1 in 3 French want Iraq to win

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Fencer128

Platinum Member
Jun 18, 2001
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Originally posted by: DoctorPizza
This is how I reasoned it out. What do you think?
I think I can't exactly see how what you wrote relates to what I wrote, I'm afraid.

For the moment I'm asking people to suspend their judgements on the French, and tell me how they would answer in my hypothetical scenario.

Once they have answered the hypothetical, I would like to know:
a) if they would support the British: why do they not similarly support the Iraqis?
b) if they would support the Chinese: why do they support the aggressive invaders?

Well, to answer your question in that way is quite simple IMHO.

Are the UK a dictatorship who oppress their own people and are a ptential security risk at least to their nieghbours and possibly further afield? - IMHO No.
So in that case do the Chinese need to invade? No.

That would be how I would reason why you can support the US in this but you would have to really be stretching your imagination to want to support the Iraqi regime.

Cheers,

Andy
 

DoctorPizza

Banned
Jun 4, 2001
106
0
0
Are the UK a dictatorship who oppress their own people and are a ptential security risk at least to their nieghbours and possibly further afield? - IMHO No.
IMHO the UK certainly represents a risk to the Iraqis, so yes, the UK poses a risk further afield. Should the Chinese use that as the basis for an invasion? And the government is certainly not acting in a way that is representative of the will or interests of the people. That doesn't make it a dictatorship, of course, but I'm not sure it really matters -- being a mere dictator is not good or bad, it's doing things that aren't in the interests of the people that are good or bad.

So in that case do the Chinese need to invade? No.
Because they want to. It doesn't really matter -- I don't think the nature of the regime is why people support the Iraqis. I picked the Chinese because of their overwhelming numbers, really.

I could make an example where the invader had the superior government -- for instance, Canada invading the US -- but I suspect people will concentrate on the practical problems with such an invasion rather than focusing on the matter at hand. I could ask that, if you want:

If Canada were to (somehow) invade the US, would Americans prefer that the rest of the world:
1) support the American efforts to repel the invaders
2) support the Canadian aggressors

I suspect the former.

People aren't, I don't believe, supporting the Iraqis because of any like for the Iraqi regime -- they're supporting them because of the illegitimacy of the invasion.

That would be how I would reason why you can support the US in this but you would have to really be stretching your imagination to want to support the Iraqi regime.
But I don't think it is support of the regime. It's support of Iraqi self-determination. Let them sort things out in the way they feel best.

 

Fencer128

Platinum Member
Jun 18, 2001
2,700
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Originally posted by: DoctorPizza
Are the UK a dictatorship who oppress their own people and are a ptential security risk at least to their nieghbours and possibly further afield? - IMHO No.
IMHO the UK certainly represents a risk to the Iraqis, so yes, the UK poses a risk further afield. Should the Chinese use that as the basis for an invasion? And the government is certainly not acting in a way that is representative of the will or interests of the people. That doesn't make it a dictatorship, of course, but I'm not sure it really matters -- being a mere dictator is not good or bad, it's doing things that aren't in the interests of the people that are good or bad.

So in that case do the Chinese need to invade? No.
Because they want to. It doesn't really matter -- I don't think the nature of the regime is why people support the Iraqis. I picked the Chinese because of their overwhelming numbers, really.

I could make an example where the invader had the superior government -- for instance, Canada invading the US -- but I suspect people will concentrate on the practical problems with such an invasion rather than focusing on the matter at hand. I could ask that, if you want:

If Canada were to (somehow) invade the US, would Americans prefer that the rest of the world:
1) support the American efforts to repel the invaders
2) support the Canadian aggressors

I suspect the former.

People aren't, I don't believe, supporting the Iraqis because of any like for the Iraqi regime -- they're supporting them because of the illegitimacy of the invasion.

That would be how I would reason why you can support the US in this but you would have to really be stretching your imagination to want to support the Iraqi regime.
But I don't think it is support of the regime. It's support of Iraqi self-determination. Let them sort things out in the way they feel best.

I can understand why some Iraqi people might offer resistance to US led forces because they see this as an invasion and their patriotism is willing them on. IMHO the vast majority of resistance appears to be coming from the regime or those coerced by the regime.

Do I then think that I would like to support Iraq to the extent I would like it to win over the coalition forces because of that - No. Support for the Iraqi's will amount to support for Saddam, as he would be the overall victor here IMHO.

If those in the recent "Le Monde" poll were voting "pro Iraq" because they support Iraqi self-determination then I'm afraid they misunderstood the question. Maybe a more carefully worded poll could bare that out. But this war is being fought not primarily for the Iraqi people - but to rid the world of another potential threat to the US. This is the point that should be argued if any.

The examples you gave for invasion I find hard to compare to the current situation as they have no defiance of UN resolutions, past histories of atrocities and/or fear of terrorist attack that compound this war. For that reason I can't argue this in the way I think you'd want me too. ie I would support US resistance in the face of a Canadian agression because I can't see a valid reason for an invasion.

Cheers,

Andy
 

Ilmater

Diamond Member
Jun 13, 2002
7,516
1
0
Originally posted by: figgypower
Originally posted by: Ilmater

They both would also like to finish off the rest of the "infidels" (read non-Arab=Muslims) in the world after America and Israel are dealt with, including the French, Russians and Germans.

I don't about the rest, but that last part... I'm an American Muslim and they would regard me as an infidel as much as the next non-Muslim American, especially since I'm way pro-America. They simply want to finish off everyone that is not them.
I want to make it clear that I didn't mean it to sound like it did. I completely agree with what you said, which is that they want to destroy everything that is not them.
 

silverpig

Lifer
Jul 29, 2001
27,703
12
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Originally posted by: Alistar7
Originally posted by: freegeeks
The USA needs a little spanking to loose its arrogance

:DFlame Away:D

yeah lets try to beat down the one country that has fought for freedom for the rest of the world for almost the past 100 years, while you are it why not blame the US for stopping the germans (twice) and the Japs, the world would have been much better had Hitler been allowed to keep France...

Yeah, the US did a great job in 1914-1917 and 1939-1941...
rolleye.gif


Maybe the French are a little bitter because a German army on French soil TWICE wasn't enough to get the US to act immediately.

The US would have been content with a German controlled France and wouldn't have even batted an eye. The reason they went in was because it was suggested that they would be next after Britain.
 

DoctorPizza

Banned
Jun 4, 2001
106
0
0
I can understand why some Iraqi people might offer resistance to US led forces because they see this as an invasion and their patriotism is willing them on. IMHO the vast majority of resistance appears to be coming from the regime or those coerced by the regime.
I'm not so convinced of that. It seems to me that there is a great mistrust of the Americans. Yes, the Iraqis would like somethign to change, but no, they don't want it to happen this way.

Do I then think that I would like to support Iraq to the extent I would like it to win over the coalition forces because of that - No. Support for the Iraqi's will amount to support for Saddam, as he would be the overall victor here IMHO.
I don't agree that it does amount to support for Saddam. It may be that support for Iraqi self-determination has some milestones in common with support for Saddam -- the Iraqis would win the war in both cases, for instance -- but the final destination is completely different. Winning the war is a necessary first step in self-determination. You can't force self-determination onto people -- it doesn't work like that.

If those in the recent "Le Monde" poll were voting "pro Iraq" because they support Iraqi self-determination then I'm afraid they misunderstood the question. Maybe a more carefully worded poll could bare that out. But this war is being fought not primarily for the Iraqi people - but to rid the world of another potential threat to the US. This is the point that should be argued if any.
The question was:
Do you feel more on the side of:
the US and UK (34%)
Iraq (25%)
Neither (31%)
Don't know (10%)
( http://medias.lemonde.fr/medias/image_article/sondage_guerre.gif )
As someone who is against the war and for Iraqi self-determination (as a stepping stone to the ultimate abolition of the nation-state), if I were asked such a question, I would have said I was on the side of Iraq.

The examples you gave for invasion I find hard to compare to the current situation as they have no defiance of UN resolutions,
Which clearly isn't the motivation, given the refusal to continue the inspections or go to the UN to receive mandate for the war. In any case, Israel and Turkey (and I think Morocco) have violated more UN resolutions -- why not get them first?

past histories of atrocities
They didn't matter then.... North Korea has many similar atrocities; why not invade NK?

and/or fear of terrorist attack
Which has absolutely NO supporting evidence.

that compound this war. For that reason I can't argue this in the way I think you'd want me too. ie I would support US resistance in the face of a Canadian agression because I can't see a valid reason for an invasion.
To stop US aggression against foreign nations?
To replace a fundamentally corrupt regime that denied the person with the majority of votes the presidency?
To remove nuclear weapons from the only nation to have ever used them in anger?
To stop a regime that funds and harbours terrorists?
 

Fencer128

Platinum Member
Jun 18, 2001
2,700
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(Me)I can understand why some Iraqi people might offer resistance to US led forces because they see this as an invasion and their patriotism is willing them on. IMHO the vast majority of resistance appears to be coming from the regime or those coerced by the regime.

