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Old 07-02-2005, 02:19 PM   #1 (permalink)
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Napalm In Iraq?

I first heard from a friend in London that napalm had been used in Iraq, but I had a great deal of skepticism that it could be true. I see now that it has been perculating in the British press for some time and the story has found it's way to the internet. Alas, our free press has yet to mention it.

If it is true that the Pentagon has verified the claims, why are we hearing nothing of this from the mainstream press?

________________________________________________________________

Covering Up Napalm in Iraq
By Mike Whitney
ZNet

Tuesday 28 June 2005

"You smell that? Do you smell that? Napalm, son. Nothing else in the world smells like that. I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for twelve hours. When it was all over I walked up. We didn't find one of 'em, not one stinkin' dink body. The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like... victory. Robert Duvall, "Apocalypse Now" (1979)

Two weeks ago the UK Independent ran an article which confirmed that the US had "lied to Britain over the use of napalm in Iraq". (6-17-05) Since then, not one American newspaper or TV station has picked up the story even though the Pentagon has verified the claims. This is the extent to which the American "free press" is yoked to the center of power in Washington. As we've seen with the Downing Street memo, (which was reluctantly reported 5 weeks after it appeared in the British press) the air-tight American media ignores any story that doesn't embrace their collective support for the war. The prospect that the US military is using "universally reviled" weapons runs counter to the media-generated narrative that the war was motivated by humanitarian concerns (to topple a brutal dictator) as well as to eliminate the elusive WMDs. We can now say with certainty that the only WMDs in Iraq were those that were introduced by foreign invaders from the US who have used them to subjugate the indigenous people.

"Despite persistent rumors of injuries among Iraqis consistent with the use of incendiary weapons such as napalm" the Pentagon insisted that "US forces had not used a new generation of incendiary weapons, codenamed MK77, in Iraq." (UK Independent)

The Pentagon lied.

Defense Minister, Adam Ingram, admitted that the US had misled the British high-command about the use of napalm, but he would not comment on the extent of the cover up. The use of firebombs puts the US in breach of the 1980 Convention on Certain Chemical Weapons (CCW) and is a violation the Geneva Protocol against the use of white phosphorous, "since its use causes indiscriminate and extreme injuries especially when deployed in an urban area."

Regrettably, "indiscriminate and extreme injuries" are a vital part of the American terror-campaign in Iraq; a well-coordinated strategy designed to spawn panic through random acts of violence.

It's clear that the military never needed to use napalm in Iraq. Their conventional weaponry and laser-guided technology were already enough to run roughshod over the Iraqi army and seize Baghdad almost unobstructed. Napalm was introduced simply to terrorize the Iraqi people; to pacify through intimidation. Cheney, Rumsfeld and Negroponte are old-hands at terrorism, dating back to their counterinsurgency projects in Nicaragua and El Salvador under the Reagan Administration. They know that the threat of immolation serves as a powerful deterrent and fits seamlessly into their overarching scheme of rule through fear. Terror and deception are the rotating parts of the same axis; the two imperatives of the Bush-Cheney foreign policy strategy.

Napalm in Falluja

The US also used napalm in the siege of Falluja as was reported in the UK Mirror ("Falluja Napalmed", 11-28-04) The Mirror said, "President George Bush has sanctioned the use of napalm, a deadly cocktail of polystyrene and jet-fuel banned by the United Nations in 1980, will stun the world.... Reports claim that innocent civilians have died in napalm attacks, which turn victims into human fireballs as the gel bonds flames to flesh...Since the American assault on Falluja there have been reports of 'melted' corpse, which appeared to have napalm injuries."

"Human fireballs" and "melted corpses"; these are the real expressions of Operation Iraqi Freedom not the bland platitudes issuing from the presidential podium.

Dr. Khalid ash-Shaykhli, who was the head of the Iraqi Ministry of Health in Falluja, reported to Al Jazeera (and to the Washington Post, although it was never reported) that "research, prepared by his medical team, prove that the US forces used internationally prohibited substances, including mustard gas, nerve gas, and other burning chemicals in their attacks on the war-torn city."

Dr Shaykhli's claims have been corroborated by numerous eyewitness accounts as well as reports that "all forms of nature were wiped out in Falluja"...as well as "hundreds, of stray dogs, cats, and birds that had perished as a result of those gasses." An unidentified chemical was used in the bombing raids that killed every living creature in certain areas of the city.

As journalist Dahr Jamail reported later in his article "What is the US trying to Hide?", "At least two kilometers of soil were removed......exactly as they did at Baghdad Airport after the heavy battles there during the invasion and the Americans used their special weapons."

A cover up?

So far, none of this has appeared in any American media, nor has the media reported that the United Nations has been rebuffed twice by the Defense Dept. in calling for an independent investigation into what really took place in Falluja. The US simply waves away the international body as a minor nuisance while the media scrupulously omits any mention of the allegations from their coverage.

We can assume that the order to use napalm (as well as the other, unidentified substances) came straight from the office of Donald Rumsfeld. No one else could have issued that order, nor would they have risked their career by unilaterally using banned weapons when their use was entirely gratuitous. Rumsfeld's directive is consistent with other decisions attributed to the Defense Secretary; like the authorizing of torture at Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib, the targeting of members of the press, and the rehiring of members of Saddam's Secret Police ( the Mukhabarat) to carry out their brutal activities under new leadership. Rumsfeld's office has been the headwaters for most of the administration's treachery. Napalm simply adds depth to an already prodigious list of war crimes on Rumsfeld's resume'. Co-opting the Media

On June 10, 2005 numerous sources reported that the "US Special Operations Command hired three firms to produce newspaper stories, television broadcasts and Internet web sites to spread American propaganda overseas. The Tampa-based military headquarters, which oversees commandos and psychological warfare, may spend up to $100 million for the media campaign over the next five years." (James Crawley, Media General News Service) It's clear that there's no need for the Defense Dept. to shore up its "strategic information" (propaganda) operations in the US where reliable apparatchiks can be counted on to obfuscate, omit or exaggerate the coverage of the war according to the requirements of the Pentagon. The American press has been as skillful at embellishing the imaginary heroics of Jessica Lynch and Pat Tillman as they have been in concealing the damning details of the Downing Street Memo or the lack of evidence concerning the alleged WMDs. Should we be surprised that the media has remained silent about the immolation of Iraqis by American firebombs?

