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Old 06-04-2005, 09:40 PM   #41 (permalink)
Pissing in the cornflakes
 
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You mean people in the west don't support the terrorists in Iraq?

http://www.indybay.org/news/2005/05/1738080.php

Quote:
Good News: Iraqi Freedom Fighters Down Occupation Aircraft
by Thomas Harding, Defence Correspondent Tuesday, May. 17, 2005 at 6:40 PM

Iraqi freedom fighters killed nine occupation war criminals by shooting down RAF Hercules with 'ageing anti-aircraft gun.'

Iraqi insurgents using a rudimentary anti-aircraft weapon against an RAF transport plane are likely to have caused the biggest single loss of life in the conflict, military sources disclosed yesterday.

Nine RAF crew and an SAS signaller were killed when a C130 Hercules was shot down during a "special duties" mission 20 miles north-west of Baghdad on Jan 30.

An interim Ministry of Defence report has ruled out almost everything apart from enemy fire and it was suggested that a missile or rocket-propelled grenade could have brought down the aircraft.

But an official told The Daily Telegraph yesterday that the report concluded that the Hercules had been shot down by anti-aircraft artillery, as it flew at a low altitude, possibly 150ft.

"It was shredded by a multi-barrelled 20mm canon," the official said. "They have worked out that's what caused the crash."

The gun is believed to have been a 1960s twin-barrel Zu-23, made in China or the Soviet Union, left over from the Saddam Hussein regime.

It has an effective range of 2,000 yards and can be mounted on a lorry or set on wheels.

It is not known why the Hercules, which was equipped with sophisticated defensive measures, was flying at low altitude for the 40-minute trip.
http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/200...ml?id=np12.htm
Quote:
A genuine and democratic mass struggle against occupation and for democratic working-class ownership and control of Iraq's vast economic resources would fight to ensure jobs, homes and services to meet the needs of all Iraqis and cut across any attempts at sectarian division.

Through unity in struggle, the occupying force can be forced out and a movement can begin for a socialist Iraq and a socialist federation of the Middle East.
Quote:
“The Iraqis who have risen up against the occupation are not ‘insurgents’ or ‘terrorists’ or ‘The Enemy.’ They are the REVOLUTION, the Minutemen, and their numbers will grow—and they will win.” - Michael Moore, 4/14/2004
So just how was that a troll again?
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Old 06-04-2005, 09:45 PM   #42 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tecoyah
Originally Posted by Ustwo
I am honestly perplexed why so many people in the West are in support of terroriststhis is the troll. I can understand not supporting the war on principle, but that part is now over. The morality of the war is now moot, what matters is the outcome. The most immortal thing we can do at this point is withdraw our forces, it would be unforgivable. Supporting these terrorists is condemning the Iraqi people to another Saddam, and I don't think any political gain in the west (see I told you so!) is worth the sacrifice of so many.
Thank you, Tecoyah. It is my sincere wish to keep the politics forum alive with discourse that is sincerely open to opposing views.
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Old 06-04-2005, 10:24 PM   #43 (permalink)
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Cheap shot Ustwo, as usual. Nice choice of publication excerpts for a guy that will not read anything from a "suspect" publisher.

Eh, it matters not. I do wonder how you find the time to be here 24/7, with your very busy professional obligations. What is that you do?
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Old 06-04-2005, 10:41 PM   #44 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
You mean people in the west don't support the terrorists in Iraq? ... So just how was that a troll again?
Luckily, the nutjobs that wrote that, or agree with it, are a small minority. Most people that oppose the US on this issue aren't happy when US/UK troops are killed. They want the troops out, after all.

Interesting bit of info:

Iraqi officials say that all of the suicide bombers have been foreigners. Not a single Iraqi has blown himself up. This leads me to the following:

Iraqi "freedom fighters" are made up of
a) angry Sunnis/Ba'athists, who want their power back. They don't care about freeing the Iraqis as a whole.
b) Foreign nutjobs/terrorists who want to kill infidels. They don't care about freeing the Iraqi's, they're just another group that wants to control them.
c) criminals who want to maintain the current insecurity, so that they may profit. Not interested in freeing the Iraqis at all.
d) others who are indeed fighting the foreign oppressors in order to bring freedom to their people.

Now, does anyone care to give me their estimate of the relative size of group D? I bet it's pretty damn small, compared to the other three groups.

What you have to remember: in Islamic culture, the nation as a whole isn't important. The tribe is important, and the Islamic world as a whole is important. Remember that when you're trying to compare the sitation to people invading the US.
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Old 06-04-2005, 10:53 PM   #45 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dragonlich
Luckily, the nutjobs that wrote that, or agree with it, are a small minority. Most people that oppose the US on this issue aren't happy when US/UK troops are killed. They want the troops out, after all.
I agree they are a small minority, but we are still talking about millions of people. Take a look at the signs at a war protest or an anti-Bush rally. Even wanting the troops out is in indirect support of the terrorists. What do you think would happen if we just pulled out tomarrow? Reguardless of it being right or wrong, we made the mess, we have to clean it up.

