09-18-2004, 12:22 PM | #1 (permalink) | |||
Loser
Location: RPI, Troy, NY
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Why Did We Invade Iraq?
I see a lot of people on these boards saying we invaded Iraq for a lot of different reasons: WMDs, oil, terrorists, hussein is an evil evil man, etc. And of course these are what you're supposed to think. That's what the government told you.
I'd like to introduce you to the Project for the New American Century (http://www.newamericancentury.org/). Their statement of principles was written in 1997: Quote:
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Now I'd like to show you a letter that the group sent to Bush when he was President and the highlighted people above had already implanted themselves as the makers of foreign policy. Quote:
9/11 = terrorist = bad = hussein = iraq. Iraq = evil dictatorship with suffering people = { North Korea, Iran, etc. } The leap is not a large one after what has already happened. So I say to my fellow war-haters, don't cite North Korea and Iran as reasons to not go to war with Iraq. If the neoconservative members of the PNAC stay in power for another 4 years, we will be at war with both these soverign nations and others in a public "desire to spread democracy and stop terror" and a private "desire to assert american leadership (read dominance) upon the world". |
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09-18-2004, 04:34 PM | #2 (permalink) |
Guest
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I'm not sure exactly what the motives of the Bush administration are - they very might well be part of the world domination conspiracy theory you have spoken of, or the Halliburton "controversy", but I take all conspiracy theories with a large dose of salt - and sometimes I don't agree with how the war is conducted (read: certain bombing campaigns in Fallujah, failure to appeal to the people of Iraq, or Abu Ghraib), but my own rationalization goes something like this:
(this was written by me for another forum, and has been cross-posted)
War is not pretty, but isolation is not the answer. Neither are half-witted sanctions that prey on the people of Iraq, but not the regime that controls it. I would have preferred a slower invasion, but that would have provided Saddam with even more time to bunker down. "All that is required for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing." -Edmund Burke Maybe the Bush administration are not good men, but what were they to do? Last edited by jconnolly; 09-18-2004 at 04:41 PM.. Reason: Editing. |
09-18-2004, 06:19 PM | #3 (permalink) |
can't help but laugh
Location: dar al-harb
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rukkyg,
i think your preconceived notions clouded your reading of this. the article says nothing about about invasion, all it does is state the removal of saddam hussein as a valid and necessary objective. invasion is, of course, a method of doing just that... but not the only way. in fact, it provides specific statements concerning backing anti-saddam groups within iraq... suggesting an internal coup rather than an invasion. if you had read this before the war i think you would have derived significantly different conclusions about its intent. also, people don't "implant themselves" into foreign policy, they are chosen and appointed.
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If you will not fight when your victory will be sure and not too costly, you may come to the moment when you will have to fight with all the odds against you and only a precarious chance for survival. There may even be a worse case. You may have to fight when there is no hope of victory, because it is better to perish than to live as slaves. ~ Winston Churchill |
09-18-2004, 06:48 PM | #4 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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Wolfowitz doctrine...
This war is about oil and colonial interests, just not in the current context as thought by leftie's/anti war people... Who gets the majority of their oil from Iraq/ South East Asia ( Japan, China), Western Europe (France, Germany). The longterm establishment of an American presence in Iraq will ultimately assure a lower global military build up of troops and interests in the middle east. If we have military dominance in the ME region over the nations that have direct natural resource interests, this will assure a lower military buildup in said nations (Primarly(sp) Western Europe and hopefully China). They will have no exports of global military interests in the ME region because we are there and regulating it.
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
09-18-2004, 07:07 PM | #5 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
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What about this twist on the same words: 9/11 confirmed everbody's worst fears about fundamentalist terrorism? That, in fact, it IS a danger to be dealt with and not only the paranoid delusions of some frantic CIA operative working 20 hours a night in the bowels of the intelligence labs, a la Richard Clarke?? Call it 'having a contigency plan'. Last edited by powerclown; 09-18-2004 at 07:38 PM.. |
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09-18-2004, 07:22 PM | #6 (permalink) | |
Junk
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" In Canada, you can tell the most blatant lie in a calm voice, and people will believe you over someone who's a little passionate about the truth." David Warren, Western Standard. |
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09-18-2004, 07:27 PM | #7 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Right here
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first of all, many of us had read those papers before the war. And we were the ones explaining to people that the posturing Bush was doing was immaterial--we were definately headed for war.
