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Old 10-20-2004, 09:22 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Should the U.S. go into Sudan?

I know this is a topic in national congress, and I think that we should stay out. We have too many problems with Iraq, Iran, and N. Korea to be turning our attention to Sudan

Any more ideas?
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Old 10-20-2004, 09:24 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Perhaps the French will help out
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Old 10-20-2004, 10:20 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Send the French in to show the Sudanese how to surrender.
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Old 10-20-2004, 10:52 PM   #4 (permalink)
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No, we shouldn't go into the Sudan. If we went in, the far left would claim it was just another imperialist adventure.
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Old 10-20-2004, 11:07 PM   #5 (permalink)
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If it were Christians killing muslims maybe the world would care.
The U.N. hasnt even batted an eyelash at this crisis
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Old 10-21-2004, 01:19 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Perhaps the French will help out
Geez, can you actually add something to a discussion?



I think it depends if we (as "the world") can achieve something there, it is one thing to invade and to bomb everything to shreds but what then? can we build up a nation there that works? Do we have a plan what to do there? And most important, are we willing to spend the necessary manpower/money etc. ?
If not chances are that we just kill a few guys and don't really change anything or even make think even worse

Personally, I don't think we can do much. Iraq shows how complicated nation building can be, and the situation in Sudan is more chaotic than it was in Iraq.
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Old 10-21-2004, 08:37 AM   #7 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pacifier
Personally, I don't think we can do much. Iraq shows how complicated nation building can be, and the situation in Sudan is more chaotic than it was in Iraq.
Leave it alone and let it rot itself out. A strategy of apathy & surrender. Seems to be how the rest of the world feels about the situation as well.

On one hand, it is astounding to me how only 10 years after THE EXACT SAME THING HAPPENED IN RWANDA, the rest of the world is letting it happen again right before it eyes. On the other, it is a case study of how geo-politics work in the real world, as opposed to the theory, morality, ideology that is preached about in popular culture and academia. If anyone cared to put in the slightest effort, I would imagine the problem could be solved in a matter of weeks.
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Old 10-21-2004, 09:03 AM   #8 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by powerclown
Leave it alone and let it rot itself out. A strategy of apathy & surrender. Seems to be how the rest of the world feels about the situation as well.
It worked so well with Afghanistan in the 90s
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Old 10-21-2004, 09:04 AM   #9 (permalink)
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Should we go into the Sudan? No, absolutely not. Our credibility with the Muslim world is rock bottom right now, and it would be asking for another debacle. Even if we had an administration who belived in planning how to win the whole war instead of the first battle, it would be remarkably bad idea.

That said, someone should go into Sudan. It's a damn shame we can't.
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Old 10-21-2004, 09:05 AM   #10 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by powerclown
Leave it alone and let it rot itself out. A strategy of apathy & surrender. Seems to be how the rest of the world feels about the situation as well.

On one hand, it is astounding to me how only 10 years after THE EXACT SAME THING HAPPENED IN RWANDA, the rest of the world is letting it happen again right before it eyes. On the other, it is a case study of how geo-politics work in the real world, as opposed to the theory, morality, ideology that is preached about in popular culture and academia. If anyone cared to put in the slightest effort, I would imagine the problem could be solved in a matter of weeks.
Best answer so far. As long as the majority of people don't care, either through apathy or just not knowing what is going on (which I think is more the case) things will continue as such.

The U.S wouldn't go there because they have nothing to gain. It would be even more fruitless than going into Iraq with much of the same consequences or worse.

And the problem with the Sudan is that it isn't mainstream enough unlike for example the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. Maybe 40 more years of hatred and killings will spawn some action, but for now their conflict is still rather minor league compared to the big boys conflicts, at least in the media eyes and for those who think some lives, or lives lost , are more important than others..
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Old 10-21-2004, 09:16 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OFKU0
Best answer so far. As long as the majority of people don't care, either through apathy or just not knowing what is going on (which I think is more the case) things will continue as such.

The U.S wouldn't go there because they have nothing to gain. It would be even more fruitless than going into Iraq with much of the same consequences or worse.

And the problem with the Sudan is that it isn't mainstream enough unlike for example the Israeli/Palestinian conflict. Maybe 40 more years of hatred and killings will spawn some action, but for now their conflict is still rather minor league compared to the big boys conflicts, at least in the media eyes and for those who think some lives, or lives lost , are more important than others..
Might not be 40 years, but 14 years of persecution and genocide by Muslims in the North of the Christians/pagan "africans" in the south is pretty bad. 2 million people dead plus one of the world's most active slave trades.

