucatan, Mexico
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Yea, I'm always kind of amazed that after all the documentation, all the written history and all the so called evolution of man we're still resolving conflicts at a caveman level.
Old rich men start wars and profit from them while young men (and now women) go fight them. And innocent people suffer and die in the process. Been that way since the first man figured out how to throw a rock at another. Seems pretty ludicrous, doesn't it?
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I used to drink to drown my sorrows, but the damned things have learned how to swim- Frida Kahlo Vice President Starkizzer Fan Club |
10-25-2010, 08:56 AM | #22 (permalink) |
warrior bodhisattva
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Location: East-central Canada
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Tully, what are you talking about? Cavemen didn't have the horrific, nightmarish tools of war that we do today.
It's not that nothing changes; it's that things get worse. For fuck's sake, just look at the 20th century. Now, more than ever, we need to know what the hell is going on.
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10-25-2010, 09:28 AM | #23 (permalink) | |
I Confess a Shiver
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10-25-2010, 09:54 AM | #24 (permalink) |
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Location: essex ma
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i still think that the iraq war will be remembered as a moment at which the united states gave away something fundamental about itself and then didn't have the integrity or courage to look it down, to take account of it, and still less to hold the oligarchy responsible.
i'm not arguing with tully and eden's assessments of what's likely to happen as a result of the leak. i mean, just look at the continuing gap in coverage between the heroic us media and that of the guardian and independent and al-jazeera. apparently when dod "asks" that a story not be covered, they nearly get their wish domestically anyway. i wish it were otherwise. obviously posting this way in a messageboard is an index of little more than frustration, or a desire to distance myself somehow from the overwhelming blase response, like systematic torture and the killing of in the area of 100,000 civilians falls under the rubric of "shit that happens" because "war is hell"---and still more from the non-reaction of alot of other folk who really don't seem to be interested at all. maybe that's because they're not being told that they are already interested. and americans are passive, don't you think? they like doing what they're told so long as they can pretend they aren't being told what they like doing. and they don't like bad news. and they don't like war crimes when the americans are complicit in them. they want to feel good while they sit on their couches. i am btw sitting on a couch.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
10-25-2010, 09:56 AM | #25 (permalink) |
Currently sour but formerly Dlishs
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Location: Australia/UAE
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are you saying Will should be President?
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10-25-2010, 10:08 AM | #26 (permalink) |
I Confess a Shiver
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Hmm. "You can't make an omelet without breaking a few eggs," is a good 'n snarky one for this situation.
... Rumor has it a good number of Iraqis are actually glad the US stumbled into the country and wrecked everything. They're under the mistaken impression that things are going to be better, that progress has been made. Stupid Iraqis. ... War is bad!* *until you run out of food, fuel, land, and the ability to sit on your couch and complain Last edited by Plan9; 10-25-2010 at 10:11 AM.. |
10-25-2010, 10:15 AM | #27 (permalink) |
People in masks cannot be trusted
Location: NYC
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What are the odds of the UN coming out and condemning US or investigating USA over these documents. My bet is nil.
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10-25-2010, 10:21 AM | #28 (permalink) |
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Location: essex ma
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right, plan 9. i'm sure there are, just as i'm also sure that there are alot of people dead for nothing.
and just as i'm also sure that from the point of view of the use of torture as an instrument to attempt social control that the new boss was pretty much the same as the old boss. but hey, what's a few war crimes? war is heck. and to point out those----ooopsie daisy!-----war crimes...why that's just complaining. but i'm sure you're right that there are people who think it's just swell that the united states fabricated a case for war and then launched it. for example, i'm sure those fine folk at xe/blackwater are still kinda psyched about the whole thing. and you're right: those important perspectives are being ignored when people read the wikileaks cache. that's because civilians are like parents in that old dj jazzy jeff/fresh prince track. they just don't understand. and so you're no doubt correct that it really is the exclusive purview of people who were in iraq to talk about the politics of the war, to talk about the political realities that shape it and the information that we've been given. because we really ought to be focusing on the good stuff. like the case for war in the first place could have been an even more shabby piece of shit than it was. and like that there were only 100,000 civilians killed and not, say, 200,000. that is a good thing. glass half full, dontcha know. accentuate the positive. war is peace. except not all wars are equal. and this war was less equal than most. that's because it was unnecessary. launched for no reason, really, apart from the imperialist fever dreams of those fellows at the project for a new american century. i'd think you'd be more than a little pissed off about that, getting stuck in harms way for no real reason. i would think you'd want to understand how the fuck that was possible. but i'm just sitting on my couch. what do i know?