And we cited those papers as our evidence that the war plans were drafted and waiting for an opening. Secondly, the way mojo described the war for oil situation is not contrary to leftist positions. He just wants it to be, because it happens to be correct. Depending on how many threads this current version of TFP still has, one can run a search on my name and find a similar, although more in-depth, exposition of the left's position in regards to "war for oil." I don't know if he lifted those thoughts from that thread, but he certainly didn't appear to agree when many of us posted those same assertions long ago. In any case, I'm very interested to see the data on freshwater bodies in Iraq. I find that tidbit more interesting and problematic than oil reserves.
__________________
"The theory of a free press is that truth will emerge from free discussion, not that it will be presented perfectly and instantly in any one account." -- Walter Lippmann "You measure democracy by the freedom it gives its dissidents, not the freedom it gives its assimilated conformists." -- Abbie Hoffman |
09-18-2004, 07:59 PM | #8 (permalink) |
Kiss of Death
Location: Perpetual wind and sorrow
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Smooth I never argued that the war was about oil, the only time I argued was when people were like...
"No blood for oil1!1!!1111 Bushco is teh ghey and lam50rs!
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To win a war you must serve no master but your ambition. |
09-18-2004, 08:42 PM | #10 (permalink) |
Winner
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There's no secret conspiracy here, it's all right in the open. The thing is, hardly anyone has been paying attention.
PNAC was a think tank formed by so-called "neoconservatives" in order to develop a new foreign policy for conservatives in the post-Cold War environment. This policy had nothing to do with countering the threat of terrorism here at home. Instead, it had to do with asserting American power and influence abroad in the hopes of maintaining order and challenging unfriendly regimes. When 9-11 occurred, these guys saw their opportunity and tried to use the threat of terror against the United States as an excuse to push their unrelated agenda. Afghanistan was merely a launching pad from which to begin their previously determined plans in Iraq. Even though they said that a "key goal" should be to "capture or kill Osama bin Laden", they were all too ready to move onto goal #2 before the primary mission had been accomplished. As a result, they severely compromised the War on Terror. It would be alright if the War in Iraq would have made us safer or at least benefitted us in some way. I mean I'm happy for the Iraqi people who can now live without fear of Saddam, I really am. But I'm also sad for the 1000 American soldiers who have lost their lives, the thousands more who have been maimed beyond repair, and the thousands of Iraqi civilians who have been caught in the crossfire. I'm sad that my children and potential grandchildren will have to pay off the $200 billion and counting bill. All for what? I don't think anyone knows, not even PNAC. Any way you look at it, this war was a mistake, a colossal mistake. If this is the new American century, I want no part of it. Some like Pat Buchanan are saying that the neocons are out, but I don't believe it. Not as long as Cheney, Wolfowitz, and their ilk roam the White House. The only way to get them out is to vote for John Kerry this November and so that's what I'm doing. |
09-19-2004, 06:14 AM | #11 (permalink) | |
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Last edited by jconnolly; 09-19-2004 at 06:23 AM.. |
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09-19-2004, 06:25 AM | #12 (permalink) |
Loser
Location: RPI, Troy, NY
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I would not say this is a conspiracy theory at all.
Cheney was picked for vice president. Then he influenced Bush to pick a few of his buddies from the PNAC. They all believe that the only way to continue in the world is to assert american dominance on the rest of the world, in effect, advancing america at the expense of anyone who doesn't agree with our values. I'd be the first to say that *I* think our values are the best, but I don't think that everyone should be forced at gun- or cruise missle-point to accept them as well. |
09-19-2004, 12:25 PM | #15 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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if you read the project for a new american century site through, you can see what i think is a more coherent vision that underpinned war in iraq: it was the theater across which the american state, in its military expression, was to be inserted as lone hegemon, not answerable or bound to international law, represented by the un.