Reading up on this, one points to the power of Arab oil. People are horrified by a Palestinian death and it warrants an emergency UN meeting. 50 people can at the same time be murdered, gang raped, and abducted by Arab militia's and you might see something about it.
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Old 10-21-2004, 10:00 AM   #12 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Locobot
It worked so well with Afghanistan in the 90s

While I don't agree with the sarcastic tone, I do agree that Africa has the potential to be the middle east of the 21st century, with its vast resources funding fundamentalist Islamic governments who, in turn, fund terrorist organisations.

Those who say we should MYOB (including myself at times), forget that these things DO have a tendency to come around again.

I also believe that the UN is showing its serious bias by not addressing the slaughter that is going on in the Sudan, including a bias against Christianity.
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Old 10-21-2004, 10:47 AM   #13 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by powerclown
Leave it alone and let it rot itself out. A strategy of apathy & surrender.

No, Im all for an invention if the chances are good that the invention will be successful. you have to answer a couple of questions before going into war. If you don't you end up with a shitload of people killed, pissed "homefront" and no real success.

so since you seem to be so much in favour of a invention what would you do? what are your plans?

...let me guess, it involves some major bombing, right?

BTW: UN not adressing Sudan? in which world do you live?
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Last edited by Pacifier; 10-21-2004 at 10:55 AM..
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Old 10-21-2004, 11:09 AM   #14 (permalink)
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In what reality do you live Pacifier? The conflict is 14 years old, there were problems way before the UN fell asleep with Rwanda.
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Old 10-21-2004, 11:43 AM   #15 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pacifier
so since you seem to be so much in favour of a invention what would you do? what are your plans?
As the head of the UN (ahem), I would have armed, international peacekeepers & armored personnel carriers in the region in a week. I imagine it would take less than 50 well-armed men guarding each village to prevent the bandits (on horseback!) coming in and slaughtering everyone. Not 1 bomb necessary. Get the politicians in there, stamp out an agreement, enforce it with troops. Problem solved - killing stopped, at least short term.

Africa, the forgotten land. SO much land, so little development. In a way, I hope it stays that way, for the sake of the magnificent indigenous wildlife. But I agree Lebell: one day, the $hit is going to hit the fan over there in a big way.
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Old 10-21-2004, 11:47 AM   #16 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pacifier
Geez, can you actually add something to a discussion?
Its quite serious. If Europe doesn't want us to be the worlds police, then they can do something usefull. I'm sick of damn leftists blaming us for doing something and then blaming us for not doing the same thing.
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Old 10-21-2004, 11:51 AM   #17 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Mojo_PeiPei
In what reality do you live Pacifier? The conflict is 14 years old, there were problems way before the UN fell asleep with Rwanda.
there was a UN peacekeeping force in Rwanda in 1994 when the genocide started, mostly belgian and french troops. this force was reinforced to rescue western civillians (450 french, 450 belgians + 500 in kenia, 250 US Ranger in Burundi) . On 12th april the belgians withdraw their forces when 10 soldiers where killed.

Eventually, on 17 May 1994, the UN security council adopted a resolution that would deliver nearly 5,500 troops and much needed personnel carriers and other equipment to UNAMIR. Unfortunately, the member states refused to gather troops or send supplies for approximately six months, well after the formal end of the genocide.

At the End of June the was a attempt to reinforce the UN troops again French forces landed in Goma, Zaire, on a humanitarian mission. They deployed throughout southwest Rwanda in an area they called "Zone Turquoise"

So was it a failure of the UN or the member states who voted for troops but failed to actually send troops?

more on this:
http://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB...B53/index.html
http://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB...B119/index.htm
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Last edited by Pacifier; 10-21-2004 at 11:55 AM..
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Old 10-21-2004, 11:59 AM   #18 (permalink)
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Regarding Sudan - Let the EU maintain its impotency and draft another resolution like this (LINKY)

I mean, these are the people that we are trying to make happy with, right?
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Old 10-21-2004, 12:00 PM   #19 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by powerclown
As the head of the UN (ahem), I would have armed, international peacekeepers & armored personnel carriers in the region in a week.
You mean like the UN mission to Rwanda? when this was voted for but the member failed to send troops? when the french secured "Zone Turquoise" alone at the end?
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Old 10-21-2004, 12:43 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Empower the African Union by sending them money and logistical training.

The posts on this board represent the simplistic black white group think that exacerbates situations like this. It's about land, folks, it always has been, always will (because there's oil underneath- both sides know this). The slaughter in Rwanda? Both sides engaged in it. So what's the point of blaming one side when both are equally at fault?
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Old 10-21-2004, 01:12 PM   #21 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Ustwo
Its quite serious. If Europe doesn't want us to be the worlds police, then they can do something usefull. I'm sick of damn leftists blaming us for doing something and then blaming us for not doing the same thing.
Who is blaming the US?

The question asked if "we" (which I presume meant American troops) should enter.

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Old 10-21-2004, 02:34 PM   #22 (permalink)
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Let me tie this into this thread.