The US "free press" is a completely integrated part of the state-information system. Its meticulously managed message has been the most successful part of the entire Iraqi debacle. By providing the requisite cheerleading, diversions and omissions, the media has shown itself to be an invaluable asset to the men in power; perpetuating the deceptions that keep the public acquiescent during a savage colonial war. Given the scope of the media's culpability for the violence in Iraq, it's unlikely that the use of napalm will cause any great crisis of conscience. Their deft coverage has already facilitated the deaths of tens of thousands of innocent people; a few more charred Iraqis shouldn't matter.
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Old 07-02-2005, 03:20 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Got a link?

I want to have an open mind, and I don't like going after the source over the story, but with lovely comments like, "Their deft coverage has already facilitated the deaths of tens of thousands of innocent people; a few more charred Iraqis shouldn't matter," it's a little difficult.
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Old 07-02-2005, 03:57 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Just do a search for Mike Whitney and you'll see how this isn't exactly a reliable source.
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Old 07-02-2005, 04:05 PM   #4 (permalink)
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AFAIK the US are not using Napalm, they are using a different stuff with similar results (MK 77 Bombs).

http://www.globalsecurity.org/org/ne...alm-iraq01.htm

more links about the topic

http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/...749944836.html
http://edition.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/me...c.irq.savidge/
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/m...9_1n5bomb.html
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/...145828249.html
http://www.sundaymirror.co.uk/news/t...name_page.html
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Last edited by Pacifier; 07-02-2005 at 04:09 PM..
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Old 07-02-2005, 04:09 PM   #5 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elphaba
I first heard from a friend in London that napalm had been used in Iraq, but I had a great deal of skepticism that it could be true. I see now that it has been perculating in the British press for some time and the story has found it's way to the internet. Alas, our free press has yet to mention it.

If it is true that the Pentagon has verified the claims, why are we hearing nothing of this from the mainstream press?

________________________________________________________________
I posted the following story in a thread on this forum, back on June 17.......
It is also quoted in over 8600 google.com search resultsm and to my knowledge,
it has not been refuted by either the UK or the US government.....

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&l...22&btnG=Search

http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpos...3&postcount=11
Quote:
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/pol...p?story=647397
US lied to Britain over use of napalm in Iraq war
By Colin Brown, Deputy Political Editor

17 June 2005

American officials lied to British ministers over the use of "internationally reviled" napalm-type firebombs in Iraq.

Yesterday's disclosure led to calls by MPs for a full statement to the Commons and opened ministers to allegations that they held back the facts until after the general election.

Despite persistent rumours of injuries among Iraqis consistent with the use of incendiary weapons such as napalm, Adam Ingram, the Defence minister, assured Labour MPs in January that US forces had not used a new generation of incendiary weapons, codenamed MK77, in Iraq.

But Mr Ingram admitted to the Labour MP Harry Cohen in a private letter obtained by The Independent that he had inadvertently misled Parliament because he had been misinformed by the US. "The US confirmed to my officials that they had not used MK77s in Iraq at any time and this was the basis of my response to you," he told Mr Cohen. "I regret to say that I have since discovered that this is not the case and must now correct the position."

Mr Ingram said 30 MK77 firebombs were used by the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force in the invasion of Iraq between 31 March and 2 April 2003. They were used against military targets "away from civilian targets", he said. This avoids breaching the 1980 Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW), which permits their use only against military targets.

Britain, which has no stockpiles of the weapons, ratified the convention, but the US did not.

The confirmation that US officials misled British ministers led to new questions last night about the value of the latest assurances by the US. Mr Cohen said there were rumours that the firebombs were used in the US assault on the insurgent stronghold in Fallujah last year, claims denied by the US. He is tabling more questions seeking assurances that the weapons were not used against civilians.

Mr Ingram did not explain why the US officials had misled him, but the US and British governments were accused of a cover-up. The Iraq Analysis Group, which campaigned against the war, said the US authorities only admitted the use of the weapons after the evidence from reporters had become irrefutable.

Mike Lewis, a spokesman for the group, said: "The US has used internationally reviled weapons that the UK refuses to use, and has then apparently lied to UK officials, showing how little weight the UK carries in influencing American policy."

He added: "Evidence that Mr Ingram had given false information to Parliament was publicly available months ago. He has waited until after the election to admit to it - a clear sign of the Government's embarrassment that they are doing nothing to restrain their own coalition partner in Iraq."

The US State Department website admitted in the run-up to the election that US forces had used MK77s in Iraq. Protests were made by MPs, but it was only this week that Mr Ingram confirmed the reports were true.

Mike Moore, the Liberal Democrat defence spokes-man, said: "It is very serious that this type of weapon was used in Iraq, but this shows the US has not been completely open with the UK. We are supposed to have a special relationship.

"It has also taken two months for the minister to clear this up. This is welcome candour, but it will raise fresh questions about how open the Government wished to be... before the election."

The MK77 bombs, an evolution of the napalm used in Vietnam and Korea, carry kerosene-based jet fuel and polystyrene so that, like napalm, the gel sticks to structures and to its victims. <h4>The bombs lack stabilising fins, making them far from precise.</h4>
Quote:
http://usinfo.state.gov/media/Archiv..._Fallujah.html
Did the U.S. Use "Illegal" Weapons in Fallujah?
Media allegations claim the U.S. used outlawed weapons during combat in Iraq

.........In both stories, Islam Online noted that U.S. forces had used napalm-like incendiary weapons during the march to Baghdad in the spring of 2003. Although all napalm in the U.S. arsenal had been destroyed by 2001, Mark-77 firebombs, which have a similar effect to napalm, were used against enemy positions in 2003.

The repetition of this story on Islam Online’s led to further misinformation. Some readers did not distinguish between what had happened in the spring of 2003, during the march to Baghdad, and in Fallujah in November 2004. They mistakenly thought napalm-like weapons had been used in Fallujah, which is not true. No Mark-77 firebombs have been used in operations in Fallujah.............

................The Sunday Mirror story was wrong in two ways.

