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Most interviews with Iraqis that I've watched show that they don't think they're better off. You may believe otherwise, and I'm not going to argue with you about it because it can't be proven one way or the other without touring the place...
Either way, many civilians have suffered because a 3rd party decided to impose its will on the country. It will take years for enough stability to return, to allow what I would regard as a healthily functioning government. Assuming of course that the right people emerge from the chaos, to govern. |
Dangit, Galway, I was purposfully leaving that opening. Now you ruined it :). My plans foiled again! lol
Splitter |
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I recently read an article that quoted a former US enemy in Iraq who said the US has made mistakes, but at least they weren't breaking into homes and chopping off heads. The rebuilding of Iraq is the largest such undertaking since the Marshal Plan. This whole thing went off topic because someone asserted, by a misrepresented video, that there were no rules and no morality in war. They used a very graphic video from US forces to prove their point. Their underlying point was obviously that US forces are out to kill civilians or went into engagements without any thought given to civilian casualties. In fact, the video actually showed rules of engagement being followed. I am reminded of a video of a Japanese pilot (or survivor from a ship) blowing himself up with a grenade as a US ship pulled along side to pick him up. Of course, this WWII video is usually misrepresented as US sailors shooting a poor guy lost at sea. It's sickening. The disdain, the outright prejudice against the US is tangible sometimes. It gets old and far too often, the silence of others is deafening. Splitter |
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I discuss these things a lot in another forum and people tell me it's standard operating procedure to throw grenades into a house before going in, even if that means not checking for civilians inside. I can understand the troops fearing for their own safety, but when one's stated mission is to supposedly liberate someone and elevate their standard of living and then they do this, well, people are goint to talk in a negative manner. Frankly, i have no reason to hate America more than any other country, including my own. But when i am part of an occupying force on a foreign land that makes me a legitimate target at all times and it's the duty of every able bodied person in the land to shoot me. Why? Because nobody among the people suffering from this inside their own homes asked me to be there. I can understand the reasons your people might be detached from war and always view it as a noble undertaking, but i don't have to agree with them. You've never really had a war on your own territory since maybe the inception of your nation and with the lack of conscription it's even easier for the general public to detach themselves from it all. That doesn't mean being right however, it just means lacking the collective memory and knowledge of what it means to have your entire way of life turned upside down and your prospects ruined for the rest of your life, because of a foreign intruder. And since people don't know this, they can't understand the ways it motivates other people to do horrible things in return. Quote:
As for the Iraqis wanting the coalition to stay because they fear the ensuing chaos of a withdrawal, well, the conditions for that chaos were actually set up by the action of invading the place. In fact, there were more christian churches in Iraq and there are still in Syria than all the Arab nations allied to the western powers combined (like Saudi Arabia for example). What happened was actually a PR spin campaign to paint them not with their own negative traits but with the negative traits of other neighboring countries (who are much worse in their behaviours but nobody as much as gives them a slap on the wrist because they are considered allies), so that access to cheap oil could be secured. Iraq had neither a real terrorist problem nor any influences from Iran before the invasion, because under Saddam both of these meant a short trip to an unmarked grave. I still don't agree with it, but it's results seems to agree more with the stated mission of the coalition than the chaos the same coalition ushered in. Toppling this power structure made it possible for both terrorist groups and Iranian agencies to infiltrate the place. As for the Iraqis fearing Iran, that's not entirely true since the majority of them share a common religion with Iran. In short, the coalition invaded to supossedly correct a bunch of thigns Saddam had perfectly under control, only to end up losing control of all of them in the process. No matter my personal feelings on the matter, from a purely objective point of view that's certainly not a definition of success. All that is equivalent to me pretending i'm saving the local baker from the debt incurered by his flour suppliers, while what i'm really after is giving him a solid beating so that he can sell bread cheaper to me. After a while he has no debt to his flour suppliers because they simply won't do business with him anymore due to fear of having to deal with me, his shop is all busted up and when the guy is missing half his teeth and agrees to my terms i offer him some money to remodel the place, placing a nice fat loan tax on it and gradually ending up appropriating his business so that he does most of the work and i get most of the earnings. First of all, it doesn't make sense if my stated goal is to help someone improve his life. Second, it's not outright slavery or theft, but it's definitely a "protection" racket of the kind mafia organizations usually run. What i'm trying to say is Iraq surely was no democracy under Saddam, but it was a secular, stable state. As it turns out, after the end of the occupation it will still not be a democracy, but it will also be unstable and minus 60000 civilian lives. I really fail to see anything positive in the whole affair. I'm not talking about