What good is the U.N.?

Forget Iraq part I , forget Iraq part II.
Forget Somalia, Forget Kosovo- Forget all major conflicts post Cold War where the US has had to take responsibility and be world Police.


They are failing to act now- and why?????


What good is an organization who puts SUDAN on the head of the human rights council? The same country that is funding the muslim milita that is killing Christians is the head of the human rights wing of the U.N.? You have got to be kidding me.

So what good is it ?
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Old 10-21-2004, 03:01 PM   #23 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Orpheus
It's about land, folks, it always has been, always will
I will admit up front that I am far from expert on this topic, but how is it about land?

From my vantage point, it seems like, yet again, a religious war. Please correct me if I am in error, but this statement didn't make any sense to me.

Also, does anyone else see the irony in this post? Accusations of simplicity followed by a simplistic solution (i.e. it is only about land).
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Old 10-21-2004, 03:05 PM   #24 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KMA-628
I will admit up front that I am far from expert on this topic, but how is it about land?

From my vantage point, it seems like, yet again, a religious war. Please correct me if I am in error, but this statement didn't make any sense to me.

Also, does anyone else see the irony in this post? Accusations of simplicity followed by a simplistic solution (i.e. it is only about land).

Yeah I agree

Land? wtf is there in Sudan? Am i missing something???


again its about militant muslims imposing their beliefs on others in a non-passive manner
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Old 10-21-2004, 03:11 PM   #25 (permalink)
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Let me tie this into this thread.

What good is the U.N.?

Forget Iraq part I , forget Iraq part II.
Forget Somalia, Forget Kosovo- Forget all major conflicts post Cold War where the US has had to take responsibility and be world Police.
What good is the UN?

Firstly, consensus.

Without the UN providing all countries with a voice, actions taken by the US, NATO or the EU (for example) smack of unilateralism.

Secondly, legality.

Like it or not, the US is a signatory of international and UN treaties. It is the UN that decides what is legal or illegal with regards to international law (often by interpreting Geneva Conventions for example).

Thirdly, morality.

Believe it or not, UN actions are often the right thing to do. The UN funds and manages hundreds of international organisations, international tribunals and committees that try to improve social, economic, health and cultural issues throughout the world. The UNHCR, UNESCO, UNDP, ECA, ECE, ELAC, ESCAP, ESCWA, ICJ, E-MINE, UNOB, UNOCI, UNMIL, MONUC, UMEE, UNAMSIL, MINURSO, MINUSTAH, UNMISET, UNMOGIP, UNFICYP, UNOMIG, UNMIK, UNDOF, UNIFIL, UNTSO, UNIFEM, UNCTAD, ITC, UNDCP, UNEP, UNIFEM, UNV, UNCDF, UNFPA, UNICRI, UNITAR, UNRISD, UNIDIR, INSTRAW, UNOPS, UNU, UNSSC, UNAIDS, PfII, WTO, IAEA, CTBTO PREP.COM, OPCW, ILO, FAO, WHO, IBRD, IDA, IFC, MIGA, ICSID, IMF, ICAO, IMO, ITU, UPU, WMO, WIPO, IFAD, UNIDO, OSG, OIOS, OLA, DPA, DDA, KPKO, OCHA, DESA, DGACM, DIP, DM, OHRLLS, UNSECOORD, UNODC, UNOG, UNOV, UNON and so on.

If you think the UN is just the Security Council, then you are sorely mistaken. If you think the UN does no good, then you are deluded.


Quote:
They are failing to act now- and why?????
Because there are politics involved. Because often the search for consensus means that actions and declarations are watered down.

Because, GASP the UN is not perfect. Not like the United States, eh? Yeah, right...


Quote:
What good is an organization who puts SUDAN on the head of the human rights council?
Every country gets to head the Security Council at some stage. From the United States all the way down to Lichtenstein. Imagine that! An organization that trys to be inclusive and offer all nations the opportunity to be part of decision making and direction.

Again, sometimes this is not perfect, but it's a lot better than one nation going around stomping on everyone.

Quote:
The same country that is funding the muslim milita that is killing Christians is the head of the human rights wing of the U.N.?
Yes, it's really not great, is it? Good job they will lose their seat within six months at the longest. Or do you think the US should decide who sits where, for how long and why?

Quote:
You have got to be kidding me.
No. No I'm not. And neither is the majority of the world. And, for that matter, the United States government.

Quote:
So what good is it ?

It does more good that you think, or seem to know.

Is it perfect? No.
Does it need reforming? Yes.
Would it benefit if the US actually paid their dues? Absolutely.

Should it be disbanded? Categorically not.


Yes, there have been problems, but they should be resolved. Making stupid statements like "What is the UN good for?" do nothing to improve things.