First, napalm or napalm-like incendiary weapons are not outlawed. International law permits their use against military forces, which is how they were used in 2003.....................
Well....I guess that our state dept. cleared that up. It seems an odd way to defend the use of "napalm like" weapons.

Last edited by host; 07-02-2005 at 04:20 PM..
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Old 07-02-2005, 04:51 PM   #6 (permalink)
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Host, I apologize for not doing a topic search first. I thought it was new news.
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Old 07-02-2005, 04:56 PM   #7 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by djtestudo
Got a link?

I want to have an open mind, and I don't like going after the source over the story, but with lovely comments like, "Their deft coverage has already facilitated the deaths of tens of thousands of innocent people; a few more charred Iraqis shouldn't matter," it's a little difficult.
I agree with you that his article is inflammatory and it is obvious that he has no love for the current administration. I should have stated that at the onset. I received the article from truthout.org which is clearly left leaning.

My only interest in posting this was to determine if this was just left-wing crazies making unsupportable claims, or is our mainstream press once again ignoring the international press.
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Old 07-02-2005, 05:14 PM   #8 (permalink)
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Based on the links that Pacifier and Host have given me, it would appear that the Pentagon used "napalm-like" explosives on Bagdad and Fallujah. Isn't this just an attempt to skirt international law? I also wonder what purpose it would serve, as was brought up in the article I posted.
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Old 07-02-2005, 06:24 PM   #9 (permalink)
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Yeah, I remember this story popping up on the internet a few weeks ago. As to why the MSM hasn't picked up on it, well, I'm sure they're just so busy what with white women disappearing in Caribbean nations and all that catching up to do on the Downing Street Memos story.
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Old 07-02-2005, 08:16 PM   #10 (permalink)
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Not to mention the oh so last month Paris Hilton.
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Old 07-02-2005, 08:30 PM   #11 (permalink)
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Two weeks ago the UK Independent ran an article which confirmed that the US had "lied to Britain over the use of napalm in Iraq". (6-17-05) Since then, not one American newspaper or TV station has picked up the story even though the Pentagon has verified the claims.
When and where did the Pentagon "confirm" this?

Quote:
"Despite persistent rumors of injuries among Iraqis consistent with the use of incendiary weapons such as napalm" the Pentagon insisted that "US forces had not used a new generation of incendiary weapons, codenamed MK77, in Iraq." (UK Independent)
Lots of things that are not incendiary weapons make things burn. Remember the four Blackwater employees who got killed and hung from the bridge? Remember how charred their bodies were? Did the insurgents use napalm on them? Of course not. When things go boom, combustibles will burn.

Quote:
Defense Minister, Adam Ingram, admitted that the US had misled the British high-command about the use of napalm, but he would not comment on the extent of the cover up. The use of firebombs puts the US in breach of the 1980 Convention on Certain Chemical Weapons (CCW) and is a violation the Geneva Protocol against the use of white phosphorous, "since its use causes indiscriminate and extreme injuries especially when deployed in an urban area."
Napalm does not contain White Phosphorous. As the 7-up commercial went: "Never had it, never will. AHAHAHAHAAAAAA!!!"

Quote:
The US also used napalm in the siege of Falluja as was reported in the UK Mirror ("Falluja Napalmed", 11-28-04) The Mirror said, "President George Bush has sanctioned the use of napalm, a deadly cocktail of polystyrene and jet-fuel banned by the United Nations in 1980, will stun the world.... Reports claim that innocent civilians have died in napalm attacks, which turn victims into human fireballs as the gel bonds flames to flesh...Since the American assault on Falluja there have been reports of 'melted' corpse, which appeared to have napalm injuries."
The same exact type of wounds tend to be generated when anybody is in a vehicle that is hit and they do not make it out of it. Why? Because gasoline, which powers many vehicles, burns. Odd how that works, isn't it?

Quote:
Dr Shaykhli's claims have been corroborated by numerous eyewitness accounts as well as reports that "all forms of nature were wiped out in Falluja"...as well as "hundreds, of stray dogs, cats, and birds that had perished as a result of those gasses." An unidentified chemical was used in the bombing raids that killed every living creature in certain areas of the city.
we used nerve gas? Why are they not saying we nuked them?Oh, yeah, that whole thing about the spy satellites of other countries proving we didn't...

Quote:
The US simply waves away the international body as a minor nuisance while the media scrupulously omits any mention of the allegations from their coverage.
Nope, the US media just doesn't give press time to obvious falsehoods and enemy propaganda.
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Old 07-02-2005, 08:38 PM   #12 (permalink)
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Moose, as to your first question you will find the answer in the links provided. The Pentagon as admitted to using "napalm-like" weapons. Your other questions are likely to be answered in the links as well, if you should choose to read them.
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Old 07-02-2005, 08:53 PM   #13 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Elphaba
Moose, as to your first question you will find the answer in the links provided. The Pentagon as admitted to using "napalm-like" weapons. Your other questions are likely to be answered in the links as well, if you should choose to read them.
From the following link: http://usinfo.state.gov/media/Archiv..._Fallujah.html

Quote:
Although all napalm in the U.S. arsenal had been destroyed by 2001, Mark-77 firebombs, which have a similar effect to napalm, were used against enemy positions in 2003.

-and-

No Mark-77 firebombs have been used in operations in Fallujah.
"similar effect to napalm" does not mean "napalm-like". A bullet can kill you. So can a stampeding herd of cattle. Does that make a stampeding herd of cattle "bullet-like"? They both have the same result of making somebody dead, right?

Is a FAE bomb "napalm-like"? They both use combustibles, right?

Let's use another example. You're familiar with the old Corvair of Ralph Nader fame, right? The Prius, the new hybrid gas-electric car manufactured by Honda, IIRC, could be considered honestly to be an "advanced version" of the Corvair, since it's several generations of automotive technology later, yes? Manufacturing the Corvair to it's original safety standards now would be quite illegal. Making the Prius is not illegal at all.