(You)I'm not so convinced of that. It seems to me that there is a great mistrust of the Americans. Yes, the Iraqis would like somethign to change, but no, they don't want it to happen this way.

(Me)Do I then think that I would like to support Iraq to the extent I would like it to win over the coalition forces because of that - No. Support for the Iraqi's will amount to support for Saddam, as he would be the overall victor here IMHO.

(You)I don't agree that it does amount to support for Saddam. It may be that support for Iraqi self-determination has some milestones in common with support for Saddam -- the Iraqis would win the war in both cases, for instance -- but the final destination is completely different. Winning the war is a necessary first step in self-determination. You can't force self-determination onto people -- it doesn't work like that.

If you don't see this the way I do - I fear I won't be able to convince you with further debate.

(Me)If those in the recent "Le Monde" poll were voting "pro Iraq" because they support Iraqi self-determination then I'm afraid they misunderstood the question. Maybe a more carefully worded poll could bare that out. But this war is being fought not primarily for the Iraqi people - but to rid the world of another potential threat to the US. This is the point that should be argued if any.

(You)The question was:
Do you feel more on the side of:
the US and UK (34%)
Iraq (25%)
Neither (31%)
Don't know (10%)
( http://medias.lemonde.fr/medias/image_article/sondage_guerre.gif )
As someone who is against the war and for Iraqi self-determination (as a stepping stone to the ultimate abolition of the nation-state), if I were asked such a question, I would have said I was on the side of Iraq.

And how do you feel the majority of those polled probably interpreted the question? (I say probably as no doubt not everyone agrees - but I see an overall trend IMHO).

(Me)The examples you gave for invasion I find hard to compare to the current situation as they have no defiance of UN resolutions,

(You)Which clearly isn't the motivation, given the refusal to continue the inspections or go to the UN to receive mandate for the war. In any case, Israel and Turkey (and I think Morocco) have violated more UN resolutions -- why not get them first?

Simply put - they are not as big a threat in the eyes of the US.

(Me)past histories of atrocities

(You)They didn't matter then.... North Korea has many similar atrocities; why not invade NK?

I hope they don't go down the "series of pre-emptive" wars route as I would not support that. Plus NK has nuclear capabilites.

(Me)and/or fear of terrorist attack

(You)Which has absolutely NO supporting evidence.

Fear doesn't require hard evidence - other than the capability to act/acomplice and a hatred for the US (these define the so-called "axis of evil" IMHO). If you would like a tenuous reason then you can cite the fact that Iraq has failed to account for the whereabouts to the UN inspection team of any of the material put forward as missing since their last visit.

(Me)that compound this war. For that reason I can't argue this in the way I think you'd want me too. ie I would support US resistance in the face of a Canadian agression because I can't see a valid reason for an invasion.

(You)To stop US aggression against foreign nations?

It depends if you qualify that aggression - if you feel it is malevolent or unnecessary then maybe you have a point.

(You)To replace a fundamentally corrupt regime that denied the person with the majority of votes the presidency?

Its called the electoral college system - its not illegal and it can be changed if the elctorate kick up a fuss. I see no problem there.

(You)To remove nuclear weapons from the only nation to have ever used them in anger?

And again - its a "why" issue - why did they use them?

(You)To stop a regime that funds and harbours terrorists?

OK, now we start to need links and stories that show the US harbours and funds groups that go around killing civilians.

Cheers,

Andy
 

Ilmater

Diamond Member
Jun 13, 2002
7,516
1
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Originally posted by: DoctorPizza
Are the UK a dictatorship who oppress their own people and are a ptential security risk at least to their nieghbours and possibly further afield? - IMHO No.
IMHO the UK certainly represents a risk to the Iraqis, so yes, the UK poses a risk further afield. Should the Chinese use that as the basis for an invasion? And the government is certainly not acting in a way that is representative of the will or interests of the people.
This has got to be the most asinine argument against the war I have ever read. I know people that are anti-war that would smack you in the face (or worse) for making such an unintelligent argument.

Let me explain something to you: in 1991, the UN fought a war with Iraq. Iraq ended the war by signing a treaty. That treaty required them to get rid of certain weapons that the UN (not the US alone) felt was a threat to stability in the region as a condition for us to stop attacking them. They agreed to the terms. They also agreed to prove that they had disposed of said weapons. Never was it our job to play hide-and-go-seek with Saddam and his weapons-makers. It was an explicit part fo the peace treaty that they show us where the weapons were. That was why inspectors were there. Saddam decided that he could kick out inspectors without causing the war to attack him. Right there, he was in violation of the peace treaty. End of story. But he was right. The UN didn't want to jump back into a war so soon. Resolution after Resolution was passed until 1441, which was, by its own admission, a "last chance" for Saddam to avoid "serious consequences." A couple of months later, Saddam finally let weapons inspectors back in. He also realeased what he claimed was proof that he had disposed of all of the CBN weapons. However, a large amount of the CBN weapons weren't accounted for. So the inspectors were there playing hide-and-go-seek with Saddam's men, trying to find these weapons. The US issued an ultimatum that he had to hand over all of the unaccounted-for weapons or face war. Of course, he didn't do so.

Now, we tried to get other countries to go along with us. All of the other countries in the Security Council had signed the document saying that Saddam must either prove he had fully disarmed or "face serious consequences." What did they think "serious consequences" meant? Increasing sanctions (sanctions which, by the way, I never agreed with) which were already extreme? What could we do? There's nothing we could do short of war. What do you think "serious consequences" was supposed to mean if not war? I know that some countries (some cheese-eating surrender monkeys come to mind) specifically chose the words "serious consequences" to give themselves an out later. This way, the resolution never actually said "war," just "serious consequences," which is much more vague.

We now have at least three countries - the US, Britain and Australia - providing troops to help in the effrot to oust Saddam and his Baath party. THIS IS NOT THE US ALONE!

So, in answer to your moronic question, no, other countries should not sit idly by if the Canadians invaded us (with hockey sticks, no doubt). Why? Because you don't give a reason why they did it.

And for another thing, you mentioned that the Iraqis should fight it out for themselves. Can you even read? Maybe you should sit back and let the adults do the talking. The Iraqi military are scared to death of revolting against Saddam because his top officers are treated like princes. If you're an Iraqi soldier and you don't like where you are, what do you do? You surely can't talk to others. There would be a reward for anyone that wanted to turn you in. And the officials would be happy to turn you in because they don't want to see their leader that's showering them with gifts go down. Plus, the reward is quite nice. Then, the solier that reported the dissident would be rewarded in some way. It's basically the same thing as Stalin's regime. Back then, if you owned a shoe business and the shoe business down the street was doing better than you, you just turned him in and he would be sent to the Gulags. No more competition for you, eh? I watched an Iraqi defector on the History Channel a few weeks ago. He used to be the top Iraqi nuclear scientist. At first it was a fun science experiment when he was a kid, but as he grew up, he realized that he was working for a madman. Saddam treated him very well and gave him everything he wanted. Then he saw another scientist get dragged away, accused of saying things not in line with Saddam's regime. This other scientist was tortured for about a month. At the end, he was given back all of his nice things (fancy car, nice house, etc.) and told, "Isn't this better than the torture from before? Just do what you're told and nothing bad has to happen to you." Do you think that the people around him were going to be eager to go against Saddam's will after that? That's why the scientist that was being interviewed defected. He wasn't about to say anything bad or try to start an anti-Saddam movement, he ran like any other sensible person would.

The Iraqis can't stop him. We're not there for their sake, but it surely doesn't hurt that they get something out of this as well.

Now, if you wish to talk again, tell me where I was wrong from before. Tell me how we're not justified. Until then, SHUT THE F*CK UP AND LET THE GROWNUPS TALK!
 

exp

Platinum Member
May 9, 2001
2,150
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The hypocrisy of so many (but not all, mind you) anti-war protestors is becoming more and more clear with each passing day. So far all we've been hearing from the French and the rest of the world is "Oh, the poor Iraqi children. Won't somebody pleeeeze think of the children!! Save them from those American butchers. Blah blah blah..." But now that the war has begun the Truth is coming out, and we see that war detractors are actually rooting for the Iraqis to be put *BACK* under the crushing weight of a barbarous regime and suffocating economic sanctions, just for the brief visceral pleasure they get from seeing some egg in America's face. If anyone needed further confirmation that much of the anti-war crowd is driven purely by their resentment towards America and that they care even less for the Iraqi people than Americans do, here it is.

Americans at least have a legitimate reason for supporting the deaths of so many Iraqis--national security. You may not think it applies in this *specific* instance, but national security is universally acknowledged as one of the very few possible justifications for taking actions leading to the deaths of innocent people. By contrast, what is the French/foreign reason for supporting more Iraqi deaths that would come under a renewed Hussein regime? Spite, plain and simple. It is truly reprehensible IMO that anyone would sell out an entire population just to get a dig in at a certain country. If they really gave a sh*t about the Iraqis, as they claim to, they would hope and pray for a quick victory for the coalition because with Saddam out of the way there would at least be a chance for the killing in Iraq to actually stop (so that something good can come out of this whole stinking mess). Otherwise all these deaths will have been for naught, and Iraqis will continue to die well into the 21st century.