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite Last edited by roachboy; 10-25-2010 at 10:24 AM.. |
10-25-2010, 10:32 AM | #29 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Things are still not as good as they are under Saddam, but even if they were, we still invaded a sovereign nation which was no threat to us and killed between 100,000 and 270,000 Iraqis in less than 10 years, based on conservative estimates. We displaced millions. Despite the fact we've poured billions into the country, there are still many areas without power, water and waste management. There's still a civil war, though it's smaller than it was before.
I suppose I'm glad some Iraqi folks wanted us to invade and destroy their country, but their happiness isn't worth 100,000-270,000 lives, close to $1t in money we'll never see again, and what will certainly be significant blowback in the coming decades. The next 9/11 will be because of our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the cycle of ignorance, hatred, and violence will continue until the United States finally collapses. Most of the information in the wikileaks release probably won't surprise those who have posted about the war here, but they should serve as a reminder of what has happened, a way to keep the numbness and apathy away. |
10-25-2010, 10:35 AM | #30 (permalink) | |
Living in a Warmer Insanity
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Location: Yucatan, Mexico
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I agree we should know what's going on. I really don't see anything in these leaks that I didn't already believe to be true. Raise your hand if you honestly believed we weren't torturing people. Raise your hand if you thought there weren't a whole lot more civilian causalities then the DOD was reporting. So I guess they verify to some degree. But I also believe some, maybe a lot, are inaccurate when taken at face value. A lot of these are field reports given in the fog of war. Plus they concern me in that they may be putting more troops at risk. I know we're done with Iraq and it's over over there but I keep getting e-mails from friends who seem to still be there. I like not to put them in any more danger then they already are.
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10-25-2010, 10:41 AM | #31 (permalink) |
I Confess a Shiver
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Roachboy,
Well, it's your couch. Your self-righteous furniture isn't any different than my self-righteous furniture outside of a ten digit grid. Forgive my lack of skill at hanging sarcasm tags. I did enjoy your 1984 diatribe and, shocking as it may be, generally concur. At no point did I refer to Iraq as a war. The GWoT and actual wars are different creatures. Senior military officials don't even see it as a "War War." I think the distinction matters here for the purposes of the discussion and is something that has been generally ignored in this thread. Continue the "the man is evil" circle jerk. I failed to heed the appropriate The Academy's submenu again. My bad. Last edited by Plan9; 10-25-2010 at 10:45 AM.. |
10-25-2010, 10:54 AM | #32 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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plan 9---there's no real subtext to this. and i'm not terribly interested in "the man is evil" as a line of thinking. i haven't been since i was 19. that was a long time ago.
one problem with the definition of the gwot fiction is that it enabled rumsfeld et al to decide that the rules did not apply. so it was ok to, say, turn people over the the secular arm (inquisition-speak) and then "not investigate" the torture that in which they were entirely complicit. with plausible deniability dontcha know. because, well, they're just "reporting not investigating".... so it's not a surprise. and there's a sense in which i think people got kind of inured to reports of such business enabled by the bush administration somehow. acted like it was a bad tv show instead of what it was..war crimes, you know. the kind of shit that would've had the lot of them on trial had the united states committed to only real crime, which is to loose a war. but i digress. personally, like i said at the outset, i would hope these documents function to build some level of pressure for even something like the chilcot commission. a public accounting for what happened--even as i am pretty sure that the main reason chilcot happened was that everyone knew that beyond whatever actions blair took there was the united states to blame. it's much harder for a single party state with two right wings to undertake an investigation of a bogus war that was consented to by much of the political class in a context where there's no-one anywhere to blame but ourselves. i'm also interested in this as an fight over information control. just to you know. but it's quite nice that you are so quick to assume that this is a one-dimensional thread and that, in another way, you are the only person really qualified to make adequately complex judgments about iraq. it's a strange viewpoint, one that you seem to share with slims. i confess that i don't get it. fact is that in all of this, my personal interest is in the political and/or command conditions of possibility for things like torture, for overlooking the trigger-happy folk at checkpoints, for overlooking the mercenary psychopaths from blackwater.... that's different from going after the daily routines of the people who signed up and ended up there. and even from questioning their motives. i'm not entirely sure what made you think the situation was otherwise.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
10-25-2010, 11:01 AM | #33 (permalink) |
I Confess a Shiver
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Ha! I'm not qualified to clean toilets. I can't make complex judgments about my toenail clippings. Stop putting text in my profile. You flatter me.