What's the point of all this verbiage? When necassary, words can be quite deceiving, and must be parsed very, very carefully.
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Old 07-02-2005, 10:00 PM   #14 (permalink)
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moose, are you kidding? The Pentagon admits that a firebomb which has "similar effects to napalm" was used and you are honestly going to claim that we don't really know what it does because hey, a stair case could kill ya too if you don't watch your step, what's the difference?
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Old 07-02-2005, 10:08 PM   #15 (permalink)
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moose, are you kidding? The Pentagon admits that a firebomb which has "similar effects to napalm" was used and you are honestly going to claim that we don't really know what it does because hey, a stair case could kill ya too if you don't watch your step, what's the difference?
Lots of things which have "similar effects to Napalm" are NOT "Napalm". Gasoline in an automobile fuel tank can "have similar effects to napalm" if it catches fire. So if my car catches fire, am I to be arrested for possession of Napalm?
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Old 07-02-2005, 10:13 PM   #16 (permalink)
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Ummm let me get this straight, based even on the report on the left wing independent.

We used firebombs, on military targets, that may be banned under a treaty we didn't sign, and we should be upset by this?

And does anyone honestly think we could get away with using these on a city, when we had reporters, sometimes quite hostile to the marines if you recall, with the marine units? This was during the most closely monitored offensive in modern warfare history.

You can't cover up the effects of a fire bombing on a city, give me a break.
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Old 07-03-2005, 09:18 AM   #17 (permalink)
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Ummm let me get this straight, based even on the report on the left wing independent.

We used firebombs, on military targets, that may be banned under a treaty we didn't sign, and we should be upset by this?

And does anyone honestly think we could get away with using these on a city, when we had reporters, sometimes quite hostile to the marines if you recall, with the marine units? This was during the most closely monitored offensive in modern warfare history.

You can't cover up the effects of a fire bombing on a city, give me a break.
Well the current Administration did a hell of a job covering up WMD, so in comparison, a block or two or three of firebombing shouldn't be that difficult. I'm just guessing though, I wasn't there. And napalm-like substances? Could it be somewhat likely that this substance is worse than napalm? We've come along way since Vietnam, baby.
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Old 07-03-2005, 10:59 AM   #18 (permalink)
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Amazing this attitude that it's ok for the US to do whatever the Hell we want, and yet we are supposed to be so much better than the terrorists.

Then they don't understand why everyone hates us. Let's keep running up trade deficits killing our factories at home and see how much pity other countries will take on us when we can't pay the bills.
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Old 07-03-2005, 12:34 PM   #19 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by OFKU0
Well the current Administration did a hell of a job covering up WMD, so in comparison, a block or two or three of firebombing shouldn't be that difficult. I'm just guessing though, I wasn't there. And napalm-like substances? Could it be somewhat likely that this substance is worse than napalm? We've come along way since Vietnam, baby.
Yeah, they must have done a hell of a job. They even managed to fool the French and German intellegence.

Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
Then they don't understand why everyone hates us. Let's keep running up trade deficits killing our factories at home and see how much pity other countries will take on us when we can't pay the bills.
And this has to do with the subject how...?
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Old 07-03-2005, 12:46 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
We used firebombs, on military targets, that may be banned under a treaty we didn't sign, and we should be upset by this?
Yes, you should and I tell you why:

1. A lot of states signed the treaty and the fact that you didn't signed it and that you use those weapons is oil in the fire of those who hate you (no not the liberals, I'm talking about extremist terrorists here). This "fuck you we don't care" attitude is in fact the reason for a lot of your problems, start learning!

2. At least one of your allies has sigend th treaty (UK) and they might be a bit upset. Sure, you still have Poland, but you should try not to piss off too many allies.

3. You'll loose the moral highground you claim to have (although I don't now why you claim it...) if you use every dirty trick possible.
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Old 07-03-2005, 01:12 PM   #21 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pacifier
Yes, you should and I tell you why:

1. A lot of states signed the treaty and the fact that you didn't signed it and that you use those weapons is oil in the fire of those who hate you (no not the liberals, I'm talking about extremist terrorists here). This "fuck you we don't care" attitude is in fact the reason for a lot of your problems, start learning!

2. At least one of your allies has sigend th treaty (UK) and they might be a bit upset. Sure, you still have Poland, but you should try not to piss off too many allies.

3. You'll loose the moral highground you claim to have (although I don't now why you claim it...) if you use every dirty trick possible.
1. Good for them, we didn't because such treaties are stupid. I rather doubt that any extremist terrorists were thinking 'You know the United States isn't that bad...wait they used a firebomb instead of a bunker buster? Those bastards! We will suicide bomb them now!'

2. They will get over it.

3. If we used every dirty trick possible there would no longer be a problem. Our dirty tricks are measured in megatons.

This really a much to do about nothing issue brought up only to destabilize the US/UK alliance by those who would rather see us fail, regardless of the consequences to Iraq. I don't think anyone reading this really cares what weapons we used.
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Old 07-03-2005, 01:47 PM   #22 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by djtestudo
Yeah, they must have done a hell of a job. They even managed to fool the French and German intellegence.


And this has to do with the subject how...?
Your conclusions about what "French and German intellegence" determined about Iraqi WMD before the march, 2003 invasion of Iraq are open to dispute. Consider that, in addition to the three news articles that I offer here to raise doubts about the solidity of your statement, that the political leaders of France and Germany did not share Bush and Blair's urgency to invade Iraq to pre-empt the WMD threat, and that they actively opposed the invasion. This indicates to me that, although we cannot know for sure what the consensus of these intelligence agencies actually was regarding the threat of Iraqi WMD, they did not make a persuasive enough argument to their political leaders to sway them toward the policies of Bush and Blair.
Quote:
By THOMAS WAGNER
Associated Press Writer
SEPTEMBER 25, 04:21 ET
http://wire.ap.org/?FRONTID=EUROPE&S...2dWORLD%2dREAX

LONDON (AP) - Prime Minister Tony Blair's warning about Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction appeared to win little support outside Washington, with France and China expressing skepticism.

For weeks, talk about a possible U.S.-led war against Iraq had created widespread interest about Blair's long-promised dossier about Saddam Hussein's chemical and biological arsenal.

In it and his speech to a special session of the House of Commons on Tuesday, Blair said the stockpile is not only growing, but that Saddam is prepared to use such weapons of mass destruction quickly. The intelligence dossier also said Iraq has taken steps to develop nuclear weapons.