BTW, this 1/4 to 1/3 figure among the French population is probably lower than many other nationalities (I would guess it is well above 90% in the Arab world). So the next time any of you pro-war people feel a bit guilty over the Iraq conflict after seeing the protests going on around the world, just remember that *at least* 25% of those people out there demonstrating have such little regard for human life that they would gladly let millions more die at the hands of Saddam for the sole purpose of seeing the U.S. humiliated. Then ask yourself, "Should I really care what people of this caliber, with motivations so petty and base, think?" I think you'll find, as I have, that the answer is a resounding NO.

 

Ilmater

Diamond Member
Jun 13, 2002
7,516
1
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You can't force self-determination onto people -- it doesn't work like that.
You're right, it's better to let them rot. Good point. Way to take the moral high-ground. D*psh*t.
The examples you gave for invasion I find hard to compare to the current situation as they have no defiance of UN resolutions,
Which clearly isn't the motivation, given the refusal to continue the inspections or go to the UN to receive mandate for the war. In any case, Israel and Turkey (and I think Morocco) have violated more UN resolutions -- why not get them first?
Who's begging for war again? There's a difference between the situations and the resolutions. Read my post above: 1441 was a "last chance" for Saddam. None of the Israel or Turkey resolutions you speak of carry language like that.
past histories of atrocities
They didn't matter then.... North Korea has many similar atrocities; why not invade NK?
This is my favorite argument because of its lack of all trace of logic. So, you're anti-war, right? But you're saying we should invade NK? Good thinking.

I know, you'll say, "I'm not for invading NK, I'm just saying that NK is a threat too, so what's to stop us from invading them? Why Saddam? Is it oil?"

You have to be a monumental idiot to think that argument gets you anywhere. Arguing that we could be attacking other people IS NOT an argument against this war. Yes, you're right, North Korea is a threat and a problem. However, different factors like oil (*GASP* He said it!!!) and fundamentalist Islamic terrorism make this a more serious and imminent problem. Just today, the Kurds helped the US take out an Islamic chemical and biological weapons plant that was working with Al Qaeda. I would never make the claim that Saddam is explicitly helping Al Qaeda because they don't like the fact that he has millions of Muslims under his control that don't want to be there. However, they do agree in their hatred for America and Israel. Plus, and most importantly, NK already HAS nuclear weapons. Iraq is still working on them. The best thing to do would be to stop Iraq from producing the weapons in the first place. NK can wait because they've already developed them. They're going to be as bad in the future as they are right now. Plus, China has said that an "nuclear-free peninsula is in its best interest." So, if something happens with the North Koreans, we hope that China will step in. Thy most definitely are not happy with North Korea having the weapons. Neither is South Korea or Japan. Hopefully, between the three of them, they can get something accomplished.
that compound this war. For that reason I can't argue this in the way I think you'd want me too. ie I would support US resistance in the face of a Canadian agression because I can't see a valid reason for an invasion.
To stop US aggression against foreign nations?
To replace a fundamentally corrupt regime that denied the person with the majority of votes the presidency?
To remove nuclear weapons from the only nation to have ever used them in anger?
To stop a regime that funds and harbours terrorists?
Oh my God. More proof that we're not talking to anti-war people, we're just talking to Democrats. Let me address these specifically:
A) This is ridiculous, and I've already discussed why this war is valid. Instead of "To stop US aggression against foreign nations?" you could have said "Because they disagree with the war" and the same arguments would apply. I won't repeat myself again.
B) Wake the f*ck up. This is not a democracy! It's a constitutional republic. Our constitution says that whoever wins the most electoral votes wins the election. Period. If you don't like the constitution, then, to use a phrase that can never be overused, get the f*ck out. BTW, since your narrow, liberal mind is incapable of comprehending anything that disagrees with your point of view, I'll fill you in on something. Months after everything cooled down in FL, there was a re-re-recount, and Bush won. If you would like some cheese with that whine, then go to France.
C) In anger? For this insult, I would happily kill you. Unlike most of the so-called "warmongerers," I don't throw this around a lot. But you disrespect the reality of the situation with even the suggestion that we didn't exhaust every single possibility before we dropped the bomb. The Japanese would have exhausted every last man in destroying the US. The death marches were killing more and more US POWs every day. There was only one way to get the Japanese to end this war that THEY STARTED WITH ZERO PROVOCATION! It wasn't with anger that we dropped the bomb, it was with utter sadness. Do you know how many died in Nagasaki and Hiroshima? Do you know how many would have died if we DIDN'T use the bomb? You are an idiot. I and many others know that your opposition to this war is because of your hatred for Bush and nothing more. If it isn't, then where were you when Clinton bombed Iraq in 1993, 1999, and 2000? Where were you when Clinton bombed Serbia? Huh? Where? Sitting at home watching MTV. That's where you need to be right now. It's a wonder you can type at better than a 4th grade level.
D) Funds and harbors terrorists eh? I would ask you what exactly you're referring to, but I'm tired of reading your filth.

Do us all a favor and go play with a loaded pistol.
 

Ilmater

Diamond Member
Jun 13, 2002
7,516
1
0
Originally posted by: exp
The hypocrisy of so many (but not all, mind you) anti-war protestors is becoming more and more clear with each passing day. So far all we've been hearing from the French and the rest of the world is "Oh, the poor Iraqi children. Won't somebody pleeeeze think of the children!! Save them from those American butchers. Blah blah blah..." But now that the war has begun the Truth is coming out, and we see that war detractors are actually rooting for the Iraqis to be put *BACK* under the crushing weight of a barbarous regime and suffocating economic sanctions, just for the brief visceral pleasure they get from seeing some egg in America's face. If anyone needed further confirmation that much of the anti-war crowd is driven purely by their resentment towards America and that they care even less for the Iraqi people than Americans do, here it is.

Americans at least have a legitimate reason for supporting the deaths of so many Iraqis--national security. You may not think it applies in this *specific* instance, but national security is universally acknowledged as one of the very few possible justifications for taking actions leading to the deaths of innocent people. By contrast, what is the French/foreign reason for supporting more Iraqi deaths that would come under a renewed Hussein regime? Spite, plain and simple. It is truly reprehensible IMO that anyone would sell out an entire population just to get a dig in at a certain country. If they really gave a sh*t about the Iraqis, as they claim to, they would hope and pray for a quick victory for the coalition because with Saddam out of the way there would at least be a chance for the killing in Iraq to actually stop (so that something good can come out of this whole stinking mess). Otherwise all these deaths will have been for naught, and Iraqis will continue to die well into the 21st century.

BTW, this 1/4 to 1/3 figure among the French population is probably lower than many other nationalities (I would guess it is well above 90% in the Arab world). So the next time any of you pro-war people feel a bit guilty over the Iraq conflict after seeing the protests going on around the world, just remember that *at least* 25% of those people out there demonstrating have such little regard for human life that they would gladly let millions more die at the hands of Saddam for the sole purpose of seeing the U.S. humiliated. Then ask yourself, "Should I really care what people of this caliber, with motivations so petty and base, think?" I think you'll find, as I have, that the answer is a resounding NO.
All I can say is, that was perfect. It's good that an intelligent person can express their opinion with a cool head rather than my obvious emotion (which I try to repress, but usually to no avail). Thanks.
 

DoctorPizza

Banned
Jun 4, 2001
106
0
0
If you don't see this the way I do - I fear I won't be able to convince you with further debate.
So your opinion is that two routes which start out the same are equivalent?

And how do you feel the majority of those polled probably interpreted the question? (I say probably as no doubt not everyone agrees - but I see an overall trend IMHO).
I think they probably interpreted it as "whose side are you on".

Simply put - they are not as big a threat in the eyes of the US.
But if -- as was your claim -- the war is because of violation of UN resolutions, they should be higher on the list. They have violated more resolutions for a longer time.

I hope they don't go down the "series of pre-emptive" wars route as I would not support that. Plus NK has nuclear capabilites.
They've already started down that path.

I think a long war in Iraq would have a positive consequence in this regard -- if the Iraq conflict took many months, my feeling is that support would wane, and a succession of pre-emptive wars would be untenable. If things can get wrapped up quickly, I think it'll have an encouraging effect on the US administration.

Fear doesn't require hard evidence - other than the capability to act/acomplice and a hatred for the US (these define the so-called "axis of evil" IMHO).
Except for Libya (which has taken significant steps to improve its international relations) and Cuba.

If you would like a tenuous reason then you can cite the fact that Iraq has failed to account for the whereabouts to the UN inspection team of any of the material put forward as missing since their last visit.
If it's all been used or destroyed, it would be hard to account for its whereabouts.

It depends if you qualify that aggression - if you feel it is malevolent or unnecessary then maybe you have a point.
The Canadians apparently feel just that way.