... My interest in this thread has to do with WillRavel's bloodthirsty TEOTWAWKI / Edwin Starr commentary. I figure it had to be balanced out with something or it'd create a wormhole. Please know that I wouldn't dare step in the intellectual ring with you on anything above the debate of chocolate vs. vanilla. Last edited by Plan9; 10-25-2010 at 11:08 AM.. |
10-25-2010, 11:10 AM | #35 (permalink) |
I Confess a Shiver
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I'm here, brother.
*double rimshot* ... Edit: Just had a spark of reasoning as I was pissing into the corner of a fly-infested plastic closet under a full moon. How romantic. I think my problem with this whole topic is scale. You lofty academics are talking about these big numbers that, quite frankly, my cromag brain can't handle. Me dumdum. All I can think about is the faces of the people I've worked with. I guess that's where I get my stupid self-righteous from. It leaves me wondering where you guys get yours from. You talk about the 200,000 you've never seen. I talk about the dozen or so I've shook hands with. And I get it: You can't make a shit sandwich into anything but a shit sandwich. Other than voting for the next suitman that'll send us overseas, you guys help anybody? Last edited by Plan9; 10-25-2010 at 11:29 AM.. |
10-25-2010, 11:24 AM | #36 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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i think that's something to keep in mind, what will said.
this is a frustrating situation. personally, i think it's ethically and politically pretty significant, that the united states launches a war on shabby false pretenses---why that hadn't happened since most of the actions involving treaties and native americans then the spanish-american war (remember the maine) then world war 1 (dubious because we were selling weapons to both sides until we stopped) then the various coups d-etat in latin america and africa then vietnam. ok so maybe that's just how the us o a rolls. ugh.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
10-25-2010, 11:28 AM | #37 (permalink) |
I Confess a Shiver
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Please don't call it a war. And don't call it frustrating.
With employment what it is... I'm sure the deployed baby-killers in US camo are glad to be getting a paycheck so they can feed their bratlings. Last edited by Plan9; 10-25-2010 at 11:31 AM.. |
10-25-2010, 11:54 AM | #39 (permalink) |
... a sort of licensed troubleshooter.
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Liberal, as it's used now, is another way of saying, "I honestly care about the well-being of people I've never met or otherwise interacted with". The smugness comes much later, at least 15 minutes, and is really only a byproduct.
I voted against the guy that wanted to invade Iran and stay in Iraq. I don't have any other power in this situation, and I have a sneaking suspicion even the voting thing is a bit of a joke. |
10-25-2010, 01:52 PM | #40 (permalink) | |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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selections:
Showcase: Read selected reports the main interface: Wikileaks Iraq War Diaries ---------- Post added at 09:52 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:51 PM ---------- Quote:
alot of academic understanding is about collections of information---counting things, modelling things, writing stories that connect those models to other models. it's like that in any social science. the same business obtains in the physical sciences too, but there's more numbers and fewer obvious gaps (even as almost everything about the physical sciences, about what knowledge is produced, is based on models which don't seem like models because of all them numbers).... ideally there's a continuum with the particularities of individual experience. but there isn't always. historians don't have to worry about that so much usually because the people they deal with are all dead. i don't think this is the same problem that's here exactly. inside/outside, someplace you were the people you know and knew in a fucked up situation vs. people who see in the chain of decisions that resulted in your being there and knowing these people a disastrous political situation. i can see how there'd be problems with talking across that divide, but it doesn't seem to me that it's an academic vs. cromag (your term) or whatever problem. what is seems like is that one perspective dissolves the other---the same thing's happened with slims. two different registers of claims to "the real" about the war in iraq or afghanistan on the one hand---release of documents that show fragments of the reality in theater that pose significant interpretive problems. code violations. people getting to read codes they don't necessarily understand, which is a screen----i think (even as it could be true) for an intrusion of norms particular to civilian world into this other hectic dangerous space. that there are problems--ethical, political and hopefully legal---with the rumsfeld dod position on torture---that these documents demonstrate that the reality was much bigger and distributed quite differently than we might have thought by way of by ghraib---that it was widely known about and condoned by "report don't do anything" is not an intrusion into the day-to-day experience of ordinary people in ordinary situations--it's a glimpse of how collusion with war crimes looks. and the top-down hierarchy is a kind of given. this is all moving around the question of whether an actual discussion about this sort of thing is possible across different types of experience or if they're inevitably going to be what they seem to be so far---folk with one type of experience excluding the other from talking as if there's only one "reality" to do with a war and that being on a front line is what defines it. but it's obvious that anything as complex as a non-war, a not war-war, involves any number of levels of reality. so what to do? anything? it may be that wikileaks triggers a type of response that i don't understand at all. is that the case?
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
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Tags |
cache, defense, department, documents, iraq, wikileaks |
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