I could easily say "What good is the United States for?" and list a litany of travesties and disasters in which America was involved. But that also would be stupid. The United States is undoubtedly the most powerful nation on the Earth. And, for the vast majority of issues, is a force for good. It would server the world community better if it handled its power responsibly and partnered with its neighbours and the world community, rather than take the current arrogant, unilateral stance it seems to be at the moment.

With regards to the United Nations, there is always room for improvement. As there is in what Australia does, what Ireland does, what the US does, what the Post Office does, what your local TV station does... See the pattern?

You probably don't have all the answers in the world. Everything can be improved. It takes a "better" man (or nation) to help improve things rather than stand around bleating about how things are no good and are not worth the effort.

Hopefully you and the rest of the anti-UN cabal can see that.



Mr Mephisto

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Old 10-21-2004, 03:13 PM   #26 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Kalibah
Yeah I agree

Land? wtf is there in Sudan? Am i missing something???


again its about militant muslims imposing their beliefs on others in a non-passive manner
Erm... no. Not it's not.

What is there in Sudan? Do you even know where it is?! My God...

It's the size of France. It's HUGE. There is living space for millions of people. I could easily say, "What the fuck is there in America?" The ignorance of that comment is remarkable.

With regards to the Muslim militia, they are NOT trying to impose their beliefs. They are engaged in a war of genocide and ethnic cleansing. Much much worse.


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Old 10-21-2004, 03:28 PM   #27 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr Mephisto
Erm... no. Not it's not.

What is there in Sudan? Do you even know where it is?! My God...

It's the size of France. It's HUGE. There is living space for millions of people. I could easily say, "What the fuck is there in America?" The ignorance of that comment is remarkable.

With regards to the Muslim militia, they are NOT trying to impose their beliefs. They are engaged in a war of genocide and ethnic cleansing. Much much worse.


Mr Mephisto


Usually when people invade other countries its for natural resources. For land? its a vast wasteland ( from the pictures ive seen) its a third world country. No infastructure.


its a holy war in my opinion
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Old 10-21-2004, 03:34 PM   #28 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kalibah
Usually when people invade other countries its for natural resources. For land? its a vast wasteland ( from the pictures ive seen) its a third world country. No infastructure.


its a holy war in my opinion
Well, first of all no one is invading another country. Once again, you should check your facts or at least learn the rudiments of the issue at hand before making sweeping, and erroneous, comments.

Secondly, I've see pictures of the US that show nothing but vast sandy desert. That means you all live in holes in the sand, right? Good grief...

You said it was a wasteland. Well, obviously it is NOT, otherwise hundreds of thousands of people would not have been there in the first place, such that the Janjaweed persecuted them. Also, I think you implied it had no natural resources. Again wrong. Additionally, you said it had no infrastructure. Well guess what? It doesn't have to have a McDonalds, strip club, Starbucks and 6 lane highway to be someone's home, and somewhere people want to live.

Open your mind. Educate yourself.

Finally, you said it was an attempt by militant muslims to impose their beliefs on others, when it is not. It's ethnic cleansing and genocide, plain and simple.


Mr Mephisto

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Old 10-21-2004, 03:53 PM   #29 (permalink)
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Jeez- It's the dark ages all over again on this board. First, Sudan is the largest country in Africa. Second, the war is a civil one, waged for the past 19 years; religion just makes it easier for Westerners to digest and comprehend. Third, there is lots of oil in the South, controlled by the Rebels (Christian + Animists) but desired by the North. Fourth, the Dafur crisis is an inter-Islamic struggle. The African Farmers (also Muslim) would like to declare independence from the Arabs; the latter have not taken kindly to this, to say the least. They have employed a systemic response of genocide and starvation to destroy the will for independence.

“ALL this because of oil,” laments Steven Mangong. Once a farmer in a small village in the heart of southern Sudan’s oil region, Mr Mangong is now living destitute in a refugee camp at Rumbek, 300km (185 miles) away.
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Old 10-21-2004, 07:03 PM   #30 (permalink)
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OT

Quote:
Originally Posted by Pacifier
You mean like the UN mission to Rwanda? when this was voted for but the member failed to send troops? when the french secured "Zone Turquoise" alone at the end?
Inaccurate. The French military presence in Rwanda led to *more* killing and slaughter, not less. They provided military support to (and sympathized with) the ruling, French-speaking majority in this French colony, the Hutu Power regime, who were killing the Tutsi minority by the thousands. Operation Turquoise was a farce, and implicitly allowed the killing of the Tutsis to continue instead of stopping it. Once it became apparent that the operation was ineffectual, the French began evacuating anyone with white skin, turning away black Tutsi Rwandans. I saw video of this myself.

The only country that was really committed to help was Belgium, and they evacuated their remaining troops after 10 of them were killed in one day by the Hutus. I also have a lot of sympathy and respect for General Dallaire, a Canadian, who foresaw the coming genocide, begged the UN for additional troops, and was turned down.