Quote:
Interesting bit of info:

Iraqi officials say that all of the suicide bombers have been foreigners. Not a single Iraqi has blown himself up. This leads me to the following:

Iraqi "freedom fighters" are made up of
a) angry Sunnis/Ba'athists, who want their power back. They don't care about freeing the Iraqis as a whole.
b) Foreign nutjobs/terrorists who want to kill infidels. They don't care about freeing the Iraqi's, they're just another group that wants to control them.
c) criminals who want to maintain the current insecurity, so that they may profit. Not interested in freeing the Iraqis at all.
d) others who are indeed fighting the foreign oppressors in order to bring freedom to their people.

Now, does anyone care to give me their estimate of the relative size of group D? I bet it's pretty damn small, compared to the other three groups.
I agree with your assesment.

Quote:
What you have to remember: in Islamic culture, the nation as a whole isn't important. The tribe is important, and the Islamic world as a whole is important. Remember that when you're trying to compare the sitation to people invading the US.
Yes this is part of the problem. After the invasion I was reading the Arab press quite a lot and their reaction to it was as if they themselves were invaded and had lost as baddly as Saddam had. They honestly seemed to believe Bagdad Bob, and they were angry that they had been lied to. Even though they didn't 'like' Saddam they admired him for the percieved streangth of Iraq, and when that was brushed aside like a mosquito, it made them all feel impotent.
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Old 06-04-2005, 11:23 PM   #46 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
You know, I REALLY wish every time I stated an opinion it wasn't called a troll by someone who didn't agree with it. Its how I feel buddy, based on some of the stuff host and roachboy post its very mild opinion.

Ever wonder why conservatives just give up on the politics board? Take a guess.
You are quite free to state that you think that the war deserves American support, and explain why. It is not trolling to explain why you think Iraq is critical to the War on Terror, or whatever. I will note any disagreement i have with such statements with respect for your right to express that opinion.

That particular quote, as Tecoyah notes, accuses members of this board of treasonous sentiments. As such, i think i am with in my rights to state that i hold it to be trolling. None of the quotes you cite in clarification come from this community.
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Old 06-04-2005, 11:48 PM   #47 (permalink)
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Don't forget, the people have been fighting back. Locals (shopkeepers etc) got sick and tired of the chaos and instability caused by the "bad apples" (not all Iraqis are bad) and fought back. Does anyone remember a few weeks back, when these shopkeepers sucessfully fought off a bunch of "insurgents"? I think there was a thread on that somwhere around here.

I think the majority of Iraqis just want to have the water running, the power on, schools to go to, open their stores and stay open without fear of insurgent activity, and the resulting "lockdown" and "sweeps" by US troops. IMO, both have bad results.

The key is stablizing the damn place. We need more troops and committment to actually "fixing" the place instead of this dragging of feet and passing the buck. Putting an inexperienced, untrained local police and armed forces out in the field is disastrous. (this would follow your "right or wrong, we made the mess, we have to clean it up" which I agree with).

Anyways, people are tired of having their schools, shops, what-have-you blown up by the insurgents and fed up with the shakedown by US troops.

A veteran from Iraq came to our school last week and gave a powerpoint presentation in our class. He said the reason why schools etc were being targeted was because they were built by coalition (mostly US) troops, contracters etc. So it's like a bad cycle. If anyone's interested, we can open up another thread and I can share with you what this guy talked about. On a side note, the Syrian Ambassador came to speak to our class a few days ago. Very interesting stuff he had to say. We can open a thread on that too. The Israeli Foreign Minister is supposed to come next week. /end tangent

Also, even our good intentions, which some Iraqis no doubt "appreciate" to a certain extent, would still prefer all the foreign elements (not just Western" leave their country. Iraq has had a bad history of foreign occupations and meddling since the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the British Mandate. You can't really blame them for not trusting us. But on the other hand, they (some) want us there as a stabilizing presence (which makes sense too). Makes for a tense and uneasy situation.

Best solution (which I belive we're trying to do), stabilize the place, get their institutions and security apparatus in place and get the hell out ASAP (easier said than done of course).

For those who are interested. Read:

"Threatening Storm", Kenneth Pollack - ex-deputy CIA Director who advised about the Iraq invasion of Kuwait. He provides excellent background about the region and great analysis. This guy has degrees from MIT and Harvard and is currently at the Brookings Institute (I think) or is it the Saban center for Near East Studies.

"Inventing Iraq" - Toby Dodge - explains alot of the British experience and consequences. Lends insight to the fractious state of Iraq. It also talks about the whole Islamic state versus tribal loyalty thing too.

"U.S. Policy in Post-Saddam Iraq: Lessons from the British Experience" - Michale Eisenstadt & Eric Mathewson - This book is awesome. It is pretty short but it is a collection of papers focusing on comparing/contrasting the current US experience in Iraq with the British.