the motives for the second war link directly to the neocon understanding of the first. i have thought from the outset that this adversarial relation to the un explained the shabbiness of the administration's case--it does not take much to see in it an expression of contempt for the institution itself--a contempt that the neocons might have thought vindicated if the war in iraq had gone as they fantasized it would. i think the wolfowitz crowd had a vision, believed it, threw the dice on the basis of that vision, and lost--horribly, completely, entirely. in a rational world, this gamble and loss should spell a parallel, ignominious defeat for the adminsitration as a whole in the next election---much of what i have been posting over the past week or so has been directed at trying to point out how the political culture being developed by the right is geared toward making it possible to explain away this fiasco. a capacity for collective denial which is itself a kind of horrifying glimpse of what a future would look like should this political tendency become dominant for any period of time. if these people retain power long enough to enforce their view of the world, their version of history, and of politics onto children via the political instrument of education, then future historians will find themselves having to explain the early phases of a collective retreat into fantasy as the first phase of the collapse of the american empire, and the passage into a different arrangement. they will probably look to questions like lead in the wine to explain it. what no-one wants to say, but what seems obvious, is that american troops have died in numbers now over 1000 and 12-15,000 iraqis have died---all for a hallucination of american global military hegemony--the primary function of which was to keep the world safe for the increasingly outmoded entity known as the nation-state, and that only--and i mean only--because the right in particular (traditional and neocon alike) cannot think of how it could possibly operate outside that framework. lots of people are dead because the bush administration chose to indulge this absurd attempt at political self-preservation engineered by a particular rightwing faction. there is a way to link the war to oil as well, but i think it explains less about the administration's actions than does the nationalist project.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
09-19-2004, 02:28 PM | #16 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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The purpose of invading Iraq was to cement, in the minds of state leaders, that they will pay a price for open or covert support of terrorist actions against the US. Without regard to UN or other "allied" positions the US would, in the future, act to defend itself by going on the offensive.
If there was another state who stood so blatantly in opposition to the US for decades and supported terrorism regardless of the presence of oil we would have invaded them as well. Look at Libya as an example. We attacked them on several occasions with the trigger very nearly being pulled on invasion when the Marine barracks was bombed in Lebanon. A key decision that shaped US response to terrorist acts was made in those days. That decision was one of not going tit for tat with terrorists. Deny them a resonse and a world stage and they would slink away. Since then states sponsoring terrorism and terrorist networks themselves learned the US would take being bloodied with only the mildest and most ineffective response and they learned that they could take the world stage by inflicting massive injury on innocents. Denying terrorists safe havens and unobstructed support is the first step in protecting the US. Allowing terrorist organizations to fester and grow with no serious constraint resulted in the exponential growth in audacity and civilian death tolls we've seen over the last 3 decades.
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Strive to be more curious than ignorant. |
09-19-2004, 02:54 PM | #17 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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except that iraq had no connection to the war on terrorism....
iraq was a central agenda item for the project for a new american century folk from 1991--check out their letter to clinton from 1998--same rationale, point for point, for attacking iraq. every inquiry has pointed out that there was no such link between hussein and "terrorism" as is presently defined. if this is the case, then why do reasonable people continue to float this argument?
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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; 09-19-2004 at 02:57 PM.. |
09-19-2004, 02:56 PM | #18 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Right here
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The reason I don't believe your scenario, onetime, is because I do not agree with the premise: that nations believed that the US would remain idle while they supported attacks against the population.
I look at things like the fact that we have secured a springboard on one side of Iraq and are currently working to secure one on the other side. That one springboard is literally on an incredible resevoir of oil, and that our current military depends on oil to operate, leads me to recognize the long-term, stategic import of our actions. However, I disagree that our current reliance on military aggression was the only, or even the best, method of securing safety for our citizens. I find most disturbing (and this is the issue I am most upset about in regards to being opposed to the war) that the plans as laid out for the military planning were not described to the people. Not only could the citizens decide, on an informed basis, whether they wanted to support those plans, the issue is not even part of the official canon. So when people like roachboy or myself raise them, we look like loons screaming in the wilderness. Some conservatives have agree with this mini-analysis, but argue that the safety of the public hinges upon some secrecy in government. I don't agree with that. That is when this boils down to ideology for me. The other issues, if allowed to be discussed in public discourse (as of yet, they are not due to our own government's obfuscation of the underpinnings) are discussable rationally.
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"The theory of a free press is that truth will emerge from free discussion, not that it will be presented perfectly and instantly in any one account." -- Walter Lippmann "You measure democracy by the freedom it gives its dissidents, not the freedom it gives its assimilated conformists." -- Abbie Hoffman |
09-19-2004, 03:38 PM | #19 (permalink) |
Tilted
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Finally, an intelligent non-ranting discussion. Kudos to everyone involved.