You asked me a hypothetical question: What would I have done? I told you what I would have done, and my theoretical answer to Darfur would have worked in Rwanda too if the foreign troops hadn't turned and ran away.
/OT
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Old 10-21-2004, 08:08 PM   #31 (permalink)
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An overview of the situation in Darfur. Note that since this article was printed, US Secretary of State Colin Powell has in fact labeled the conflict in Darfur genocide.

Quote:
Racism at root of Sudan's Darfur crisis

By Makau Mutua

BUFFALO, N.Y. – The visits by US Secretary of State Colin Powell and UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to Sudan last week gave hope that the genocide in Darfur can be arrested before an entire people is obliterated.
But anyone - including Mr. Powell and Mr. Annan - interested in averting more tragedy there must understand that Darfur is not an accidental apocalypse of mass slaughters, enslavement, pillage, and ethnic cleansing. The Darfur pogrom is part of a historic continuum in which successive Arab governments have sought to entirely destroy black Africans in this biracial nation.

Darfur is not a mere humanitarian disaster that access by international relief agencies can reverse. The raison d'être of the atrocities committed by government-supported Arab militias is the racist, fundamentalist, and undemocratic Sudanese state. What is required for peace in Sudan is either regime change, in which a democratic, inclusive state is born, or a partition, in which the black African south and west become an independent sovereign state free of Khartoum and the Arab north.

Sudan, like most African postcolonial states, is partially a victim of imperial cartography. Thoughtlessly carved out by the British during the 19th-century scramble to claim Africa, Sudan is a forced crucible of Muslim Arabs and black Africans. The blacks in the south either hew to their ancestral traditional African religions or have converted to Christianity. The fact that black Africans in Darfur are exclusively Muslim has not stopped the Arab Janjaweed militias and the government from exterminating them.

Race - not religion - is the fundamental fault line in Sudan, though religion has certainly added fuel to the fire in the south. Indeed, since independence from the British in 1956, the demon of Sudan has been race. The Arab north, except for brief periods when token Africans were included in government, has exclusively held political and military power. To protest political exclusion, military repression, enslavement, and economic exploitation, Africans in the south rose against the state several years after independence.

Since 1983, the armed insurrection in the south has drawn a scorched earth response from Khartoum. President Omar Bashir and his fundamentalist Islamic government declared a holy war against African groups in the south - the Dinka, Nuba, and Neur peoples. More than 2 million people have been decimated, millions more have been internally displaced, and hordes have been exiled.

Khartoum's genocidal policy in Darfur and the south is also a grab for resources. The Arab north is arid and barren, but the south is arable with vast oil deposits Khartoum covets and badly needs. In the west, in Darfur, Arabs seeking to escape the spreading desert kill and displace Africans for more productive land.

But there is a reality check. Khartoum has been unable to vanquish Africans militarily in the south. That's why Khartoum now appears ready to conclude its peace agreement with the south. But just as the guns are about to fall silent in the south, Arabs in Darfur have killed at least 30,000 Africans and displaced more than a million from their homes and villages.

Both the US and UN through Powell and Annan - whose mediators and proxies, particularly Kenya, are helping broker the peace deal - must make it clear to President Bashir that the accord between Khartoum and the south won't stop the diplomatic isolation and international condemnation of Sudan unless it ends its genocidal policies in Darfur and allows aid workers to care for victims and assist their return home. Both Powell and Annan must speed up work on a UN resolution to condemn the atrocities in Darfur and the south, and to impose sanctions on the Sudanese government and its leaders.

The African Union (AU), the continental body of Arab and black African states, must end the hypocrisy in Afro-Arab relations. Sudan, the bridge between black and Arab Africa, should lead in rewriting the historical script between the two peoples. Since the slave trade era, Arabs have violated and dominated Africans. Yet the Organization of African Unity, the AU predecessor, ducked these inequities under the doctrine of noninterference in the internal affairs of sister states.

The AU has stayed that odious course. It's telling that the AU has not denounced Sudan for the Darfur atrocities. And, at its annual summit in Addis Ababa last week, the AU declared that the Darfur killings did not amount to genocide. Although the killings clearly meet that definition according to the Genocide Convention, unfortunately Powell also failed last week to declare that the Darfur killings meet the definition of genocide. The AU offer to send just 300 soldiers to Darfur to protect aid workers, monitors, and civilians from Arab militiamen - in an area the size of France - demonstrates lack of political will to confront Sudan.

Important, too, is that Arab states should condemn Sudan; otherwise their anger over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict rings hollow. How can they protest the killing of Palestinians when their kin exterminate Africans in Sudan?