Its called the electoral college system - its not illegal and it can be changed if the elctorate kick up a fuss. I see no problem there.
It isn't simply "the electoral college system". The way in which votes were (mis)counted is deeply suspect.

And again - its a "why" issue - why did they use them?
Because it was deemed better to kill Japanese civilians than American soldiers.

OK, now we start to need links and stories that show the US harbours and funds groups that go around killing civilians.
Terrorists are not defined by killing civilians. But you may be interested in, amongst other groups, Noraid and Alpha 66. Noraid have sponsored the IRA and Alpha 66 have made attacks on Cuba. Both groups reside within the US.

 

DoctorPizza

Banned
Jun 4, 2001
106
0
0
This has got to be the most asinine argument against the war I have ever read. I know people that are anti-war that would smack you in the face (or worse) for making such an unintelligent argument.
So you disagree that the UK poses a threat to the Iraqi people?

Let me explain something to you: in 1991, the UN fought a war with Iraq. Iraq ended the war by signing a treaty. That treaty required them to get rid of certain weapons that the UN (not the US alone) felt was a threat to stability in the region as a condition for us to stop attacking them. They agreed to the terms.
The treaty also agreed that sanctions on food and medicine, and any other material that was deemed necessary, would be lifted. This didn't happen.

They also agreed to prove that they had disposed of said weapons. Never was it our job to play hide-and-go-seek with Saddam and his weapons-makers. It was an explicit part fo the peace treaty that they show us where the weapons were. That was why inspectors were there.
And they did. And the inspectors destroyed weapons.

Saddam decided that he could kick out inspectors without causing the war to attack him.
They were not kicked out by Saddam.

Right there, he was in violation of the peace treaty.
By 1998, when the inspectors left, the UN was already in violation of the treaty. Once one party has voided the agreement by non-compliance the other party is no longer bound by it.

End of story. But he was right. The UN didn't want to jump back into a war so soon. Resolution after Resolution was passed until 1441, which was, by its own admission, a "last chance" for Saddam to avoid "serious consequences."
Unspecified serious consequences. Compliance with 1441 has never been (and probably never will be) determined.

A couple of months later, Saddam finally let weapons inspectors back in. He also realeased what he claimed was proof that he had disposed of all of the CBN weapons. However, a large amount of the CBN weapons weren't accounted for. So the inspectors were there playing hide-and-go-seek with Saddam's men, trying to find these weapons. The US issued an ultimatum that he had to hand over all of the unaccounted-for weapons or face war. Of course, he didn't do so.
The US has no jurisdiction in such matters. Which is why the war remains illegal.

Now, we tried to get other countries to go along with us. All of the other countries in the Security Council had signed the document saying that Saddam must either prove he had fully disarmed or "face serious consequences." What did they think "serious consequences" meant?
Passing a second resolution justifying some form of military action.

Increasing sanctions (sanctions which, by the way, I never agreed with) which were already extreme? What could we do? There's nothing we could do short of war. What do you think "serious consequences" was supposed to mean if not war?
It evidently wasn't supposed to mean war, which is why the UN has condemned the action.

I know that some countries (some cheese-eating surrender monkeys come to mind) specifically chose the words "serious consequences" to give themselves an out later. This way, the resolution never actually said "war," just "serious consequences," which is much more vague.
The intent was that the form of non-compliance be determined -- it hasn't been -- and a second resolution passed to address the non-compliance. If that meant taking the weapons by force, so be it.

1441 as it stands does not justify any single course of action; it merely states that in the event of non-compliance some decision on action would be taken.

We now have at least three countries - the US, Britain and Australia - providing troops to help in the effrot to oust Saddam and his Baath party. THIS IS NOT THE US ALONE!
It doesn't matter if the entire world was on your side; if it's not done with UN consent, it's not legal.

So, in answer to your moronic question, no, other countries should not sit idly by if the Canadians invaded us (with hockey sticks, no doubt). Why? Because you don't give a reason why they did it.
I gave several reasons.

And for another thing, you mentioned that the Iraqis should fight it out for themselves. Can you even read? Maybe you should sit back and let the adults do the talking.
Can you form an argument without resorting to personal attacks?

The Iraqi military are scared to death of revolting against Saddam because his top officers are treated like princes.
The one does not follow from the other.

If you're an Iraqi soldier and you don't like where you are, what do you do? You surely can't talk to others. There would be a reward for anyone that wanted to turn you in. And the officials would be happy to turn you in because they don't want to see their leader that's showering them with gifts go down.
The Iraqi soldiers are a subset of the Iraqi people. If there was such widespread dislike for his regime, they would turn their guns on the government. The Republican Guard may be better equipped than the rest of the army, but do you really think that they could win if the rest of the country rose up against them?

Plus, the reward is quite nice. Then, the solier that reported the dissident would be rewarded in some way. It's basically the same thing as Stalin's regime.
The Russian regime is evidence that internal and external political pressure will, given time, result in change that is (probably) for the better. Likewise the Chinese regime, likewise the Libyan regime. A leader can't continue to lead without popular support indefinitely.

Back then, if you owned a shoe business and the shoe business down the street was doing better than you, you just turned him in and he would be sent to the Gulags. No more competition for you, eh? I watched an Iraqi defector on the History Channel a few weeks ago. He used to be the top Iraqi nuclear scientist. At first it was a fun science experiment when he was a kid, but as he grew up, he realized that he was working for a madman. Saddam treated him very well and gave him everything he wanted. Then he saw another scientist get dragged away, accused of saying things not in line with Saddam's regime. This other scientist was tortured for about a month. At the end, he was given back all of his nice things (fancy car, nice house, etc.) and told, "Isn't this better than the torture from before? Just do what you're told and nothing bad has to happen to you." Do you think that the people around him were going to be eager to go against Saddam's will after that? That's why the scientist that was being interviewed defected. He wasn't about to say anything bad or try to start an anti-Saddam movement, he ran like any other sensible person would.
That they defected makes clear that there is another option.

The Iraqis can't stop him.
Yes they can.

We're not there for their sake, but it surely doesn't hurt that they get something out of this as well.
Sure. Their Iraqi leader will be replaced with an American leader.

Now, if you wish to talk again, tell me where I was wrong from before.
You're wrong because you're trying to force self-determination -- which by its very nature cannot be forced upon people -- onto the Iraqis.

Tell me how we're not justified. Until then, SHUT THE F*CK UP AND LET THE GROWNUPS TALK!
If acting like a grown up means shouting and insulting people, I'm glad you're not applying the label to me.

 

DoctorPizza

Banned
Jun 4, 2001
106
0
0
You're right, it's better to let them rot. Good point. Way to take the moral high-ground. D*psh*t.
Do you understand what self-determination is?

Who's begging for war again?
The US, apparently.

There's a difference between the situations and the resolutions. Read my post above: 1441 was a "last chance" for Saddam. None of the Israel or Turkey resolutions you speak of carry language like that.
The Israel ones probably would if the US didn't keep vetoing them. And 1441 spelled out no penalties. It merely laid the ground work for passing further resolutions to address non-compliance. Non-compliance which is yet to be demonstrated.

This is my favorite argument because of its lack of all trace of logic. So, you're anti-war, right? But you're saying we should invade NK? Good thinking.
I don't believe you should invade NK. I'm merely questioning the judgement of those who claim that Iraq represents a threat to the US. If that is the metric used to decide who to invade, NK should be higher on the list.

I know, you'll say, "I'm not for invading NK, I'm just saying that NK is a threat too, so what's to stop us from invading them? Why Saddam? Is it oil?"
Well, why is it Saddam?

You have to be a monumental idiot to think that argument gets you anywhere. Arguing that we could be attacking other people IS NOT an argument against this war.
It is an argument against the motivation that some are using for the war. If the war is because Saddam represents a threat to the US, it makes little sense to waste resources on him when there are much greater, and much more immediate threats.

Yes, you're right, North Korea is a threat and a problem. However, different factors like oil (*GASP* He said it!!!) and fundamentalist Islamic terrorism make this a more serious and imminent problem.
The Iraqis are not fundamentalists, and the Iraqi regime is a secular one. Islamic fundamentalists are not common in Iraq. If you were invading Saudi then I could understand that motivation.

Just today, the Kurds helped the US take out an Islamic chemical and biological weapons plant that was working with Al Qaeda.
Where?

I would never make the claim that Saddam is explicitly helping Al Qaeda because they don't like the fact that he has millions of Muslims under his control that don't want to be there. However, they do agree in their hatred for America and Israel.
A hatred for America is perfectly sound given the way that the Americans have treated them over the past decade or so.

Plus, and most importantly, NK already HAS nuclear weapons.
They certainly have nuclear reactors; their weapon status is unknown.