Roachboy has produced the clearest analysis I have read. The rationale of the pre-emptive strike falls apart completely due to our utter failure of connecting Saddam Hussein to terrorist acts. It was the basis of an entirely new doctrine and it failed! If it were not for Americans new belief that "the only thing we have to fear... is everything" there would be a political reckoning. Going to war to show other countries you can't be messed with is the worst possible case for war. Would you give your life for such a rationale? |
09-20-2004, 06:16 AM | #20 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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Iraq was the prime example of the "worst" that could happen to states who stood in opposition to the UN and US. The net result? Saddam's lifestyle didn't change. His money didn't go away. His power remained virtually in tact. Even when invading and dissecting a sovereign neighbor Saddam ended up losing his military and control of his airspace. Hardly a significant price to pay given the potential gain he would have seen if the world allowed his invasion of Kuwait to stand. Hell he even tried to assassinate the first President Bush and he still enjoyed his many palaces and cars. The fate of Hussein was the very worst that states who sponsored terrorism would face. Now that fate has changed. Now they are absolutely aware that the things these state leaders have worked for most of their adult lives, power and position, can be taken away without following the normal political channels that can drag on for decades.
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Strive to be more curious than ignorant. |
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09-20-2004, 06:31 AM | #21 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: Charlotte, NC
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One word... Oil.
Oh wait... one more... Vendetta.
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09-20-2004, 06:34 AM | #22 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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__________________
Strive to be more curious than ignorant. |
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09-20-2004, 07:03 AM | #23 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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onetime: i suspect that we are actually close to agreement at the level of content, in your response to my last post--i would frame it differently and derive different conclusions--but i think you can, if you are so inclined, insert your last analysis into the logic of the post about the pnac project and see for yourself.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
09-20-2004, 07:13 AM | #24 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
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Kerry this morning in a speech: "Saddam was indeed a devil who deserved to go to hell."
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Regarding Iraq & the UN.... "In November 2002, the U.N. Security Council voted on its 17th resolution ordering Iraq to disarm. All 15 Security Council members — including France, Russia and China — voted for U.N. Security Council Resolution 1441. The resolution warned of “serious consequences” should Saddam fail to comply this time." "The resolution warned of “serious consequences” should Saddam fail to comply this time." What kind of ridiculous game is it when a world body such as the UN has to warn an aggressive dictator 17 times to come into compliance?? It is unfortunate that the UN lacked the resolve to enforce any 17 of their own resolutions. Which brings up the question: What credibility does the UN 'Security Council' have when it fails to live up to responsibilities it sets out for itself? What kind of security does it provide to the world - what type of example does this set to those behaving illegally - when it has proven itself too weak to carry out its own rules? A list of the 17 UN Security Council Resolutions broken by Hussein. Security Council Resolutions Concerning Iraq Grounds for punishment were laid out by the UN, and carried out by the US. |
09-20-2004, 07:16 AM | #25 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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Nevermind got it. Not sure why you think my first post doesn't also coincide then.
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Strive to be more curious than ignorant. Last edited by onetime2; 09-20-2004 at 07:19 AM.. |
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09-20-2004, 07:21 AM | #26 (permalink) | |
Psycho
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09-20-2004, 07:26 AM | #27 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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__________________
Strive to be more curious than ignorant. |
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09-20-2004, 07:40 AM | #28 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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onetime---all you would have to do is excise the link to terrorism and substitute the neocon nationalist agenda, and we would be in parallel places. i would maintain that the "link" is fictional, as was the rest of the case bush presented...but apart from that, the logic you outlined in the post i referenced is not far from the neocon position as i interpret it.
sorry about the acronym...
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
09-20-2004, 07:41 AM | #29 (permalink) |
Psycho
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Israel has indeed ignored Security Council Resolutions, which is quite a surprise considering the veto power of the US:
http://www.vicpeace.org/fact-sheets/FactSheet6vpn.pdf Here are some of the other Security Council Resolutions that would've passed had it not been for the US vetoing them. In almost all the cases the US is the only Security Council member to vote against them: http://freepalestine.com/US%20Vetoes...0Palestine.htm |
09-20-2004, 08:35 AM | #30 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Detroit, MI
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Great links Happy....