The tragedy of Darfur wouldn't be permitted if it were taking place in Europe. But African states must take advantage of the interest by the UN and the US to bring about maximum diplomatic and economic pressure, including sanctions, to hasten regime change in Sudan. Khartoum must be put on notice that only an open and inclusive democracy will save it from partition into two states, one black African, the other Arab.

• Makau Mutua is professor of law and director of the Human Rights Center at the State University of New York at Buffalo.
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Old 10-21-2004, 09:30 PM   #32 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr Mephisto
Well, first of all no one is invading another country. Once again, you should check your facts or at least learn the rudiments of the issue at hand before making sweeping, and erroneous, comments.

Secondly, I've see pictures of the US that show nothing but vast sandy desert. That means you all live in holes in the sand, right? Good grief...

You said it was a wasteland. Well, obviously it is NOT, otherwise hundreds of thousands of people would not have been there in the first place, such that the Janjaweed persecuted them. Also, I think you implied it had no natural resources. Again wrong. Additionally, you said it had no infrastructure. Well guess what? It doesn't have to have a McDonalds, strip club, Starbucks and 6 lane highway to be someone's home, and somewhere people want to live.

Open your mind. Educate yourself.

Finally, you said it was an attempt by militant muslims to impose their beliefs on others, when it is not. It's ethnic cleansing and genocide, plain and simple.


Mr Mephisto

First off it IS A religius conflict



Backed by Muslim clerics, the National Islamic Front regime in the Arab and Muslim north declared a jihad, or holy war, on the south in 1989. Since 1983, an estimated 2 million people have died from war and related famine. About 4.5 million have become refugees.

Sudan's holy war against the south was reaffirmed in October by First Vice President Ali Osman Taha.

"The jihad is our way, and we will not abandon it and will keep its banner high," he said to a brigade of mujahedin fighters heading for the war front, according to Sudan's official SUNA news agency. "We will never sell out our faith and will never betray the oath to our martyrs.


n 1986, Musba entered the Uduk tribal capital of Chali and declared to its Christians: "You are all going to convert from Christianity to Islam today, because here is what's going to happen to you if you don't."

Musba then killed five church leaders in front of the gathered villagers. When they refused to convert, he began killing unarmed men, women and children. Some were herded at gunpoint into a hut then run over by a 50-ton, Soviet-made tank.

He also herded groups of about a dozen people into a hut, where he asked the first person "Do you renounce Jesus Christ?" Anyone who refused was killed by a three-inch nail driven into the top of the head.


They are making women CONVERT or else they get gang-raped

The North is Islamic, the south is generally not.

Thats A religous war


Forced conversions to Islam is a part of government policy.

http://www.persecution.org/Countries/sudan.html


http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/ar...TICLE_ID=26672









During the civil war- the South viewed itself as being seperate from the north- thus to them the North invaded the confederacy.


It stems from the Suden Liberation army wanting to be Free from tthe north
"

For an interim period of six years, Sudan is to remain one country, with Omar al-Bashir, the current president, remaining in office, and with Mr Garang, the rebel leader, as his deputy. Then there is to be a referendum in which southerners will be offered the choice of staying or seceding.
"


So yes to them, they are invaded.



Then the janjaweed—an Arab militia that kills for the Sudanese government—rode up to finish the job.



Dont give me that crap about open your mind. Apparently it is YOU that doesn't have a firm grasp on the facts. As for what is there- its NOT a war over land. Its a holy war as I have just pointed out. There is NO reason the Arab militia men are fighting the Rebels in the south other than because of the "jihad" as the president himself put it


http://www.vitrade.com/who_is_who/ba...e_achieved.htm


AGAIN stated by the PResident- this is a HOLY WAR- that is the definiation of a JIHAD


And it is a wasteland- villages burned,

"Human rights groups say that since violence flared in Darfur last year around 30,000 people have been killed, and more than 1 million non-Arabic-speaking locals have fled their villages, turning the sparsely populated province into a true wasteland."



So when villages are being burned, people killed, and everyone is fleeing- it isnt a Wasteland???

Its already a desert- people lived there. When they are gone- yes its a wasteland. That region- was wasnt refering to the country- I was refering to the region


What would you call it? I suppose a warzone might be better fitting- but essentially its the same thing

Last edited by Kalibah; 10-21-2004 at 09:35 PM..
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Old 10-21-2004, 11:30 PM   #33 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kalibah
First off it IS A religius conflict.
I never said it wasn't a religious conflict. I disputed your assertion that they are trying to impose their religious beliefs on others as the implied primary reason for the conflict. I put it to you that they are not seeking converts, but are simply engaging in genocide and ethnic cleansing, and that they are using religious differences as an excuse.

Do you honestly believe that if the hundreds of thousand of displaced persons had

a) all been given the chance to convert
and
b) had done so

...that the janjaweed would have simply packed their bags and ridden off?