Blair, President Bush's top ally, said he wants U.N. weapons inspectors allowed back into Iraq with no limits on their movements.

But he also supported the U.S. goal of a ``regime change'' in Baghdad, given how often Saddam has defied the world body's requirements regarding his weapons since losing the Gulf War.

Britain and the United States are two of the five permanent, veto-wielding members of the U.N. Security Council, and they have been trying to win the support of the other three - China, France and Russia - for a new resolution threatening Iraq for its continued defiance.

But the French and Chinese leaders both sounded skeptical Tuesday about Blair's speech and the dossier in comments they made while attending a summit of European and Asian leaders in Denmark.

French President Jacques Chirac said a war with Iraq is still avoidable if the U.N. Security Council is given a primary role in the crisis. Chirac reiterated there was no need for a proposed Security Council resolution threatening war if Saddam keeps U.N. arms inspectors out.

``This is not the view of France,'' said Chirac, adding that only inspectors can provide the needed proof about Saddam's weapons. ``I do not think at all that war is unavoidable.''..............
Quote:
http://edition.cnn.com/2003/WORLD/me....powell.ricin/
Wednesday, February 12, 2003 Posted: 2:58 PM EST (1958 GMT)
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- European intelligence officials questioned U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell's contention Wednesday that the lethal poison involved in a terrorist plot broken up in Britain came from Iraq.

Powell cited the plot in testimony before the House International Relations Committee, arguing that part of the danger of not disarming Iraq lay in possible alliances with terrorists........

.......A French intelligence source said he was "stunned" by Powell's comment.

"There is no, repeat, no suggestion that the ricin was anything but locally produced," he said. "It was bad quality, not technically sophisticated."

Further, the source said, British authorities "are clear" that the poison was "home-made."

"Don't forget, intelligence is like a supermarket, and at that level in government, you see everything, and can pick anything," the source said.
Quote:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main...ixnewstop.html
German spies offered help to Saddam in run-up to war
By David Harrison in Baghdad
(Filed: 20/04/2003)

Germany's intelligence services attempted to build closer links to Saddam's secret service during the build-up to war last year, documents from the bombed Iraqi intelligence HQ in Baghdad obtained by The Telegraph reveal.

Documents recovered from Iraqi intelligence HQ in Baghdad

They show that an agent named as Johannes William Hoffner, described as a "new German representative in Iraq" who had entered the country under diplomatic cover, attended a meeting with Lt Gen Taher Jalil Haboosh, the director of Iraq's intelligence service.

During the meeting, on January 29, 2002, Lt Gen Haboosh says that the Iraqis are keen to have a relationship with Germany's intelligence agency "under diplomatic cover", adding that he hopes to develop that relationship through Mr Hoffner.

The German replies: "My organisation wants to develop its relationship with your organisation."

In return, the Iraqis offered to give lucrative contracts to German companies if the Berlin government helped prevent an American invasion of the country.

The revelations come a week after The Telegraph reported that Russia had spied for the Iraqis, passing them intelligence about a meeting between Tony Blair and Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian prime minister. Both the British and Italian governments have launched investigations.

The meeting between the Iraqi and German agents took place some six months before Chancellor Schröder's Social Democrat-led government began its policy of direct opposition to the idea of an American/British-led war against Iraq. The policy was adopted in the heat of last year's German general election campaign, at a time when the Social Democrats were widely predicted to lose the contest. Mr Schröder was re-elected as Chancellor last September, largely because of the popularity of his government's outspoken opposition to the war against Iraq. The apparently verbatim account of the meeting between Lt Gen Haboosh and Mr Hoffner was among documents recovered by The Telegraph in the rubble of the Iraqi intelligence headquarters in Baghdad, which was heavily bombed.

During the meeting, Lt Gen Haboosh tells the German agent that Iraq has "big problems" with Britain and the United States. "We have problems with Britain because it occupied Iraq for 60 years and with America because of its aggression for 11 years," he says.

He adds, however, that Iraq has no problems with Germany and suggests that Germany will be rewarded with lucrative contracts if it offers international support to Iraq. "When the American conspiracy is finished, we will make a calculation for each state that helps Iraq in its crisis."

He also urges Mr Hoffner to lobby the German government to raise its diplomatic mission in Baghdad to full ambassadorial level. Mr Hoffner says that it would be a decision for the German foreign ministry, but Germany's diplomatic presence in the Iraqi capital made it easier for him to enter Iraq because he was able to use diplomatic cover.

Last night, a spokesman for the German government said it was "well known" that it had been offered lucrative contracts by Baghdad providing it maintained an anti-Iraq war stance. "Iraq made these kinds of promises before the war and praised Germany for its position," he said............
pan6467 and I agree that one of the most grievous shortcomings of the present U.S. administration, is it's lack of action in regard to the greatest threat to our national security; the vunerability of our paper fiat currency to
a fundamentally driven decline in it's purchasing power, with only the speed of the decline in doubt. Our government indicates that it has no plan to deal with unsustainable trade and budget deficits, aggravated by politically driven and, from the standpoint of new financial demands on the U.S. treasury created by Bush's "war on terror", unjustifiable, signifigant tax cuts, primarily for the wealthiest tax payers. Only lip service and posturing is paid to advocacy for solutions to profligate use and dependence on foreign crude oil.
Bush has proposed less than $1 billion in federal support for his folly that is supposed to relieve our dependence on motor fuels; "hydrogen fuel cells", during a time when oil has doubled in price on his watch, and caused the annual trade deficit to expand by more than $125 billion on the increase in the cost of crude oil alone!

It is not unreasonable to regard the U.S. to be a candidate for a currency collapse similar to the recent experience in Argentina. pan6467 makes the point that this is not a time for the U.S., a massive debtor nation that is trading it's infrastructure to countries like China for an unsustainable consumption binge, spending more on oversized homes with granite kitchen countertops, than was malinvested on still unlit fiber optice networks and still unused telecom and internet infrastructure, just a few years ago, to piss off the rest of the world with it's "in your face" attitude.

An announcement tomorrow by OPEC or Russia that oil purchase must be paid for in Euros instead of dollars would suddenly reduce the ability of the U.S. to continue to purchase both guns and butter.