Iraq is still working on them. The best thing to do would be to stop Iraq from producing the weapons in the first place.
Why? Israel developed them in secret and has them. Why shouldn't Iraq have them too? The Iranians are sure to develop them (they have nuclear reactors, they have native uranium ore and I believe processing capabilities, so it's just a matter of time), so will you invade them too? How about Pakistan (you know -- the nuclear power where the Islamic extremists are gaining in strength) or India?

You can't put the genie back in the bottle, and any attempt to do so will be a failure.

NK can wait because they've already developed them. They're going to be as bad in the future as they are right now.
Not so. If you were to attack now, they would nuke South Korea and perhaps Japan. If you were to leave it for a few years, they'll be able to strike at the mainland US. From an American perspective, a strike on US soil is far worse than a strike on foreign soil. I'm not saying that a strike on foreign soil would be a good thing, mind you -- I'm just pointing out that the situation can get -- at least from an American perspective -- worse than it presently is.

Plus, China has said that an "nuclear-free peninsula is in its best interest." So, if something happens with the North Koreans, we hope that China will step in.
Something China has refused to do thus far.

Thy most definitely are not happy with North Korea having the weapons.
But refuse to do anything about it.

Neither is South Korea or Japan. Hopefully, between the three of them, they can get something accomplished.
South Korea is impotent; Seoul is in artillery range of North Korea and millions could be killed if they pissed off the North Koreans. Japan is within missile reach of NK and is not a nuclear power (by choice; they certainly could develop the technology if they wanted to). Their navy is capable, but faced with nuclear-tipped missiles, what are they going to do?

I don't see any of those nations doing anything. South Korea and Japan's hands are tied. China still seems to be sympathetic to some degree to North Korea and has thus far done nothing.

Oh my God. More proof that we're not talking to anti-war people, we're just talking to Democrats.
I'm not an American, let alone a Democrat.

Let me address these specifically:
A) This is ridiculous, and I've already discussed why this war is valid. Instead of "To stop US aggression against foreign nations?" you could have said "Because they disagree with the war" and the same arguments would apply. I won't repeat myself again.
You may believe it to be valid, but that doesn't make it legal.
B) Wake the f*ck up. This is not a democracy! It's a constitutional republic.
Neither of which things are incompatible with democracy ("constitutional" meaning you have laws, "republic" meaning your head of state is not a monarch). You have a representative democracy (meaning that rather than the populace voting on matters directly, they elect representatives who in turn vote on matters). Each representative represents a constituency, and the representatives in the constituencies are voted on in a first-past-the-post manner (generally regarded as the worst kind of democracy, but extremely widespread nonetheless; probably due in no small part to your English heritage).

Our constitution says that whoever wins the most electoral votes wins the election. Period.
Questions remain about who won the most votes. Certain voters were incorrectly excluded in Florida, and certain votes were miscounted anyway.

C) In anger? For this insult, I would happily kill you.
God bless free speech, eh?

Unlike most of the so-called "warmongerers," I don't throw this around a lot. But you disrespect the reality of the situation with even the suggestion that we didn't exhaust every single possibility before we dropped the bomb.
No you didn't. You didn't attempt a full-scale land invasion of mainland Japan

The land invasion would certainly have been bloody, and resulted in many American deaths. But to claim you exhausted the possibility is to deny the facts.

The Japanese would have exhausted every last man in destroying the US.
The Japanese may well have surrendered after the Russians entered the war against Japan anyway. We will never know.

The death marches were killing more and more US POWs every day. There was only one way to get the Japanese to end this war that THEY STARTED WITH ZERO PROVOCATION!
So if someone else starts the war you can retaliate in any way you can?

It wasn't with anger that we dropped the bomb, it was with utter sadness.
It was an act of aggression designed to make conquering Japan easier. The war against the Japanese had long before ceased to be defensive.

Do you know how many died in Nagasaki and Hiroshima? Do you know how many would have died if we DIDN'T use the bomb?
Many. That is not the point.

You are an idiot.
I shall bear that in mind.

I and many others know that your opposition to this war is because of your hatred for Bush and nothing more. If it isn't, then where were you when Clinton bombed Iraq in 1993, 1999, and 2000?
I couldn't care less about Clinton. I have protested my nation's involvement in its enforcement of the illegal no fly zones in north and south Iraq, however.

Where were you when Clinton bombed Serbia? Huh? Where?
Why do I care about Clinton?

Sitting at home watching MTV. That's where you need to be right now. It's a wonder you can type at better than a 4th grade level.
I see.

D) Funds and harbors terrorists eh? I would ask you what exactly you're referring to, but I'm tired of reading your filth.
Alpha 66, Noraid, money sent to Israel to support the IDF....

 

Raiden256

Platinum Member
Feb 11, 2001
2,144
0
0
Go get 'em Pizza! I don't agree with everything you say, but I love the calm demeanor in which you say it. Makes deflecting those ad hominem attacks look like a walk in the park! :D
 

freakflag

Diamond Member
Mar 22, 2001
3,951
1
71
DoctorPizza

I do not have the time, nor the inclination to quote every instance of the collosol stupidity you have posted in this thread, so, I just used your name.

Somehow, it just seems appropriate.

Stop posting.

Really.
 

kylebisme

Diamond Member
Mar 25, 2000
9,396
0
0
Originally posted by: NightTrain
First you claimed the article doesn't say what it was purported to have said.

Now, relieved of that misconception, you attack the credibility of the poll that didn't exist.
i pointed out the article doesn't have anything to do with it's title and then when another article was presented i presented what i know of the source, both of which are true. i don't see what you are going on about, do you just like to badger people NightTrain?
 

DoctorPizza

Banned
Jun 4, 2001
106
0
0
I do not have the time, nor the inclination to quote every instance of the collosol stupidity you have posted in this thread, so, I just used your name.
Even one or two would be a good start -- if you can.

Somehow, it just seems appropriate.

Stop posting.

Really.
God forbid someone challenge your views.
 

Fencer128

Platinum Member
Jun 18, 2001
2,700
1
91
Doctor Pizza, I would be quite happy to debate this with you - point by point - but I find it extremely time consuming to got through each sentence of every post, quoting previous replies as I do so. If you wish to debate more please can we keep it to a single point at a time as this would mean I could formulate a reply that takes less than 30mins.

I'll be off most of the weekend (so I'll only be on spradically) but I should be back up to speed on Monday evening.

Cheers,

Andy
 

Ilmater

Diamond Member
Jun 13, 2002
7,516
1
0
Longest post ever.... and so it begins. I want to begin by saying that you were right on one point. My personal attacks were uncalled for. It's much easier to beat you with my arguments. In contrast to what Raiden256 said, I do not think that the way you address arguments makes your responses look any more credible. In fact, I've noticed that most of the time you counter my points with snide remarks it's because you don't have anything better to say and cannot counter the argument. I'll make it a point to show you those points below.

Originally posted by: DoctorPizza
This has got to be the most asinine argument against the war I have ever read. I know people that are anti-war that would smack you in the face (or worse) for making such an unintelligent argument.
So you disagree that the UK poses a threat to the Iraqi people?
I disagree with the fact that the UK poses a bigger threat to the Iraqi people that Saddam does, yes. More importantly, I think Saddam poses a bigger threat to instability in the region than the UK does.

Let me explain something to you: in 1991, the UN fought a war with Iraq. Iraq ended the war by signing a treaty. That treaty required them to get rid of certain weapons that the UN (not the US alone) felt was a threat to stability in the region as a condition for us to stop attacking them. They agreed to the terms.
The treaty also agreed that sanctions on food and medicine, and any other material that was deemed necessary, would be lifted. This didn't happen.
I would like you to prove this one. Show some proof that the US violated the treaty BEFORE Saddam did. Then show proof where there was a clause that said that sanctions on "any other material that was deemed necessary would be lifted" in the peace agreement.

They also agreed to prove that they had disposed of said weapons. Never was it our job to play hide-and-go-seek with Saddam and his weapons-makers. It was an explicit part fo the peace treaty that they show us where the weapons were. That was why inspectors were there.
And they did. And the inspectors destroyed weapons.
But they didn't destroy them all, did they? And they weren't handed all the weapons either, were they? No. The inspectors that were in Iraq directly following the Persian Gulf War were consistently denied access to different plants that they wanted to search. The fact that they were searching at all was proof enough that Saddam wasn't cooperating. They were going into pants, finding weapons, and destroying them. The peace agreement said that Saddam was supposed to destroy them himself. The inspectors were only there to make sure he wasn't lying (which he was). Every time they destroyed weapons (as even you admit they were), Saddam was in violation of the peace treaty. They also know that they didn't find everything. We had a list of most of the things that Iraq had, and shortly after 1441, Saddam released thousands of pages documenting his destruction of weapons. However, many of the things that we know he had were not destoyed, most significantly, large stockpiles of anthrax and Serin gas.