Afghanistan, where a group that attacked your homeland was based, i'm talking about a country that's been finally proven beyond all doubt to have absolutely nothing to do with it and yet, there's nobody in an official position that will come out and say "you know what world, we really screwed up on this one as a leadership and as a state", it even usually goes the other way with certain people still trying to justify it. Afghanistan is a different story, but once again instead of targetting the terrorist organization responsible for the attacks, the coalition managed once again to target the local's way of life. This is the biggest mistake of the western powers since maybe the end of WWI. We all hear how people fight for a religion, a country, an ideal, even a ragged piece of colored cloth they call their flag and it might not even be a national flag but the flag of a military unit, a political party or even a sports team. However, what people really fight for is the preservation of their way of life, their sense of identity, the ability to have some stability in life and the right to improve it on their own terms and not under terms imposed arbitrarily by outsiders who know next to nothing about the prevailing mentality in the place. Attack this and you get suicide bombers and other nasty stuff, which by the way is not exclusive to islam no matter how keen some high profile people are to tell you so. I come from a predominantly christian country (discounting immigrants from other countries, the citizens here are 98% christian orthodox) and many times during our history there have been cases when people preferred group suicide instead of capture, especially if it involved giving the aggressor a bloody nose or blowing up the gunpowder magazine as a fortified position was getting overrun in order to inflict massive casualties to the invading force. The thing is, apart from terrorists there used to be guerillas and resistance movements too before the televised reality-TV wars of our age. If someone in Iraq kills coalition combatants that doesn't make him a terrorist outright. If he videotapes and circulates footage of torture and/or ritual killings of prisoners then he is a terrorist.If a roadside bomb deliberately targets civilians that's terrorism. If it targets a military convoy and happens to kill civilians, then it's no different than what happens when a gunship chopper fires stray rounds at a crowd. See, i didn't even mention specific nationalities because, wether we like it or not, there are examples on each side of doing what is considered the accepted norm in war and what is considered over the top even for war. The distinction between terrorist and combatant is not who they target by nationality, but who they target based on the target's actions. A suicide bomber targetting civilians is a terrorist. It's not the method that makes him one, it's his target choice or even his disregard for civilian life if it's guaranteed that a hit in a certain location with a certain weapon will cause loss of it. A person who kills people on camera in order to circulate this around is also one. It's his aim of demoralizing through terror that makes him one. A guy wearing an official uniform of a state is also a terrorist if he poses in front of prisoners that he tortures or deliberately targets civilians. I think this is the core of the issue, until the same set of standards start applying to everyone you can't expect much support from the rest of the globe in these wars. We had this discussion again and someone linked various papers on the matter, some written by active US officers. The one and only golden constant in these papers, gleaned from studying the counter-insurgency methods of the British, was that "whatever you decide to do, make sure it applies equally to everyone, including your own guys...this shows the locals that even if they don't like you they can depend on you to be reasoned with within certain limits, making them less likely to revolt and take arms against you." This is the reason the US can't win these wars, the double standards that serve to provide the justification for them. Britain enslaved half the globe and didn't get that much flak, because the law was law for everyone involved. Again, that has nothing to do with my personal feelings towards any nation (i know better than to judge individual people by the actions of their governments). It's just the facts on why the Brits, Romans, Byzantines and others all the way back in history were infinitely better at imperial conquest than the US is today...because first and foremost they used to admit it's an imperial conquest and then gave the locals back something sufficient under the standards of the time so that they would tolerate it. What the guys in charge of today's wars usually try to do is draw inexistent parallels to the noble fight against the armed to the teeth Axis during WWII, when they are actually fighting starving people with no access to basic amenities like running water, or even a future for that matter, giving very few in return for the pain they cause and then talk it off with pretty words. Well, dogs bite the worst when they are backed in a corner with nothing to lose, even the small dogs...actually, especially the small ones! Once again, you can see i'm not saying "the X people" or "the X troops", but "the decision makers". Anyway, people will take offense to that, enough so that they will picket embassies even if they are not directly affected, or place IEDs if they actually live there...because the feeble construct of a justification for what's happening to them daily, simply adds insult to injury. As for the argument of protecting the western way of life, if that was the goal then my country wouldn't be requested to send more troops to Afghanistan in the midst of a near-bankruptcy to force more people from that place into emigrating to more developed countries , but would probably be requested to concentrate all its means on its border and be assisted in controling the immigration wave into Europe, as it sits right on the proverbial crossroads between Europe and Asia. As we speak, there's 500 Afghan refugees