Last edited by host; 07-03-2005 at 03:01 PM..
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Old 07-03-2005, 02:20 PM   #23 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
We used firebombs, on military targets, that may be banned under a treaty we didn't sign, and we should be upset by this?

And does anyone honestly think we could get away with using these on a city, when we had reporters, sometimes quite hostile to the marines if you recall, with the marine units? This was during the most closely monitored offensive in modern warfare history.

You can't cover up the effects of a fire bombing on a city, give me a break.
How many civilian casualties have their been in Iraq since the beginning of the war? And why don't you know for sure? But what about the hostile reporters? Isn't this the most closely monitored offensive in modern warfare history?

We don't know shit about this war. We get reports like this all the time. We're probably using cluster bombs, we're kidnaping civilians and are torturing them. But how do we know for sure? I'm not in Iraq, and neither are you. We try to trust that the information we get is trustworthy, but we know it isn't. So how can you say, in all seriousness, that the use of napalm can't be covered up?
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Old 07-03-2005, 03:28 PM   #24 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
How many civilian casualties have their been in Iraq since the beginning of the war? And why don't you know for sure? But what about the hostile reporters? Isn't this the most closely monitored offensive in modern warfare history?

We don't know shit about this war. We get reports like this all the time. We're probably using cluster bombs, we're kidnaping civilians and are torturing them. But how do we know for sure? I'm not in Iraq, and neither are you. We try to trust that the information we get is trustworthy, but we know it isn't. So how can you say, in all seriousness, that the use of napalm can't be covered up?
willravel, as you seem to hold about every conspiracy theory as true, I think its best if I just agree to disagree with you. I'll just say that claims require proof.
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Old 07-03-2005, 04:08 PM   #25 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
1. Good for them, we didn't because such treaties are stupid. I rather doubt that any extremist terrorists were thinking 'You know the United States isn't that bad...wait they used a firebomb instead of a bunker buster? Those bastards! We will suicide bomb them now!'

2. They will get over it.

3. If we used every dirty trick possible there would no longer be a problem. Our dirty tricks are measured in megatons.

This really a much to do about nothing issue brought up only to destabilize the US/UK alliance by those who would rather see us fail, regardless of the consequences to Iraq. I don't think anyone reading this really cares what weapons we used.
Well Ustwo every one in this country now knows that what goes around comes around. That dissaster of 9/11 and the current conflict in Iraq are direct results of our past policies. They may have been for the greater good at the time but we payed dearly for them in the present.

You are of course right that the treaty and the issue isn't all that important. Yet much ado about nothing can work both ways. I am pretty sure that the most advanced millitary in the world can find a way to achieve their objectives without the use of incendiary devices. Thus without actually sacrificing much we can gain a moral high ground.

So if napalm is used, I deduct marks from the millitary for using it.
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Old 07-03-2005, 04:13 PM   #26 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Mantus
Well Ustwo every one in this country now knows that what goes around comes around. That dissaster of 9/11 and the current conflict in Iraq are direct results of our past policies. They may have been for the greater good at the time but we payed dearly for them in the present.

You are of course right that the treaty and the issue isn't all that important. Yet much ado about nothing can work both ways. I am pretty sure that the most advanced millitary in the world can find a way to achieve their objectives without the use of incendiary devices. Thus without actually sacrificing much we can gain a moral high ground.

So if napalm is used, I deduct marks from the millitary for using it.
We haven't signed the anti-landmine treaty for a reason as well.

They work in warfare and serve a purpose which can't be easily replaced.

So do fire bombs. If any US commander allowed casualties to US troops when he had a weapon at his disposal which would have prevented those casualties, based on a treaty we did not ratify, then I would like to see him court marshaled. There are limits of course, we have banned our own use of chemical weapons, and nuclear weapons have become a weapon of ultimate last resort, but fire bombs are not in that category, especially used against military targets. Would it have been better had we used moabs instead?
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Old 07-04-2005, 05:46 AM   #27 (permalink)
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We haven't signed the anti-landmine treaty for a reason as well.

They work in warfare and serve a purpose which can't be easily replaced.
Poison gas works really well too, as do biological and chemical weapons.

After the horror of WWI, the international community chose to outlaw these weapons because of their terrible and disturbing effects. The ONLY two things that stop people from using them are the international consensus, and a common, shared sense of humanity.

The kind of rationale that states the pragmatic usage of such weapons during war, erodes each of those stops. It wont be long before some other country uses the US' refusal to 'do the right thing' as a valid reason for them to act likewise.

I think it's ironic that such weapons have been used in a war that was sold to the aggressors public as a righteous war against an evil dictator who used banned weaponry against his own enemies.

Now, Ustwo, you state that there should be limits. Where and how exactly should those limits be set?

Last edited by zen_tom; 07-04-2005 at 05:50 AM..
 
Old 07-04-2005, 10:11 AM   #28 (permalink)
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Ok... so we're in trouble for breaking a treaty we didnt make or sign?

Based on claims of burned corpses... in war.

Saying the Mark 77 bomb is napalm like... which is equivilant to saying a truck is equivilant to a tank because they are made of metal and move forward.

Because we used a weapon we are fully legally able to use.

And the justification is it makes the terrorists hate us MORE? They're willing to kill themselves to kill us... I dont know what's going to make them hate us more. Hell, I dont think anything we do will quell that anger.

So the solution is for the US to apologizing for killing those who seek to kill us? To apologize for using a weapon that has no long-lasting effects and a very close kill radius to protect our troops?

Should we apologize to them because we as Americans continue to breed? Or is the fact that we are not ending our reproductive rights just going to anger them as well?
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Old 07-04-2005, 10:41 AM   #29 (permalink)
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Ok... so we're in trouble for breaking a treaty we didnt make or sign?
Did Saddam sign a treaty that stated he wouldn't hide or use imaginary weapons of mass destruction? It's just a matter of practicing what you preach - unfortunately, you need to be whiter than white before you can justifiably use muscle on foreign civillians.

How many Iraqi's wanted to kill US citizens before the invasion (justified on moral grounds of weapons of mass destruction)?

If force is to be used, then use it - just don't pretend that it is being used for any other reason than furthering one's national position.