All these books were written by people of high credentials: academics, think-tanks, military and the like. I highly suggest reading these. They are written in a user friendly format. Most of these people have first hand experience in what went on/goes on in makiing the decisions and stuff regarding Iraq.

Last edited by jorgelito; 06-04-2005 at 11:50 PM.. Reason: I can't spell for hsit!
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Old 06-05-2005, 03:38 AM   #48 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
Cheap shot Ustwo, as usual. Nice choice of publication excerpts for a guy that will not read anything from a "suspect" publisher.

Eh, it matters not. I do wonder how you find the time to be here 24/7, with your very busy professional obligations. What is that you do?
And so we follow up the troll, with personal affront(veiled or not)....one more time and this is closed.
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Old 06-05-2005, 08:37 AM   #49 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
I agree they are a small minority, but we are still talking about millions of people. Take a look at the signs at a war protest or an anti-Bush rally. Even wanting the troops out is in indirect support of the terrorists. What do you think would happen if we just pulled out tomarrow? Reguardless of it being right or wrong, we made the mess, we have to clean it up.

I agree with your assesment.

Yes this is part of the problem. After the invasion I was reading the Arab press quite a lot and their reaction to it was as if they themselves were invaded and had lost as baddly as Saddam had. They honestly seemed to believe Bagdad Bob, and they were angry that they had been lied to. Even though they didn't 'like' Saddam they admired him for the percieved streangth of Iraq, and when that was brushed aside like a mosquito, it made them all feel impotent.
I think that it would save lives of American military and Iraqi civilians if we
"pulled out "tomorrow". The track record of the Bush administration is too similar to Baghdad Bob's for my liking, when it comes to accurate disclosure of the military situation in Iraq. Rumsfeld claims in a briefing linked below that trained Iraqi security forces now number 165,000. I advocate declaring "mission accomplshed", one more time, and then pull out.

Ustwo, earlier in this thread, I presented a well documented argument that details the complicity, support, and by the continuing relationship, (with no protest from the executive branch of the infamous gassing of the Kurds), the tacit approval of Saddam's regime by the Reagan and the Bush '41 administrations, until late 1990.
See:
http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...6&postcount=30

http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...0&postcount=32

The argument that Saddam was supported by the U.S. for reasons having to do with a strategy of supporting Iraq to blunt the larger threat of Iran, rings hollow and empty when one counts the anti-tank missles delivered at the direction of U.S. to Iran during the same period, in direct contravention of the President's publicly stated prohibition of negotiating or supporting terrorist states, and Iran in particular, and in spite of vehement advice to desist by close advisors to President Reagan. See: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/reagan/...e/index_5.html A reader can also observe in the timeline at the above link that other military support was provided by the U.S. to Iran in it's war with Iraq at the same time that the policy of aiding Saddam was justified as a way to counter Iran!

So now, "we have to clean it up", in your words. This sounds like the last refuge of justification for the continued occupation of a country that the administration declared so many times, posed an imminent danger to the U.S., and to it's own neighbors because of it's WMD programs. We were also told by President Bush and officials of his government that we were fignting them in Iraq, so that we wouldn't have to fight them here. This seems to be as dubious a claim as all of the others that turned out to be misleading and unreliable. Our own military provides us in it's briefings with little or no evidence that they are engaging "foreign fighters" in any signifigant or measurable numbers:
Quote:
http://www.defenselink.mil/transcrip...0510-2721.html
Presenter: Pentagon Spokesman Lawrence DiRita and Director of Operations, J-3, Lt. Gen. James T. Conway Tuesday, May 10, 2005 2:37 p.m. EDT

Defense Department Regular Briefing

Q Can I follow up on that? Can you say whether or not you've seen any evidence of some of these foreign fighters, as you've described them, crossing back over the border? And are the Syrians in any way involved in this or in any way cooperating?

GEN. CONWAY: I don't think I used the term foreign fighters. I don't think we know that yet. Certainly it's in proximity to the border. There is a major crossing site there, Husaybah, and again, there's smugglers' routes both north and south of that location. So it's not unrealistic to expect that there could be foreign fighters engaged.

At this point, we simply don't know if the there is movement across the border associated with this, because the preponderance of our forces are engaged in this fight.

http://www.defenselink.mil/transcrip...0505-2683.html
Presenter: Lawrence Di Rita, Pentagon Spokesman; and Lieutenant General James T. Conway, Director, Operations, Joint Staff Thursday, May 5, 2005 2:40 p.m. EDT

Defense Department Regular Briefing

Q General, talking about Zarqawi and his tactics, you say that that letter was encouraging to you. Yet there seem to be more and more suicide bombers -- three today. Seems to be an increase recently.

Is that a finite number? Where are these people coming from? It was thought that Iraqis really wouldn't be suicide bombers. Obviously, he's recruiting from somewhere..........