I particularly like Resolution 1172. "1998. India/Pakistan. Calls upon India & Pakistan to cease their development of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles." Yeah, when Hell freezes over. I would address the situation this way: It is in the best interests of the US (and don't forget that every country only ever does anything out of self-interest) to see a democratic ally like Israel firmly rooted in a resource-critical area like the Middle East which is otherwise populated by unstable governments run by oligarchies (Saudi Arabia), dictatorships (Syria), religious theocracies (Iran). The fact that these entities sit upon - and thus control - the rest of the world's oil supplies is troubling to say the least. In this context, supporting Israel as a Democracy, a deterrent, a spy, an ally is geopolitically desireable. |
09-20-2004, 09:35 AM | #31 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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As far as why we're not invading them, Israel's continued existence (or the current leadership's control of the state) does not encourage other states to attack the US or dismiss UN wishes without fear of retribution. At least not IMO.
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Strive to be more curious than ignorant. |
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09-20-2004, 11:38 PM | #32 (permalink) |
Psycho
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Israel's mere existence does not encourage attacks on the US, but Israel's current leadership (who is one of the most hated figures in the Muslim world, even before he was elected to power) and the US's support of him, does.
Anyway, the reasons for the invasion seem to have shifted again. Are you now saying that it was Saddam's public hatred of the US that was the justification for the invasion? |
09-21-2004, 04:56 AM | #33 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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__________________
Strive to be more curious than ignorant. |
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09-21-2004, 05:29 AM | #35 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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__________________
Strive to be more curious than ignorant. |
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09-21-2004, 08:23 AM | #37 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: Indianapolis
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How about continually locked on to planes in the no-fly zone, and firing AA guns and SAMs at them?
http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory...l/iraq/1817943
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From the day of his birth Gilgamesh was called by name. |
09-21-2004, 08:43 AM | #38 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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it does not matter, really, whether hussein did not did not threaten to united states.
what matters, as i argued above, is that the neocons saw in the first gulf war a nasty precedent in which the agreement about extent of engagement fashioned amongst the members of the coalition limited what they saw as the johnwayne narrative about american unilateral military action---again, the second iraq war follows from teh first, not from anything in between. hussein was a symbol, whose importance and actions had to be inflated so that he was understood as important enough to warrant a rerun the second time around. the neocons saw hussein as violating the rules of the game as they understood it--but without the first gulf war framing the matter, he would have been of no consequence, his actions overlooked, as the americans are wont to do with dictators whose general politics are convenient for the americans and their interests. when i agreed in general terms with onetime, i posed teh caveat that the agreement was predicated on inserting the narrative he outlined into the framework outlined by the project for a new american century, for example--which enables onetime's narrative to operate, but with all the terms for understanding that narrative switched to other grounds.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
09-21-2004, 08:45 AM | #39 (permalink) |
Super Moderator
Location: essex ma
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it does not matter, really, whether hussein did not did not threaten to united states.
what matters, as i argued above, is that the neocons saw in the first gulf war a nasty precedent in which the agreement about extent of engagement fashioned amongst the members of the coalition limited what they saw as the johnwayne narrative of american interests, which was about legitimating unilateral military action---again, the second iraq war follows from the first, not from anything in between. hussein was a symbol, whose importance and actions had to be inflated so that he was understood as important enough to warrant a rerun of the first gulf war. the neocons saw hussein as violating the rules of the game as they understood it--but without the first gulf war framing the matter, he would have been of no consequence, his actions overlooked, as the americans are wont to do with dictators whose general politics are convenient for the americans and their interests. when i agreed in general terms with onetime, i posed the caveat that the agreement was predicated on inserting the narrative he outlined into the framework outlined by the project for a new american century, for example--which enables onetime's narrative to operate, but with all the terms for understanding that narrative switched to other grounds.
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a gramophone its corrugated trumpet silver handle spinning dog. such faithfulness it hear it make you sick. -kamau brathwaite |
09-21-2004, 09:45 AM | #40 (permalink) | |
Junkie
Location: NJ
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And yes, now countries do face the prospect of regime change. In the last 30 years the US hasn't put its military at substantial risk to achieve political ends. That's no longer the case. Of course, it's unlikely we'll be doing it again in the near future but there was most assuredly a price paid by Hussein's regime and by the leaders of the Taliban.
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Strive to be more curious than ignorant. |
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