Saddam decided that he could kick out inspectors without causing the war to attack him.
They were not kicked out by Saddam.
OK, I'll admit that there is some disagreement on this one. Here are the facts: Richard Butler, the then-Chief Weapons inspector, ordered his men out of Iraq after talking to Kofi Annan and the US, right before his report was released. His report stated that they could not get anything done because Saddam would not cooperate with them. I personally saw him speak (and by the way, he claims to be against the war, but I really don't have time to get into that argument as well), and he said that Iraq was accusing his men of spying, and that Saddam had threatened them. So, that is why there is a discrepency between the reports. While Butler did order his men to leave, this wasn't until after Saddam had spoken to him and threatened him.

Right there, he was in violation of the peace treaty.
By 1998, when the inspectors left, the UN was already in violation of the treaty. Once one party has voided the agreement by non-compliance the other party is no longer bound by it.
You are so right it hurts. What is also right is that Iraq had consistently violated the treaty BEFORE the UN did. But, as I said above, you can try to prove me wrong here if you'd like.

End of story. But he was right. The UN didn't want to jump back into a war so soon. Resolution after Resolution was passed until 1441, which was, by its own admission, a "last chance" for Saddam to avoid "serious consequences."
Unspecified serious consequences. Compliance with 1441 has never been (and probably never will be) determined.
I don't want to skip these because I'm sure you'd be happy to claim that somehow I was afradi to answer them, so I'll make it clear that my intent is to cross-apply my arguments. As I'm no longer going to enter into personaly attacks, I'm going to assume that you can do this without me leading you through it.

A couple of months later, Saddam finally let weapons inspectors back in. He also realeased what he claimed was proof that he had disposed of all of the CBN weapons. However, a large amount of the CBN weapons weren't accounted for. So the inspectors were there playing hide-and-go-seek with Saddam's men, trying to find these weapons. The US issued an ultimatum that he had to hand over all of the unaccounted-for weapons or face war. Of course, he didn't do so.
The US has no jurisdiction in such matters. Which is why the war remains illegal.
You are almost right here. It should not be the US's place to step in and make demands and ultimatums. It should be the UN's place to do these things. However, the UN's inaction in these matters required us to take action. The only way for either of us to win this argument is for one of us to see the other side of the story here. The real question isn't whether or not the war is legal, but whether or not it's justified. I would think that even you would acknowledge that if you thought the war was justified, it wouldn't matter if it were legal or not. The American Revolution wasn't a "legal" war, but it was justified. There wasn't a UN back when WWII started, but you wouldn't say that America "invading" Europe to stop the Axis powers was illegal, would you? Well, maybe you would, but you still wouldn't say that they were unjustified, would you? Heh. Of course you would.
rolleye.gif
For another perspective, while the Vietnam war was legal, I don't know if I would call it just.

Now, we tried to get other countries to go along with us. All of the other countries in the Security Council had signed the document saying that Saddam must either prove he had fully disarmed or "face serious consequences." What did they think "serious consequences" meant?
Passing a second resolution justifying some form of military action.
Which, of course, France, Russia and Germany would not do, which, as I said before, is the reason why they worded it that way in the first place. Even if they would have signed the second resolution, exactly what is serious about a resolution threatening military action from a body that has failed to act repeatedly over the last couple of decades?

Increasing sanctions (sanctions which, by the way, I never agreed with) which were already extreme? What could we do? There's nothing we could do short of war. What do you think "serious consequences" was supposed to mean if not war?
It evidently wasn't supposed to mean war, which is why the UN has condemned the action.
I'm sorry, I must have missed that one. I guess you're claiming that the UN passed some sort of measure or resolution condemning the war, right? I mean, otherwise, you couldn't really say the UN was condemning the war, could you? If by UN you mean France, Germany, and Russia, then you'd still be wrong. No official statement has come from these countries condemning the war. They have expressed "regret," and called it an "error" (that one from Putin), but not one leader of these three nations has "condemned" the war. However, somebody at the UN has used the word condemn before. I think you'll find this article interesting. The U.N. human-rights chief, after condemning NATO's actions in Yugoslavia, wanted to meet with Slobodan Milosevic on his thoughts on how NATO's bombing of Yugoslavia was a war crime. That's right, the same guy that was then tried for genocide.

I know that some countries (some cheese-eating surrender monkeys come to mind) specifically chose the words "serious consequences" to give themselves an out later. This way, the resolution never actually said "war," just "serious consequences," which is much more vague.
The intent was that the form of non-compliance be determined -- it hasn't been -- and a second resolution passed to address the non-compliance. If that meant taking the weapons by force, so be it.
You say that compliance hasn't been determined. Here are the facts: after the inital rounds of inspections, the chief UN weapons inspector left saying that Iraq was not cooperating and that Iraq still had not accounted for certain weapons. This is the same guy that is claiming that weapons inspections could work now. What made him change his mind? Maybe Baghdad's contributions to the organization he founded, maybe not. I don't know. Anyway, back to the subject. There are weapons that weren't accounted for then, and they were still unaccounted for when Iraq released the 12,000 page document that was supposedly detailing where all of their weapons had gone. The fact that weapons inspectors couldn't find WMD has nothing to do with this. The fact that they weren't saying, "Here are those weapons that you wanted us to account for, destroy them if you like," is enough to make them not in compliance with the resolution.

Here's some food for thought: why did they call 1441 Saddam's "last resort" when (if what you say is true) what they really meant was "second-to-last we swear this time?" Even you can't claim that a resolution, in and of itself, is a "serious consequence," can you? Of course you can. If by "serious consequence" they really meant "just another resolution to add to the pile," then why didn't they word it that way? I do not understand how you could claim that a resolution is a serious consequence. Maybe that resolution carries serious consequences, but the resolution in and of itself is NOT a serious consequence. They didn't have to sign it, but they did.

1441 as it stands does not justify any single course of action; it merely states that in the event of non-compliance some decision on action would be taken.
Iraq has already fired weapons that were not in compliance with what they were legally allowed to have, but the UN claimed that they were compliant. Doesn't this make the UN wrong? Wouldn't that mean it was time for those "serious consequences?" Probably. It didn't seem to happen though, did it?

We now have at least three countries - the US, Britain and Australia - providing troops to help in the effrot to oust Saddam and his Baath party. THIS IS NOT THE US ALONE!
It doesn't matter if the entire world was on your side; if it's not done with UN consent, it's not legal.
You know, the UN didn't back NATO's incursion into Yugoslavia either, but it was the right thing to do. Unless, of course, you thought genocide at the hands of the Serbs was OK.

So, in answer to your moronic question, no, other countries should not sit idly by if the Canadians invaded us (with hockey sticks, no doubt). Why? Because you don't give a reason why they did it.
I gave several reasons.
Which I promptly discredited.

And for another thing, you mentioned that the Iraqis should fight it out for themselves. Can you even read? Maybe you should sit back and let the adults do the talking.
Can you form an argument without resorting to personal attacks?
Done and done.

The Iraqi military are scared to death of revolting against Saddam because his top officers are treated like princes.
The one does not follow from the other.
The lower ranks who have horrible lives and would want to revolt are held back by the higher-ups that are treated like princes. Is that clear enough for you?

If you're an Iraqi soldier and you don't like where you are, what do you do? You surely can't talk to others. There would be a reward for anyone that wanted to turn you in. And the officials would be happy to turn you in because they don't want to see their leader that's showering them with gifts go down.
The Iraqi soldiers are a subset of the Iraqi people. If there was such widespread dislike for his regime, they would turn their guns on the government. The Republican Guard may be better equipped than the rest of the army, but do you really think that they could win if the rest of the country rose up against them?
Before the Kurds even revolted, Saddam gassed an entire Kurdish city. I don't see them revolting again, do you? Oh, wait, but that would make them not self-determinant enough for you, wouldn't it? Or maybe they're just scared since no outside government did anything to stop Saddam after he gassed them by the thousands. Maybe if they revolted and were gassed the UN would pass another of those dandy resolutions that do nothing. Shouldn't that be enough for them to revolt... oh, maybe not.

Plus, the reward is quite nice. Then, the solier that reported the dissident would be rewarded in some way. It's basically the same thing as Stalin's regime.
The Russian regime is evidence that internal and external political pressure will, given time, result in change that is (probably) for the better. Likewise the Chinese regime, likewise the Libyan regime. A leader can't continue to lead without popular support indefinitely.
No, it's not. If you remember correctly, while Stalin killed MILLIONS MORE THAN HITLER in the Gulags, his people never rose up against him. Oh, wait, I know, you were right. He didn't continue indefinitely. He got very ill and because his doctors were afraid to be killed if they helped him for the capital offense of seeing him while he was sick (read: weak), they didn't treat him. His daughter, many years later, blamed the doctors, not her genocidal father, for them not treating him. You're right. Let's just wait until Saddam dies of old age or some terrible sickness. Hopefully he won't gas his own people between now and then, right?