No, I don't think they would. The killing would have continued.

Feel free to check the report by the internationally recognized and respected organization Human Rights Watch at http://www.hrw.org/reports/2004/sudan0504/

It's title alone should give you an idea. DARFUR DESTROYED - Ethnic Cleansing by Government and Militia Forces in Western Sudan

Allow me to go further by quoting a particular sentence from the summary. "The Janjaweed militias, Muslim like the African groups they attack, have destroyed mosques, killed Muslim religious leaders, and desecrated Qorans belonging to their enemies." In other words, it's more to do with the government trying to put down and destroy a rebellious province than it is to do with creating muslim converts.

Of course, it's always possible that HRW is wrong and you are right.

Quote:
So yes to them, they are invaded.
The facts remain that the conflict is within one sovereign nation. No other nation was invaded. Again, I only pointed out the contradiction in your original statement. Whether you feel yourself entitled to speak for all the hundreds of thousands of people affected has no relevance. This is a "domestic affair" (unpleasant as that phrase is), up and until the affect it is having on neighbouring countries due to the refugee crisis.

No "invasions" occurred.

Quote:
Dont give me that crap about open your mind.
Touchy, touchy. First of all I didn't curse at you, so I ask the same respect from you. Perhaps in vain, but that won't stop me asking.

Secondly, I never said I had an open mind (though I like to think I do - certainly I don't curse at strangers on the internet). The comment was made because you simply said, and I quote, "[What The Fuck] is there in Sudan?" and "its a vast wasteland ( from the pictures ive seen) its a third world country. No infastructure.".

In other words, open your mind to the fact that the lack of infrastructure has nothing to do with the value people place upon living there. And that, "the pictures you see" of it may not show the entire area in question. I've seen pictures of the terrible refugee camps in Darfur, but also the very fertile and quite picturesque areas from which many of the people were displaced. The point is, a few pictures on TV or in magazines don't tell the whole story.

That's what I meant by opening your mind.

Quote:
So when villages are being burned, people killed, and everyone is fleeing- it isnt a Wasteland???

Its already a desert- people lived there. When they are gone- yes its a wasteland. That region- was wasnt refering to the country- I was refering to the region
Let me quote you again. " its a vast wasteland ( from the pictures ive seen) its a third world country. No infastructure.".

It doesn't sound like you're referring to the region at all. Indeed, you specifically say "its [sic] a third world country."

Quote:
What would you call it? I suppose a warzone might be better fitting- but essentially its the same thing
Yes. Perhaps warzone would have been more appropriate.


Mr Mephisto

Last edited by Mephisto2; 10-21-2004 at 11:37 PM..
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Old 10-21-2004, 11:46 PM   #34 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mr Mephisto
I never said it wasn't a religious conflict. I disputed your assertion that they are trying to impose their religious beliefs on others as the implied primary reason for the conflict. I put it to you that they are not seeking converts, but are simply engaging in genocide and ethnic cleansing, and that they are using religious differences as an excuse.

Do you honestly believe that if the hundreds of thousand of displaced persons had

a) all been given the chance to convert
and
b) had done so

...that the janjaweed would have simply packed their bags and ridden off?

No, I don't think they would. The killing would have continued.



The facts remain that the conflict is within one sovereign nation. No other nation was invaded. Again, I only pointed out the contradiction in your original statement. Whether you feel yourself entitled to speak for all the hundreds of thousands of people affected has no relevance. This is a "domestic affair" (unpleasant as that phrase is), up and until the affect it is having on neighbouring countries due to the refugee crisis.

No "invasions" occurred.



Touchy, touchy. First of all I didn't curse at you, so I ask the same respect from you. Perhaps in vain, but that won't stop me asking.

Secondly, I never said I had an open mind (though I like to think I do - certainly I don't curse at strangers on the internet). The comment was made because you simply said, and I quote, "[What The Fuck] is there in Sudan?" and "its a vast wasteland ( from the pictures ive seen) its a third world country. No infastructure.".

In other words, open your mind to the fact that the lack of infrastructure has nothing to do with the value people place upon living there. And that, "the pictures you see" of it may not show the entire area in question. I've seen pictures of the terrible refugee camps in Darfur, but also the very fertile and quite picturesque areas from which many of the people were displaced. The point is, a few pictures on TV or in magazines don't tell the whole story.

That's what I meant by opening your mind.



Let me quote you again. " its a vast wasteland ( from the pictures ive seen) its a third world country. No infastructure.".

It doesn't sound like you're referring to the region at all. Indeed, you specifically say "its [sic] a third world country."



Yes. Perhaps warzone would have been more appropriate.


Mr Mephisto

When the Preisdent of Sudan says its a Jihad- maybe it is ....

"Finally, you said it was an attempt by militant muslims to impose their beliefs on others, when it is not. It's ethnic cleansing and genocide, plain and simple."