GEN. CONWAY: It gets to the issue that the intelligence people are asking themselves, and we're looking at the forensics. Are all of these people foreign fighters, such as we have seen at least be the tendency in the past? Is there some possibility that Iraqis are being forced into that condition by virtue of the fact that someone has got their family, you know, 20 miles away? We do have some indication that we're seeing more remote detonation of some of the suicide bombers than we've had in past. So we're asking ourselves: What's all that mean? And we don't have the answers yet.

Q Going -- going back to that end, is there any sense of -- you were over in Fallujah for a while. Is there any sense what -- what's coming across the Syrian border? Is there -- is there an influx of foreign fighters coming in now, or is there just a pool of foreign fighters that have been in Iraq for a while, sleepers or whatever, that we're seeing?

GEN. CONWAY: I don't think we know the answer to that for sure. We have tried to gauge the percent of the insurgency that is represented by foreign fighters. We do know that some of the insurgent websites have called this the jihad superbowl, if you will, and now is the time to come fight and try to kick the Americans out of the region. How much people are responding to that we're just not certain at this point, but we continue to seek that answer.

http://www.defenselink.mil/transcrip...ecdef2401.html
Presenter: Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld and Steve Inskeep Tuesday, March 29, 2005

Secretary Rumsfeld Interview with National Public Radio’s Steve Inskeep for “Morning Edition”

How are some ways that you are measuring progress in defeating insurgents in Iraq?

RUMSFELD: Well, we've got literally dozens of ways we do it. We have a room here, the Iraq Room where we track a whole series of metrics. Some of them are inputs and some of them are outputs, results, and obviously the inputs are easier to do and less important, and the outputs are vastly more important and more difficult to do......

......RUMSFELD: I don't know what the number is, I don't have it in front of me. But we track a number of reports of intimidation, attempts at intimidation or assassination of government officials, for example. We track the extent to which people are supplying intelligence to our people so that they can go in and actually track down and capture or kill insurgents. We try to desegregate the people we've captured and look at what they are. Are they foreign fighters, Jihadist types? Are they criminals who were paid money to go do something like that? Are they former regime elements, Ba'athists? And we try to keep track of what those numbers are in terms of detainees and people that are processed in that way.
Quote:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlates...050801,00.html
Sporadic Attacks Kill Eight in Iraq

Friday June 3, 2005 9:46 PM

AP Photo BAG120

By PATRICK QUINN

Associated Press Writer
...............The new bloodshed raised the death toll since the new Shiite-led government was announced April 28 to least 830 people, not counting insurgents.

In the past 18 months, 12,000 Iraqi civilians have been killed, including more than 10,000 Shiites, Interior Minister Bayan Jabr said, citing figures from a research center. But he said he analyzed the figures on the basis of areas where victims lived, not data stating the branch of Islam they belonged to. .................

..........Jabr has claimed the government offensive seeking to root out kidnappers and other militants in Baghdad had scored big gains, saying this week's sweep by Iraqi soldiers and police, known as ``Operation Lightning,'' captured 700 suspected insurgents and killed 28 militants.

The campaign is the biggest Iraqi offensive since Saddam Hussein's fall two years ago. Iraqi officials have said the operation, which began Sunday, involves 40,000 soldiers and police, though not all man positions at any one time. Before the offensive, authorities controlled only eight of Baghdad's 23 entrances. ........

.............Army Col. Mark Milley, who commands the 2nd Brigade, 10th Mountain Division, said intelligence indicated insurgents were using Baghdad's southern districts to stage attacks in the capital...............

.............Milley said 84 suspects were detained Friday, while a ``half a dozen suspected al-Qaida cell members'' and several other ``foreign fighters'' from Sudan, Syria, Egypt and Jordan had been captured since the operation began..............
Above are three recent DOD briefings where several high ranking generals and Rumsfeld himself offer little in the way of admissions or facts to support a contention that the U.S. is engaged in a fight against "foreign fighters" in any signifigant numbers. 26 months into this occupation, Rumsfeld's comments in the third segment are most disingenuous; acting as if it just occurred to military intelligence to ascertain if the armed opposition in Iraq "Are they foreign fighters, Jihadist types?"

In the June 3rd news report, the Iraqi interior minister passes along firgures of 12,000 Iraqi civilian dead, in the last 18 months,casualties of the continuing
insurgency.

Here's the "news" from the other country that the U.S. has recently liberated, Afghanistan. The U.S. military presence there pre-dates Iraq by more than a year. Will another year of 140,000 U.S. troops in Iraq bring this kind of progress?
Quote:
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...anwomen30.html
Monday, May 30, 2005 - Page updated at 12:00 a.m.

Afghan women still abused and persecuted, report finds

By DANIEL COONEY
The Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghan women are in constant risk of abduction, rape and forced marriage, and the government is doing little to address their plight, the human-rights group Amnesty International said in a report released today, 3 ˝ years after the ouster of the hard-line Taliban regime.

A spokeswoman for the Afghan Women's Affairs Ministry, Nooria Haqnagar, acknowledged that abuse was still rife and said, "In some remote areas, men deal with women like animals."