If you have an issue with napalm, napalm like weapons, landmines, or other things that cause horrific casualties then there's that question as well, but I think it's the pretense and hypocrisy (not to mention civillian casualty) that might cause other nations to see the US in a less than positive light.

Finally, no Seaver, you are not in trouble. Why? Because you have the largest millitary in the world, and it would be very difficult to stand up against that kind of power if it was misused. Of course, since direct attack on a battlefield would be suicide, the only remaining option is an indirect, suicide attack.
 
Old 07-04-2005, 11:11 AM   #30 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Seaver
Ok... so we're in trouble for breaking a treaty we didnt make or sign?

Based on claims of burned corpses... in war.

Saying the Mark 77 bomb is napalm like... which is equivilant to saying a truck is equivilant to a tank because they are made of metal and move forward.

Because we used a weapon we are fully legally able to use.

And the justification is it makes the terrorists hate us MORE? They're willing to kill themselves to kill us... I dont know what's going to make them hate us more. Hell, I dont think anything we do will quell that anger.

So the solution is for the US to apologizing for killing those who seek to kill us? To apologize for using a weapon that has no long-lasting effects and a very close kill radius to protect our troops?

Should we apologize to them because we as Americans continue to breed? Or is the fact that we are not ending our reproductive rights just going to anger them as well?
A quote come to mind.........
Quote:
There is no flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people for a purpose which is unattainable. If the purpose is to stop terrorism, even the supporters of the bombing say it won't work; if the purpose is to gain respect for the United States, the result is the opposite..... - Howard Zinn
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Old 07-04-2005, 11:52 AM   #31 (permalink)
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Quote:
Did Saddam sign a treaty that stated he wouldn't hide or use imaginary weapons of mass destruction? It's just a matter of practicing what you preach - unfortunately, you need to be whiter than white before you can justifiably use muscle on foreign civillians.
Yeah... he did sign it. After the first Gulf war. Try again?
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Old 07-04-2005, 11:57 AM   #32 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Ustwo
willravel, as you seem to hold about every conspiracy theory as true, I think its best if I just agree to disagree with you. I'll just say that claims require proof.
I do not readily accept every conspiracy theory as truth. Actually, I am only interested in one. This isn't a conspiracy theory, though. This has been discussed on news channels, in newspapers, and online articles. The possibility of napalm or a napalm typoe weapon being used in Iraq is common knowledge. I'll thank you not to refer back to something in the Paranoia section every time you want to bash me.

Without proof we don't know the first thing about the war. That was my point. Sounds as if our points have converged. I do not necessarily think that napalm is used. I wouldn't be surprised if they did, but I can't say "yes, I know they are using napalm". All we can really talk about is probabilities based on what has happened in the past.
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Old 07-04-2005, 12:20 PM   #33 (permalink)
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Good call Seaver - I'd like to see evidence of that treaty, please post a link.

Either way, considering that Iraq didn't have any weapons of mass destruction and the US waging a war based on that issue, subsequently using them themselves, doesn't make the action any less hypocritical does it?
 
Old 07-04-2005, 12:24 PM   #34 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Seaver
Saying the Mark 77 bomb is napalm like... which is equivilant to saying a truck is equivilant to a tank because they are made of metal and move forward.
Quote:
The Mark 77 is a US 750-lb (340-kg) air-dropped incendiary bomb that carries a fuel gel mix that is the direct successor to napalm.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_77_bomb

Another link on the subject: http://www.globalsecurity.org/org/ne...irebombs01.htm

Quote:
Originally Posted by Seaver
And the justification is it makes the terrorists hate us MORE? They're willing to kill themselves to kill us... I dont know what's going to make them hate us more. Hell, I dont think anything we do will quell that anger.

So the solution is for the US to apologizing for killing those who seek to kill us? To apologize for using a weapon that has no long-lasting effects and a very close kill radius to protect our troops?

Should we apologize to them because we as Americans continue to breed? Or is the fact that we are not ending our reproductive rights just going to anger them as well?
What in carnations are you talking about? Napalm is a very nasty weapon when misfired on civilians. Using it makes us look bad. Simple as that. Apologizing to terrorists for continuing to breed - I am sorry but what?

*sowly backs away from Seaver*
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Old 07-04-2005, 01:21 PM   #35 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Seaver
Saying the Mark 77 bomb is napalm like... which is equivilant to saying a truck is equivilant to a tank because they are made of metal and move forward.
Seaver isn't the only one, but i'm rather confused as to why it's being claimed that the Mark 77 is completely not napalm. Yes, there are some differences. But let's hear a military spokesman on the subject:

Quote:
"I can confirm that Mark-77 fire bombs were used in that general area," Colonel Mike Daily of the US Marine Corps said.

Colonel Daily said that US stocks of Vietnam-era napalm had been phased out, but that the fuel-gel mixture in the Mark-77s had "similar destructive characteristics."

"Many folks (out of habit) refer to the Mark-77 as 'napalm' because its effect upon the target is remarkably similar," he said.
Remarkably similar. Truck vs. tank comparsions, Mr. Seaver? Cattle and bullets for Mr. Moosenose? When the military spokesman calls the effect remarkably similar, i think we have a meaningful comparison. Yes, it is important to have the right names. No, the Mark 77 is not technically napalm. But it is an incidiary device, and it's use is something that this nation needs to make a decision about.

The rest of the article, in whice the Pentagon confirms use of Mark 77s.

New, improved and more lethal: son of napalm
By Ben Cubby
August 8, 2003
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2003/...?oneclick=true

The Pentagon no longer officially uses the brand-name 'Napalm', but a similar sticky, inflammable substance known as 'fuel-gel mixture', contained in weapons called Mark-77 fire bombs, was dropped on Iraqi troops near the Iraq-Kuwait border at the start of the war.

"I can confirm that Mark-77 fire bombs were used in that general area," Colonel Mike Daily of the US Marine Corps said.

Colonel Daily said that US stocks of Vietnam-era napalm had been phased out, but that the fuel-gel mixture in the Mark-77s had "similar destructive characteristics."

"Many folks (out of habit) refer to the Mark-77 as 'napalm' because its effect upon the target is remarkably similar," he said.