Back then, if you owned a shoe business and the shoe business down the street was doing better than you, you just turned him in and he would be sent to the Gulags. No more competition for you, eh? I watched an Iraqi defector on the History Channel a few weeks ago. He used to be the top Iraqi nuclear scientist. At first it was a fun science experiment when he was a kid, but as he grew up, he realized that he was working for a madman. Saddam treated him very well and gave him everything he wanted. Then he saw another scientist get dragged away, accused of saying things not in line with Saddam's regime. This other scientist was tortured for about a month. At the end, he was given back all of his nice things (fancy car, nice house, etc.) and told, "Isn't this better than the torture from before? Just do what you're told and nothing bad has to happen to you." Do you think that the people around him were going to be eager to go against Saddam's will after that? That's why the scientist that was being interviewed defected. He wasn't about to say anything bad or try to start an anti-Saddam movement, he ran like any other sensible person would.
That they defected makes clear that there is another option.
No, he had to pay large sums of money to underground factions to get himself out of Iraq. He also had to pay more for the border guards (who though they are stationed well-away from Saddam still are afraid enough to follow most of his orders) to let him out of hte country. That's hard to do for the masses that don't have money, isn't it?

The Iraqis can't stop him.
Yes they can.
Good one.

We're not there for their sake, but it surely doesn't hurt that they get something out of this as well.
Sure. Their Iraqi leader will be replaced with an American leader.
Only for a transitional period until the Iraqi government is set up. If you want to believe a conspiracy theory that neither you nor I could prove or disprove, go right ahead.

Now, if you wish to talk again, tell me where I was wrong from before.
You're wrong because you're trying to force self-determination -- which by its very nature cannot be forced upon people -- onto the Iraqis.
No, the majority of Iraqis want to be out of Saddam's control, but they cannot or will not for fear of reprisal. Your misconception is that just the desire to be somewhere else is enough to get you there. That, is where you are wrong. We're not trying to force self-determination, we're trying to pave the way for it.

Tell me how we're not justified. Until then, SHUT THE F*CK UP AND LET THE GROWNUPS TALK!
If acting like a grown up means shouting and insulting people, I'm glad you're not applying the label to me.
You're right, and I appologize.
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I have to take a break now. I'll get back to your other post this weekend.
 

DoctorPizza

Banned
Jun 4, 2001
106
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I disagree with the fact that the UK poses a bigger threat to the Iraqi people that Saddam does, yes.
How so? We're the ones dropping bombs on them and not letting them buy food or medicine. That doesn't pose a threat?

More importantly, I think Saddam poses a bigger threat to instability in the region than the UK does.
This is not a view shared by the rest of the Middle East. Nor is it a view with any great supporting evidence.

I would like you to prove this one. Show some proof that the US violated the treaty BEFORE Saddam did.
The oil for food programme was only set up in 1995 because of UN recognition that the humanitarian needs were not being adequately fulfilled; it was a response to the failure of the UN to ensure adequate supplies of food and other essentials.

Then show proof where there was a clause that said that sanctions on "any other material that was deemed necessary would be lifted" in the peace agreement.
Resolution 687 paragraph 20.

But they didn't destroy them all, did they?
Nope. They left in a huff before the job was finished.

And they weren't handed all the weapons either, were they?
We don't know.

No. The inspectors that were in Iraq directly following the Persian Gulf War were consistently denied access to different plants that they wanted to search.
Those were only required under the UNSCOM inspection rules. In 1999 UNSCOM was replaced by UNMOVIC -- and UNMOVIC didn't demand access to the presidential palaces (areas of contention) anyway.

The fact that they were searching at all was proof enough that Saddam wasn't cooperating.
I think that it is naive to assume that no searches would take place even in the event of full co-operation.

They were going into pants, finding weapons, and destroying them. The peace agreement said that Saddam was supposed to destroy them himself.
Paragraph 9 of UNSCR 697 makes clear that this is not the case. It states that the UN would form a Special Commission whose purpose was to inspect and supervise destruction of the weapons. The Iraqis were not to simply destroy them themselves. They were to destroy them with the Special Commission. This is what occurred.

The inspectors were only there to make sure he wasn't lying (which he was).
Which still hasn't been demonstrated.

Every time they destroyed weapons (as even you admit they were), Saddam was in violation of the peace treaty.
Not so. The destruction was to occur with the supervision of the Special Committee. This is spelled out explicitly in UNSCR 687.

They also know that they didn't find everything. We had a list of most of the things that Iraq had, and shortly after 1441, Saddam released thousands of pages documenting his destruction of weapons. However, many of the things that we know he had were not destoyed, most significantly, large stockpiles of anthrax and Serin gas.
We don't know the whereabouts of any such weapons; nor do we know if they have been destroyed or not. The recent inspections were supposed to determine one way or the other, but they were forced to stop when the US and UK chose to invade. As yet, nothing incriminating has been found. Sarin, by the way, cannot be stored indefinitely; it decomposes.

OK, I'll admit that there is some disagreement on this one. Here are the facts: Richard Butler, the then-Chief Weapons inspector, ordered his men out of Iraq after talking to Kofi Annan and the US, right before his report was released. His report stated that they could not get anything done because Saddam would not cooperate with them.
One problem is that things plainly were getting done, because the inspectors were successfully supervising the destruction of the weapons -- which is what they were there to do in the first place.

I personally saw him speak (and by the way, he claims to be against the war, but I really don't have time to get into that argument as well), and he said that Iraq was accusing his men of spying, and that Saddam had threatened them.
It isn't impossible that they were indeed spying.

I think there is something deeply suspicious about Scott Ritter. There seems to be some effort to discredit him (accusations of hebephilia abound), and he's stated all manner of contradictory things about Iraqi weapons and so on. However, he is on record as saying:
So let's keep in mind that the reason why inspectors are out of Iraq isn't because Iraq kicked them out, but rather they were ordered out by the United States after the United States manipulated the inspection process to create a confrontation that led to Operation Desert Fox.

If his accusation is true -- that the US did deliberately manipulate/undermine the inspections to prompt a conflict -- it is hard to condemn the Iraqi response. The inspectors were there to do what UNSCR 687 said; they were not there to spy on Iraq or the Iraqi government or anything of that nature.

So, that is why there is a discrepency between the reports. While Butler did order his men to leave, this wasn't until after Saddam had spoken to him and threatened him.
If they were spying -- which was not part of their mandate -- then it was right and proper for Iraq to ask them to leave until some way of resolving the situation was found. Ultimately, that led to UNMOVIC.

You are so right it hurts. What is also right is that Iraq had consistently violated the treaty BEFORE the UN did. But, as I said above, you can try to prove me wrong here if you'd like.
Iraq hadn't violated the treaty before the UN did.

You are almost right here. It should not be the US's place to step in and make demands and ultimatums. It should be the UN's place to do these things. However, the UN's inaction in these matters required us to take action.
The UN was not being inactive. The UN wanted the inspections to continue. The weapons inspectors (at least the IAEA inspectors) wanted the weapons inspections to continue. They wanted the "smoking gun" to be found that would justify further action.

The only way for either of us to win this argument is for one of us to see the other side of the story here. The real question isn't whether or not the war is legal, but whether or not it's justified.
Actually, I think that both questions are important; not least because I fear there will be repercussions beyond this war. Iraq is not the only country to be seeking to develop WMDs.

I would think that even you would acknowledge that if you thought the war was justified, it wouldn't matter if it were legal or not.
I think it would matter, because -- apart from anything else -- it would guide future action.

The American Revolution wasn't a "legal" war, but it was justified. There wasn't a UN back when WWII started, but you wouldn't say that America "invading" Europe to stop the Axis powers was illegal, would you?
No -- because there was minimal international law at that time. Something can't be against the law if there is no law.

Well, maybe you would, but you still wouldn't say that they were unjustified, would you? Heh. Of course you would.
The American Revolution wasn't justified; you yanks should have been grateful to be ruled by the Brits. :p

WWII is difficult. There is a very real possibility that had the UK not declared war on the Germans for their invasion of Poland that the UK wouldn't have been dragged into the war in the first place (Hitler was interested in expanding east rather more than he was to expand west). The UK came out of the war in far worse a state than it was before the war -- it did not benefit the UK to declare war on Germany. Was it justified? That is hard to say. It hurt the UK -- which presumably is what the UK government should aim to avoid.

Hitler was certainly nasty, and certainly responsible for persecuting and killing millions. The problem is that this wasn't known at the time war began -- indeed, the mass gassing and incineration of the Jews hadn't even begun -- and that the Soviet regime (which after the war essentially controlled all of eastern Europe) wasn't any better. Stalin was no less murderous than Hitler. So, whilst the involvement of the UK was certainly beneficial for the Jews, it was at the detriment of the eastern Europeans. It is not easy to state which outcome is preferable. Both regimes were extremist and murderous.

The US wasn't hurt by its involvement in the war -- indeed, on a pragmatic level, it had a quite positive outcome, as it established military bases throughout Europe which were instrumental in "fighting" the Cold War. The downsides for the Europeans remain, however -- it prevented the (unknown) extermination of the Jews, but replaced it with the equally vile Soviet regime.

As such, the question of justification can only be answered once one establishes the goals. If the aim was to stop Hitler at all costs, then yes, it was justified, and it was successful. If it was to establish a free Europe it was probably justified -- but it was also a failure. If it was to obtain the means of projecting US power into the USSR it was justified and it was successful.