In its report, Amnesty called on the government and the international community to do more to improve women's lives.

"Throughout the country, few women are exempt from violence or safe from the threat of it," the London-based organization said in its report.......
Quote:
http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_p...w/tw_2121.html
This information is current as of today, Sun Jun 05 2005 05:34:36 GMT-0400 (Eastern Standard Time).
AFGHANISTAN Travel Warning
November 15, 2004
Travel in all areas of Afghanistan, including the capital Kabul, is unsafe due to military operations, landmines, banditry, armed rivalry among political and tribal groups, and the possibility of terrorist attacks, including attacks using vehicular or other Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs ), and kidnapping. The security environment remains volatile and unpredictable.

Family members of official Americans assigned to the U.S. Embassy in Kabul are not allowed to reside in Afghanistan. In addition, unofficial travel to Afghanistan by U.S. Government employees and their family members requires prior approval by the Department of State.

http://travel.state.gov/travel/cis_p.../cis_1056.html
Ustwo, 3-1/2 years after intiating military action in Afghanistan, our own State Dept. still does not deem that country's capital, specifically, the presumed secure areas where the U.S. maintains it's diplomatic mission, to be safe enough to permit the family members of diplomats to reside with them.
Unofficial travel to any part of Afghanistan (even to Kabul), by U.S. citizens is still deemed from a personal security standpoint, to be out of the question.

Is this the picture of present day Afghanistan that you, or most Americans, have planted in your head, as a result of listening to Bush admin. pronouncements of U.S. success and improvements there, at least in the capital, Kabul?

It cannot be demonstrated that the Bush administration can or will accurately disclose to the American people why we invaded Iraq, why we are there now in a larger military presence than during the invasion, or even, tell us whether we are battling foreign fighters in any signifigant numbers. I've documented the seldom discussed fact that the "liberation" of Afghanistan is vastly overrated.

I want our troops out of Iraq now, Ustwo, and in saying that, I am not supporting "terrorists". I am reacting to the reality that our U.S. administration has lost the trust of the small portion of it's citizenry that is actually informed about the circumstances of the debacles resulting from our post 9/11 military "adventures" in Afghansitan and in Iraq.

You are free to counter the details that I offer on this thread, point by point.
I do not see you doing that.

Last edited by host; 06-05-2005 at 08:45 AM..
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Old 06-05-2005, 10:05 AM   #50 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by host
I want our troops out of Iraq now, Ustwo, and in saying that, I am not supporting "terrorists". I am reacting to the reality that our U.S. administration has lost the trust of the small portion of it's citizenry that is actually informed about the circumstances of the debacles resulting from our post 9/11 military "adventures" in Afghansitan and in Iraq.
Just one question here: when the inevitable civil war breaks out in Iraq, will you accept your responsibility?

IMO, pulling out now is the WORST the US could do. The overly used phrase "the terrorists will win" most certainly applies here, at least in the eyes of their supporters. The end result will be even more suffering, and the destruction of what little hope and freedom the Iraqis have.

(FYI, I would prefer a UN peace-keeping operation instead of the current US-led force. But that's not gonna happen.)
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Old 06-05-2005, 10:34 AM   #51 (permalink)
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Quote:
I think that it would save lives of American military and Iraqi civilians if we
"pulled out "tomorrow".
I think that that thinking is what lead to the mass slaughter of many South Vietnamese tribes after we left. I think that thinking is what caused the massacres of the tribes in Iraq following the infandata uprising after we left Saddam in power in the first place. I think that your suppor of pulling out tomarrow is severely lacking historical proof and flawed.
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Old 06-05-2005, 10:50 AM   #52 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
I don't think the iraq war needs to be blurred into anything. Its clear to me, obviously not to everyone, that it is a part of the war on terror. People call the insurgents in iraq something akin to freedom fighters. That they are only fighing because we invaded them. Then the question is raised, "well, wouldn't you do the same thing if another country invaded NY?"

I can answer with a straight face - NO.

No, i would not drive a truck full of explosives into a crowded market.
No, I would not walk into a church during a funeral and blow myself up and everyone around me.

The terrorists don't do these things to fight the americans. They do them because they believe the people around them are just as evil as the US for cooperating. For them, an islamic state cannot be created by peaceful means, only through bombs and bullets. Their words, not mine.


Agreed. Would I fight to save my country if I thought it was in jeopardy? Absolutely! Would I take out Americans left and right to do it? Not a chance! The fundamental problem with fundamentalists is that they seem to overlook (or never got to) the bigger picture.
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Old 06-05-2005, 12:13 PM   #53 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tecoyah
And so we follow up the troll, with personal affront(veiled or not)....one more time and this is closed.
My apologies, Ustwo. It was, indeed, uncalled for.
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Old 06-05-2005, 12:15 PM   #54 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jorgelito
A veteran from Iraq came to our school last week and gave a powerpoint presentation in our class. He said the reason why schools etc were being targeted was because they were built by coalition (mostly US) troops, contracters etc. So it's like a bad cycle. If anyone's interested, we can open up another thread and I can share with you what this guy talked about. On a side note, the Syrian Ambassador came to speak to our class a few days ago. Very interesting stuff he had to say. We can open a thread on that too. The Israeli Foreign Minister is supposed to come next week. /end tangent
I would be very interested in both of these.
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Old 06-05-2005, 12:29 PM   #55 (permalink)
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i won't go so far as Ustwo and say that many in the West are in support of the terrorists... but i think it's quite obvious that many in the West aren't willing to support themselves.
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Old 06-05-2005, 01:48 PM   #56 (permalink)
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Support is not a black and white word in terms of meaning.