On March 22nd, correspondent Lindsay Murdoch, who was travelling with the US Marines, had reported that napalm was used in an attack on Iraqi troops at Safwan Hill, near the Kuwait border. Murdoch's account was based on statements by two US Marine Corps officers on the ground.

Lieutenant-Commander Jeff A. Davis, USN, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Defense (Public Affairs) had called Murdoch's story "patently false".

"The US took napalm out of service in the 1970's. We completed the destruction of our last batch of napalm on April 4, 2001, and no longer maintain any stocks of napalm," Commander Davis told smh online. He was apparently referring to Vietnam-era Napalm-B, which consisted of inflammable fuel thickened with polystyrene and benzene.

The inflammable fuel in Mark-77 fire bombs is thickened with slightly different chemicals, and is believed to contain oxidizers, which make it harder to extinguish than Napalm-B.

Neither weapon technically contains napalm. The chemical mixture that became known as 'napalm' - a combination of naphthalene and palmitate - was used only in the earliest versions of the weapon.

Napalm was banned by United Nations convention in 1980, but the US never signed the agreement. Use of Mark-77 fire bombs is considered legal by the US military.

Ms. Toni McNeal, a spokesperson for Rock Island Arsenal, in Illinois, said the facility is currently producing a further 500 Mark-77s for the US Marine Corps.

She said she did not consider the Mark-77s to be napalm bombs.

But Mark-77s are referred to as 'napalm' in some current US inventories and public affairs documents.

A US Navy public affairs document dated 22/10/99 says that the US Navy no longer uses napalm but "the US Marine Corps has a requirement and uses it at ranges at Yuma and Twenty-Nine Palms."

Twenty-Nine Palms, in California, is the home base of some of the Marine Corps units that took part in the attack on Safwan Hill in Iraq.

Captain Robert Crum, USMC, Public Affairs spokesman for Twenty-Nine Palms, said: "Mk 77s are not routinely used in training at 29 Palms. Yet it would be inappropriate to say that they are never - or never would be - used in training here.

"The average young Marine may be unfamiliar with the technical nomenclature, and probably does refer to this munition by the vernacular 'napalm'."
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Old 07-04-2005, 01:56 PM   #36 (permalink)
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Thanks Martin for clearing things up. Seems pretty clear to me now.

Mark-77 is napalm-like.
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Old 07-05-2005, 09:46 AM   #37 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by zen_tom
If you have an issue with napalm, napalm like weapons, landmines, or other things that cause horrific casualties then there's that question as well, but I think it's the pretense and hypocrisy (not to mention civillian casualty) that might cause other nations to see the US in a less than positive light.
If only they could invent a war that didn't kill people. Man, that would be something.
Quote:
Originally Posted by zen_tom
Finally, no Seaver, you are not in trouble. Why? Because you have the largest millitary in the world, and it would be very difficult to stand up against that kind of power if it was misused. Of course, since direct attack on a battlefield would be suicide, the only remaining option is an indirect, suicide attack.
an indirect, suicide attack is suicide too.
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Old 07-05-2005, 10:08 AM   #38 (permalink)
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stevo, yes - war without casualty would be worth working towards.

There are plenty of non-lethal weapons that can be employed - at a cost. What I'm averse to is usage of things like landmines that continue to injure children for many years after the conflict ends and other cheap and indiscriminate weaponry.

Yes, both are suicide, but my point is that an attack against civillian targets delivers a more effective blow to the enemy than one of a more traditional millitary nature.

Ironically, it is the US' millitary might that makes it a target for terrorism.
 
Old 07-05-2005, 10:25 AM   #39 (permalink)
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I thought this thread was about "napalm-like weapons," not landmines. Plus, the weapons in question were used against military targets, not civillians. So why the fuss?

So you're against landmines that continue to kill children years after a conflict, but you are for attacking civillian targets because it delivers a more effective blow to the enemy?

I don't agree with any of this. esp. the part about terrorism delivering a more effective blow than traditional military nature. If that were true the US ARMY would be full of suicide bombers ready to blow themselves up in mosques and markets. But its not, because it isn't as effective.
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Old 07-05-2005, 11:30 AM   #40 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
I thought this thread was about "napalm-like weapons," not landmines. Plus, the weapons in question were used against military targets, not civillians. So why the fuss?

So you're against landmines that continue to kill children years after a conflict, but you are for attacking civillian targets because it delivers a more effective blow to the enemy?

I don't agree with any of this. esp. the part about terrorism delivering a more effective blow than traditional military nature. If that were true the US ARMY would be full of suicide bombers ready to blow themselves up in mosques and markets. But its not, because it isn't as effective.
Landmines, cluster bombs, napalm, biological weapons, toxin weapons are usually deployed against millitary targets, it's when the target is missed that things turn bad.

Frankly I don't see how an MK77 bomb would be any differnt in creating civilian casualties then a standard bomb. Whoever a bomb of any kind lands on would obviously be dead or mamed. I asume that there is an explanation out there somewhere on why napalm is considered so terrible. I certainly hope it wasn't due to the photograph by Kim Phuc of a burned naked child running down a road. While terrible, any munition would cause equaly grevous wounds upon impact.

Incediary weapons still apear to be useful against certain targets:

Quote:
According to an analysis by the US Department of Defense's office for Arms Control Implementation and Compliance, "incendiary weapons have significant potential military value, particularly with respect to certain high-priority military targets. Incendiaries are the only weapons which can effectively destroy certain counter-proliferation targets such as biological weapons facilities which require high heat to eliminate bio-toxins. To use only high explosives would risk the widespread relase of dangerous contaminants with potentially disastrous consequences for the civilian population. Certain flammable military targets are also more readily destroyed by incendiaries. For example, a fuel depot could require up to eight times the bombs and sorties to destroy using only high explosives rather than incendiaries. Such an increase means a significantly greater humanitarian risk of collateral damage. The United States must retain its ability to employ incendiaries to hold high-high priority military targets such as these at risk in a manner consistent with the principle of proportionality which governs the use of all weapons under existing law.
edit: always forget the link http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...incendiary.htm

So I withdraw my comment to Ustwo about our ability to utilize other weapons for the same effect.
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