crossing the border DAILY. Where do you think these guys will go if Greece finally goes bankrupt? Where will they go if the whole of Europe does? That's right, they'll be coming to the last place left standing behind the buffer zone, good old US of A, with whatever means possible, in a constant imperceprible trickle and yet and in numbers that are too big to be effectively controlled without resorting to blatant genocide. The local nationalist party here (these guys are fully anti-immigration, even in cases wher political asylum should be granted) went as far as to say "let's give them all some kind of limited citizenship so they can travel wherever they want, since we can't feed or absorb them, nobody is helping us do so and nobody is creating any motive for them to stay in their own country, but usually motives to the contrary". And just to lighten up a little as i'm closing this, this is the way a lot of people in Europe perceive these wars...imagine i'm beating a guy senseless and at the same time screaming to him he's an idiot for not liking it, because he can't understand i'm doing him a favor, since the subsequent ride in the ambulance with the cool sirens, the buzz from strong painkillers and pretty nurses and everything is so awesome...all this, despite the fact that i have not been in his place since time immemorial to really know about what the experience really entails. :grin: I think this is enough from me, with adequate pre-emptive argumentation to cover various possible counter-points. I do this all the time, preempting as much as i can so that i can avoid coming back to answer and gradually getting obsessed with stuff, as it's not healthy and it usually leads to flamewars. Much better to have one say, maintain some civility and leave it at that, in my humble opinion at least. In other words, i'll try my absolute best not to post on this subject again in the current thread :grin: Respectully and no hard feelings as always. I don't hate anybody, i just think that disagreeing with what is widely accepted (or presented as being so by by certain people high up for certain gains to the expense of other people down low) can be healthy and promote some thought in all of us. Heck, it's how science came to be, by people refusing to do and believe as they were told by their higher-ups. Well meaning doubt and questioning of everything is the real essence of freedom and honestly, no human is ever free until he can start questioning his own self and what's supposed to be happening by others on his behalf. ;) |
Amen!
Viking |
does anyone still have the link in the first post? send by PM, cheers.
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Viking...weren't you the one who made the post hoping that the Blue Angels aerobatic team bumped into one another and crashed?
I like you, Blackdog, you know that. You are one of the more intelligent people I have run across. You can even make a good argument for wrong positions :). Now take a look at the person who said "Amen!" to your post. Same guy that wanted the American exhibition pilots to crash and die. What does that tell you about the hatred out there? With friends like that, who needs enemies. Right? lol Old arguments. I'll say that WMD's were never the sole reason for taking out Saddam. I'll say we are not at war with Islam, but are at war with Radical Islam. I'll say that the US has not suffered another 9/11 and that we are fighting them "over there" instead of over here. I'll say that Iraq was never about imperialism and point out that it is a money pit. Yadda, yadda, yadda. But it comes down to this: American troops are not terrorists. They are not targeting civilians. They go out of their way to limit civilian casualties, often putting US troops in harm's way to do so. Believe me, were it otherwise, we would all know. You can be against the war. You can think it is not fair that the US is so powerful. You can think that radical elements aren't all that dangerous. Just stop the name calling, direct or indirect. Blackdog, your country is broke. Your country spent itself into overwhelming debt. Well, mine is broke too and has followed the same spending path. Just understand that your country would be in chaos right now if not for the bailout. Now which nation gave the most for the bailout? That's right, your friends. Friends with whom you need not agree on every issue. Friends whom some call terrorists themselves. People keep cherry picking Wikileaks. Read about the other stuff, see the bigger picture. You know what Wikileaks actually says? It says that nations around the globe are terrified of the terrorists, Iran included. It says they all hope "someone" will do something about their nuclear threat. Wikileaks shows a lot more "unity" on these issues than public facades would seem to indicate. Interesting, huh? I don't care to debate the war, we've done that before. All I care about is the name calling. So, sorry, I won't be a good little American and let our servicemen be called terrorists (not saying you were, btw, Blackdog). People can say, "Hey, wrong forum for politics!"....ok, then slap down the haters when they post. As I said, the silence is often deafening. Splitter |
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Anyway... War is war, plain and simple. I've always thought it was silly to try and sanitize war to make it more "humane". War in itself is a tragedy and there is no changing that. Whatever it takes to win and end it should be the next objective. I don't think I could ever kill a helpless combatant but I have a hard time condemning those who do without having been in their boots. It's easy to sit back in our comfy chairs from the safety of our homes and make judgment calls but I think that is oversimplifying things. ________ Zoloft Settlement Update |
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Off you go now... :grin: |
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E5huN-GQnm8 As they say in the Bible Belt if God had meant man to fly he would have been born with a tail rotor !! ... oh we are getting off topic again aren't we. oh well |
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