I don't think any but a lunatic fringe would be giving any support like money, arms, info, or physical support allowing the terrorists to be better terrorists.

I do think many are quite happy that we are taking casualties and think the terrorists cause is legitimate. This doesn't include the group of indirect supporters who want our troops out regardless of the effect on the Iraqi people. It becomes a situation of 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend'.
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Old 06-05-2005, 02:18 PM   #57 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dragonlich
Just one question here: when the inevitable civil war breaks out in Iraq, will you accept your responsibility?

IMO, pulling out now is the WORST the US could do. The overly used phrase "the terrorists will win" most certainly applies here, at least in the eyes of their supporters. The end result will be even more suffering, and the destruction of what little hope and freedom the Iraqis have.

(FYI, I would prefer a UN peace-keeping operation instead of the current US-led force. But that's not gonna happen.)
Quote:
Originally Posted by Seaver
I think that that thinking is what lead to the mass slaughter of many South Vietnamese tribes after we left. I think that thinking is what caused the massacres of the tribes in Iraq following the infandata uprising after we left Saddam in power in the first place. I think that your suppor of pulling out tomarrow is severely lacking historical proof and flawed.
Quote:
Originally Posted by irateplatypus
i won't go so far as Ustwo and say that many in the West are in support of the terrorists... but i think it's quite obvious that many in the West aren't willing to support themselves.
None of your responses to my last post attempts to debate, refute, or counter any of the information that I used to back my point that it is time for our military to withdraw from Iraq.

How is it that Rumsfeld, who maintained that a U.S. force level of about 140,000 U.S. troops was adequate, even though there were still not enough troops to secure the six mile stretch of road to Baghdad airport, cannot now justify withdrawing any of them, when he states this:
Quote:
SEC. RUMSFELD: Last question.

Q Mr. Secretary, in an interview with the Associated Press, Iraq's foreign minister expressed concern that the U.S. may pull out before Iraqi forces are ready. I imagine you probably haven't read that interview yet. But what sort of assurances can you give to the Iraqi people, to the American people of what the bar is for when -- how do you know how ready the Iraqi forces will be? What are you looking for when you come up with these sorts of assessments?

SEC. RUMSFELD: It's interesting. One day, someone says that the -- they might stay longer than they're needed; and the other is they might leave before -- while they're still needed. And I suppose it's an imperfect world. The president has answered that question, repeatedly. He said we have a -- committed a great deal to this effort; 25 million people have been liberated, a transitional government is in place. Our desire is to assist the Iraqi people in fashioning Iraqi security forces that can assume responsibility for their security, and pass over responsibility for their security as rapidly as they're capable of assuming it.

<b>That process is well under way. We're now over 165,000 Iraqi security forces.</b> There are a number that are operating independently. There are a number that are operating semi-independently but need logistic or lift or other types of quick reaction force assistance.

And each day it gets better. When you ask, "How can you can you know," the important thing to realize is, it's their country. It's the Iraqi people's country, and they're going to have to provide for their own security.
The U.S. military will pull out of Iraq, eventually, and judging by what this U.S. executive and military/intelligence leadership has accomplished so far, the U.S. will pull out after a far greater number of non-combatants and U.S. troops are killed or wounded, and with the same, or possibly worse dismal set of results for the efforts, than if the troop pullout were to begin tomorrow.

The crux of the problem, is that, in addition to being untruthful and incompetent, the folks running our government and our military refuse to take the advice of anyone with an informed opinion, and the possibility of offers of better solutions, that disagrees with them, the discrediting of General Shinseki by Wolfowitz, et al, being the best example of this.

The vehement refusal of some participants here to consider and to react to the details and history of U.S. military involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, for the purpose of adjusting their opinions in reaction to the progression of circumstances of the military presences in Iraq and Afghanistan, is not all that different from the description of the process described in the Downing Street memo, of the "Bush administration fixing the facts to match the policy".

Here is a fresh assessment of what some of you clamor for more of, in large part because you are incapable of even considering what you now regard as unthinkable, withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq without anyone believing that the "mission" has been accomplished. I need not worry that I will have to take some sort of responsibility as Dragonlich asks me to, for the "breakout of the inevitable civil war in Iraq". It is already a reality, although Bush and Rumsfeld will never tell you that, because then others would demand that they assume responsibility for triggering it.