Ohh okay Jihad isnt trying to convert others... backing milita men who kill and rape in the name of Allah, or say convert or die... yeah that isnt imposing their beliefs on thers.



Its Ethnic cleansing and Genoice plain and simple... yet it IS an attempt by militant muslims to impose thier beliefs on others, the president of that country has said so- the FACTS indicate that it is. It might ALSO be a genocide- but IT IS A JIHAD - HOLY WAR- IMPOSING MUSLIM BELIEFS ON OTHERS.





Second off you said
" Every country gets to head the Security Council at some stage. From the United States all the way down to Lichtenstein. Imagine that! An organization that trys to be inclusive and offer all nations the opportunity to be part of decision making and direction.Again, sometimes this is not perfect, but it's a lot better than one nation going around stomping on everyone."


I didnt say why is Sudan on the Security Council, i said why are they the head of the human rights body- so you skirted the issue.

http://www.derechos.org/news/archives/000661.html



WASTELAND

Main Entry: waste·land
Pronunciation: 'wAst-"land also -l&nd
Function: noun
1 : barren or uncultivated land <a desert wasteland>
2 : an ugly often devastated or barely inhabitable place or area




Barren land- hmm that it is.
Devistated and barely inhabitable place or area- Well gee the center of a civil war- that fits the bill clearly- Even If i was not refering to THAT region the whole country has been up in civil war in recent years


Main Entry: in·vade
Pronunciation: in-'vAd
Function: transitive verb
Inflected Form(s): in·vad·ed; in·vad·ing
Etymology: Middle English, from Latin invadere, from in- + vadere to go -- more at WADE
1 : to enter for conquest or plunder
2 : to encroach upon : INFRINGE
3 a : to spread over or into as if invading : PERMEATE



Hmm arent the janjaweed CONQUESTING OR PLUNDERING THE REGION OF DAFUR?????? They did Enter the region...)


Point is your nitpicking to avoid the real issue- militant muslims are *GASP* causing problems again!

Last edited by Kalibah; 10-22-2004 at 12:12 AM..
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Old 10-22-2004, 01:38 AM   #35 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by powerclown
I also have a lot of sympathy and respect for General Dallaire, a Canadian, who foresaw the coming genocide, begged the UN for additional troops, and was turned down.
/OT
indeed, he tried the best he could with the limited resources he had.
But like I said you plan for Sudan is identical to the original UN plan for Rwanda, but the members of the UN failed to send the troops the voted for to send.
The same could happen to your plan. But which fault is it? Is it the fault of the UN? not only, the whole western world failed there.
And before to go to Sudan you have to check and make sure you have the necessary support and will to do it.
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Old 10-22-2004, 04:08 PM   #36 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pacifier
indeed, he tried the best he could with the limited resources he had.
But like I said you plan for Sudan is identical to the original UN plan for Rwanda, but the members of the UN failed to send the troops the voted for to send.
The same could happen to your plan. But which fault is it? Is it the fault of the UN? not only, the whole western world failed there.
And before to go to Sudan you have to check and make sure you have the necessary support and will to do it.

The U.N. drafts resolutions and then when Sudan doesnt act they draft more.

http://news.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?...&id=1095762004
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Old 10-22-2004, 04:11 PM   #37 (permalink)
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The UN reminds me of a comic bit (Think it was Robbin Williams) talking about how the British cops don't have firearms.

"Stop, or I shall say stop again!"

That sums up the UN.
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Old 10-22-2004, 05:32 PM   #38 (permalink)
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Ustwo and Kalibah:

The UN is toothless largely because the nations with armies aren't willing to supply troops. It hardly seems fair to criticize their inaction unless you are willing to back them with troops.
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Old 10-22-2004, 05:49 PM   #39 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cthulu23
Ustwo and Kalibah:

The UN is toothless largely because the nations with armies aren't willing to supply troops. It hardly seems fair to criticize their inaction unless you are willing to back them with troops.


The UN has its own peacekeeper force...
If they are unwilling to use them- then what good are these resolutions?


And the U.S. seems to have always backed the U.N. with troops.

Somalia
Kosovo ( i think?)
Iraq Part I
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Old 10-22-2004, 05:52 PM   #40 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kalibah
The UN has its own peacekeeper force...
If they are unwilling to use them- then what good are these resolutions?


And the U.S. seems to have always backed the U.N. with troops.

Somalia
Kosovo ( i think?)
Iraq Part I
Correct me if I'm wrong, but those "peacekeepers" are composed of troops donated from other nations. The actions that you name were instances when the US did lend troops, but we don't give troops every time there is a crisis. I'm not saying that we should do that but let's not be too harsh on the UN for sudan unless we are willing to do something about it. We outspend the rest of the world combined when it comes to military expenditures.
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