I know that this report is from Newsweek, the magazine that published the true story of Koran desecration by U.S. jailers at Gitmo, but just muddled the now admitted details of how human excrement came to taint the muslim holy books. Consider that the reporter has been in Iraq for two years, far removed from the editorial decisions of the Koran story, and how his initial optimism was ground down during his time frame, by a series of missed U.S. opportunities and leadership, command, and training failures.
Quote:
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/8101422/site/newsweek/
Good Intentions Gone Bad

NEWSWEEK's Baghdad bureau chief, departing after two years of war and American occupation, has a few final thoughts.

By Rod Nordland
Newsweek

June 13 issue - Two years ago I went to Iraq as an unabashed believer in toppling Saddam Hussein. I knew his regime well from previous visits; WMDs or no, ridding the world of Saddam would surely be for the best, and America's good intentions would carry the day. What went wrong? A lot, but the biggest turning point was the Abu Ghraib scandal. Since April 2004 the liberation of Iraq has become a desperate exercise in damage control. The abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib alienated a broad swath of the Iraqi public. On top of that, it didn't work. There is no evidence that all the mistreatment and humiliation saved a single American life or led to the capture of any major terrorist, despite claims by the military that the prison produced "actionable intelligence."

The most shocking thing about Abu Ghraib was not the behavior of U.S. troops, but the incompetence of their leaders. Against the conduct of the Lynndie Englands and the Charles Graners, I'll gladly set the honesty and courage of Specialist Joseph Darby, the young MP who reported the abuse. A few soldiers will always do bad things. That's why you need competent officers, who know what the men and women under their command are capable of—and make sure it doesn't happen.

Living and working in Iraq, it's hard not to succumb to despair. At last count America has pumped at least $7 billion into reconstruction projects, with little to show for it but the hostility of ordinary Iraqis, who still have an 18 percent unemployment rate. Most of the cash goes to U.S. contractors who spend much of it on personal security. Basic services like electricity, water and sewers still aren't up to prewar levels. Electricity is especially vital in a country where summer temperatures commonly reach 125 degrees Fahrenheit. Yet only 15 percent of Iraqis have reliable electrical service. In the capital, where it counts most, it's only 4 percent.

The most powerful army in human history can't even protect a two-mile stretch of road. The Airport Highway connects both the international airport and Baghdad's main American military base, Camp Victory, to the city center. At night U.S. troops secure the road for the use of dignitaries; they close it to traffic and shoot at any unauthorized vehicles. More troops and more helicopters could help make the whole country safer. Instead the Pentagon has been drawing down the number of helicopters. And America never deployed nearly enough soldiers. They couldn't stop the orgy of looting that followed Saddam's fall. Now their primary mission is self-defense at any cost—which only deepens Iraqis' resentment.

The four-square-mile Green Zone, the one place in Baghdad where foreigners are reasonably safe, could be a showcase of American values and abilities. Instead the American enclave is a trash-strewn wasteland of Mad Max-style fortifications. The traffic lights don't work because no one has bothered to fix them. The garbage rarely gets collected. Some of the worst ambassadors in U.S. history are the GIs at the Green Zone's checkpoints. They've repeatedly punched Iraqi ministers, accidentally shot at visiting dignitaries and behave (even on good days) with all the courtesy of nightclub bouncers—to Americans and Iraqis alike. Not that U.S. soldiers in Iraq have much to smile about. They're overworked, much ignored on the home front and widely despised in Iraq, with little to look forward to but the distant end of their tours—and in most cases, another tour soon to follow. Many are reservists who, when they get home, often face the wreckage of careers and family.

I can't say how it will end. Iraq now has an elected government, popular at least among Shiites and Kurds, who give it strong approval ratings. There's even some hope that the Sunni minority will join the constitutional process. Iraqi security forces continue to get better trained and equipped. But Iraqis have such a long way to go, and there are so many ways for things to get even worse. I'm not one of those who think America should pull out immediately. There's no real choice but to stay, probably for many years to come. The question isn't "When will America pull out?"; it's "How bad a mess can we afford to leave behind?" All I can say is this: last one out, please turn on the lights.
If ever there was a "no confidence" vote regarding the leadership of a military and the formulation and implementation of policy that the military is ordered to follow, the above article makes the case. I cannot believe that the Bush administration can continue to be trusted with the responsibility of occupying and maintaining order in Iraq, or of overseeing U.S. foreign policy and commanding and directing the U.S. military. It must take huge volumes of denial and "fixing of facts to make the catstrophe that is Iraq look in anyway positive, or defensible". This is a descritpion of a total failure of policy and of military administration.

Please, if you have documentation from reliable sources to counter the electrical production figures, or of the performance of the U.S. military regarding relations with the Iraqi people today, and of improvements in the state of security there, post it. Posting good news to counter the sober assessments contained in my posts would do more to bolster your arguments than the content currently offered in your posts.

Last edited by host; 06-05-2005 at 02:57 PM..
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Old 06-05-2005, 02:37 PM   #58 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Support is not a black and white word in terms of meaning.

I don't think any but a lunatic fringe would be giving any support like money, arms, info, or physical support allowing the terrorists to be better terrorists.

I do think many are quite happy that we are taking casualties and think the terrorists cause is legitimate. This doesn't include the group of indirect supporters who want our troops out regardless of the effect on the Iraqi people. It becomes a situation of 'the enemy of my enemy is my friend'.
The Reagan and Bush '41 administrations, with the help of first, Rumsfeld, and then under the DOD oversight of Cheney, apparently did just what you are describing, with reference to Saddam and his terrorist activities, starting a war of aggression against his neighbor, Iran, and then gassing his own people, with U.S. bio weapons stocks, advice, technical support, and even with the U.S. supplied crop dusting helicopters to deliver the biological agents to the skies over at least one Kurdish village.

Did Reagan qualify for your "lunatic fringe" catagory when he signed the secret order to supply the terrorist government of Iran with anti-tank missles and other military hardware, repeatedly, while simultaneously supporting Saddam? How about the secret and, contrarty to the stated policy of refusing to negotiate with terrorists, effort to curry favor with Iran by secretly supplying it's military with anti-tank weapons in the hope that it would influence Iran to help free American hostages held by factions allied with the Iranian government. Isn't a blanket policy to refuse to negotiate with terrorists necessary in order to discourage further acts of terrorism that might otherwise be encouraged if terrorists observe that their acts will influence concessions?

Can you consider that there is a legitmate reason to believe that the Bush administration never actually held a position that the "liberation of the Iraqi people", was a goal, in and of itself, was worth the expense of the life of even one American soldier, let alone, 1660 lives and ten thousand seriously wounded, a weakening of U.S. ability to attract and maintain the best recruits and non-com officers in it's ranks?

Can you read the above report by Newsweek's Baghdad Bureau chief on the state of things in Iraq, and not consider that labelling objectors to U.S. military policy in Iraq as possible terrorist "sympathizers or enablers, especially when viewed alongside the history of statements and actions of U.S. administrations of the past 25 years, may not be the most compelling or effective ways to counter my arguments and conclusions?
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Old 06-05-2005, 02:50 PM   #59 (permalink)
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This post is especially revealing. What better evidence than an optimist-turned-pessimist editor with two years of on-the-ground experience in Iraq? <a href="http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthread.php?p=1804217#post1804217">Host's post</a>
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Old 06-05-2005, 07:33 PM   #60 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ustwo
I don't think any but a lunatic fringe would be giving any support like money, arms, info, or physical support allowing the terrorists to be better terrorists.
Host makes a very good point. In addition, American funding of the mujihadeen (including Bin Laden) under the Reagan administration makes current claims of purity suspect. Bush now funds Uzbekistan, which under "President" Karimov operates one of the most despotic regimes in modern times. Indeed, it takes a special kind of person to fund a terrorist or despot in the search for peace or order.

Unfortunatly, George Bush is such a person.
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Old 06-06-2005, 11:07 AM   #61 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by martinguerre
Host makes a very good point. In addition, American funding of the mujihadeen (including Bin Laden) under the Reagan administration makes current claims of purity suspect. Bush now funds Uzbekistan, which under "President" Karimov operates one of the most despotic regimes in modern times. Indeed, it takes a special kind of person to fund a terrorist or despot in the search for peace or order.

Unfortunatly, George Bush is such a person.
That's probably why he supports the government of North-Korea, Iran, Belarus, and tons of other despotisms. And that's probably why he openly disapproves of Karimov's actions.

Politics isn't black and white...
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Old 06-07-2005, 12:36 PM   #62 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dragonlich
That's probably why he supports the government of North-Korea, Iran, Belarus, and tons of other despotisms. And that's probably why he openly disapproves of Karimov's actions.

Politics isn't black and white...
That wasn't my point.

Slapping Karimov on the wrist while we still provide military support for his regime is about useless in terms of providing any significant pressure to change. So don't bother saying that we've done anything moral in the situation there. And despite long term violations of human rights, Bush only said anything when international media covered the massacres. Real stand up forgien policy that is. I think it's called "the hand caught in the proverbial cookie jar of supporting a brutal dicator who couldn't keep the massacres quiet enough."

In the war to bring down one evil, we may be tempted to accept another. sometimes, this is an unavoidable consequence of the situation we find ourselves in. but the real problem is the whitewash, the idea that America stands for freedom, period. No, we stand for freedom where it's handy for us to do so. For Uzbeks, we'd rather have their air space clearances so we can fight in Afganistan, than for them to be free of a ruthless and merciless dictator. Bush has made a series of pyhrric choices in this war on terror, and i think it is an indication of his Ahabian obession, and ability to ignore the human costs of our forgien policy.
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Old 06-07-2005, 02:34 PM   #63 (permalink)
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Another thread that's turned into a pretty good one.

Congrats to the board for some fine self policing

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