For another perspective, while the Vietnam war was legal, I don't know if I would call it just.
Its legality is questionable; neither the US nor north Vietnam signed the 1955 Geneva Agreement on the cessation of Indochina conflicts, and as such the US had no right to do what it did.

Which, of course, France, Russia and Germany would not do, which, as I said before, is the reason why they worded it that way in the first place.
Given that as yet the inspections were for the most part continuing smoothly, they were unwilling to permit war. They wanted a "smoking gun".

Even if they would have signed the second resolution, exactly what is serious about a resolution threatening military action from a body that has failed to act repeatedly over the last couple of decades?
It has also acted repeatedly over the last couple of decades.

I'm sorry, I must have missed that one. I guess you're claiming that the UN passed some sort of measure or resolution condemning the war, right?
They don't have to. Kofi Annan said before (and I think after) that any war without UN approval would be (essentially) wrong.

You say that compliance hasn't been determined. Here are the facts: after the inital rounds of inspections, the chief UN weapons inspector left saying that Iraq was not cooperating and that Iraq still had not accounted for certain weapons. This is the same guy that is claiming that weapons inspections could work now. What made him change his mind? Maybe Baghdad's contributions to the organization he founded, maybe not. I don't know. Anyway, back to the subject. There are weapons that weren't accounted for then, and they were still unaccounted for when Iraq released the 12,000 page document that was supposedly detailing where all of their weapons had gone. The fact that weapons inspectors couldn't find WMD has nothing to do with this. The fact that they weren't saying, "Here are those weapons that you wanted us to account for, destroy them if you like," is enough to make them not in compliance with the resolution.
The problem is that that hasn't actually been determined. No material breach was found prior to the start of the war.

Here's some food for thought: why did they call 1441 Saddam's "last resort" when (if what you say is true) what they really meant was "second-to-last we swear this time?"
A second resolution would authorize some assertive act. Failure to comply with 1441 would result in some consequences or other -- but those consequences would be determined by a second resolution. That would make 1441 a last resort, but still require a second resolution.

Even you can't claim that a resolution, in and of itself, is a "serious consequence," can you? Of course you can. If by "serious consequence" they really meant "just another resolution to add to the pile," then why didn't they word it that way?
If they meant invasion, why did they not word it that way?

I do not understand how you could claim that a resolution is a serious consequence. Maybe that resolution carries serious consequences, but the resolution in and of itself is NOT a serious consequence. They didn't have to sign it, but they did.
The second resolution would authorize some act against Iraq. It would not be another chance -- it would be the authorization of some action.

Iraq has already fired weapons that were not in compliance with what they were legally allowed to have, but the UN claimed that they were compliant.
If you mean the al Samoud missiles, their illegality is largely an American invention.

If you mean the missiles fired at Kuwait since the war has begun, their non-compliance hasn't been determined. Some reports have claimed they're Scuds. Some have claimed they're not. As yet, no-one seems to be sure one way or the other.

Doesn't this make the UN wrong? Wouldn't that mean it was time for those "serious consequences?" Probably. It didn't seem to happen though, did it?
Given that the UN was never given a chance to determine if he was in breech, of course the UN never decided on any consequences.

You know, the UN didn't back NATO's incursion into Yugoslavia either, but it was the right thing to do. Unless, of course, you thought genocide at the hands of the Serbs was OK.
Who said it wasn't the right thing to do? Legal and right are not synonyms.

Which I promptly discredited.
No you did not.

The lower ranks who have horrible lives and would want to revolt are held back by the higher-ups that are treated like princes. Is that clear enough for you?
No, not really. If the lower ranks really hate it so much, why not use their AK 74s and just blow away those above them. The lower orders necessarily outnumber those higher up.

Before the Kurds even revolted, Saddam gassed an entire Kurdish city.
The use of Sarin at Birjinni is assumed, but not guaranteed.

I don't see them revolting again, do you?
If they care enough? Yes.

No, it's not. If you remember correctly, while Stalin killed MILLIONS MORE THAN HITLER in the Gulags, his people never rose up against him. Oh, wait, I know, you were right. He didn't continue indefinitely. He got very ill and because his doctors were afraid to be killed if they helped him for the capital offense of seeing him while he was sick (read: weak), they didn't treat him. His daughter, many years later, blamed the doctors, not her genocidal father, for them not treating him. You're right. Let's just wait until Saddam dies of old age or some terrible sickness. Hopefully he won't gas his own people between now and then, right?
He's no spring chicken; unless the world is very unlucky and he's another Castro (who seems to refuse to die) he'll pop his clogs eventually. I'm sure it won't be quick enough for some -- but there are aims other than simply being "quick". Issues such as stability -- and slow progression seems to lead to greater stability than rapid change, if the events in Afghanistan are anything to judge by.

No, he had to pay large sums of money to underground factions to get himself out of Iraq. He also had to pay more for the border guards (who though they are stationed well-away from Saddam still are afraid enough to follow most of his orders) to let him out of hte country. That's hard to do for the masses that don't have money, isn't it?
Take a car or truck. Pack up your family and important belongings. Fill it up with cheap petrol. Point it at the border. Press the accelerator. If you're afraid of the border guards, don't stop for them. Get a bunch of friends to do the same, at the same time. There have been mass exoduses before (something like a million refugees fleeing to Syria in 1991) -- there can be again.

Only for a transitional period until the Iraqi government is set up. If you want to believe a conspiracy theory that neither you nor I could prove or disprove, go right ahead.
What'll you do if the Iraqis attempt to install a fundamentalist islamic government? I don't think it'll be quite as simple as letting the Iraqis rule themselves -- it's too dangerous.

No, the majority of Iraqis want to be out of Saddam's control, but they cannot or will not for fear of reprisal.
If the majority of them rose up, they're not all going to face reprisals. Not least because they'll be successful.

Your misconception is that just the desire to be somewhere else is enough to get you there.
In this case, if the desire is as widespread as you claim, yes, it is.

That, is where you are wrong. We're not trying to force self-determination, we're trying to pave the way for it.
If what you say about the US government being only transitional, you're forcing them to walk down the path too. If the US government is permanent, I'll concede that you're attempting to force self-determination on them (merely replacing one dictator with another).
 

Ilmater

Diamond Member
Jun 13, 2002
7,516
1
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Originally posted by: DoctorPizza
You're right, it's better to let them rot. Good point. Way to take the moral high-ground. D*psh*t.
Do you understand what self-determination is?
Yes, I do. It's a ridiculous idea that's propagated in scientology, which is a terrible excuse for a belief system. Listen, as I said before, millions of people were killed durng Stalin's reign over Russia. However, the populace was too afraid to revolt. Your ideas of self-determination are flawed. If I live under Saddam's regime, I know that revolts have been put down with chemical weapons. I also know that people that show public displays of dissent are shot (see Basra after the Persian Gulf War). If I wanted to die, I could just hang myself. However, my religious beliefs tell me that suicide isn't an acceptible way out. So, what are my other choices? Many over the years have left, but as I said before, that's not an option for everyone as it is quite expensive. If I can't change the regime and am assured of death - and possibly the death of many who do not deserve it - how can I revolt? I guess I'm just not desperate enough. I'm not determined enough. Right? Isn't that what self-determination says? I guess Jews just weren't determined enough to rise up against their captors in WWII. They must have LIKED being in concentration camps because they didn't try to get out. Yeah, they were hungry and weak and would have been shot without a second thought at the slightest whim of the guards, but if they REALLY wanted out, they'd fight for it. Believe it or not, some people are so mentally defeated, they lose the fight and accept their fates. Before you discredit the WWII example as just a fanatical extreme attempt at an example, really think about it. It's dead-on.

There's a difference between the situations and the resolutions. Read my post above: 1441 was a "last chance" for Saddam. None of the Israel or Turkey resolutions you speak of carry language like that.
The Israel ones probably would if the US didn't keep vetoing them. And 1441 spelled out no penalties. It merely laid the ground work for passing further resolutions to address non-compliance. Non-compliance which is yet to be demonstrated.
We claim to know of non-compliance. I'm not saying I know it's there, I just know that many (including those that are now anti-war) have said that many of the weapons that should have been destroyed haven't been accounted for. Saddam claims that they're destroyed. So are you saying that we should take the word of a murderous maniac. When you're as crazy and as deadly as Saddam Hussein, you have to go a little further than Israel and Turkey in proving your innocence. Saddam hasn't done this. And before you start telling me how murderous Israel is, just remember that this conflict has been going on for thousands of years. This latest string of conflicts started a few years back when Ariel Sharon went to the Temple Mound to pray; hardly grounds for wave after wave of suicide bombers.

And by the way, you're not saying that countries vetoing resolutions is unjust are you? No, you couldn't be because you agree with Germany and France vetoing the recent resolutions the US has proposed. Or maybe you're only opposed to vetoing resolutions that you agree with. Is that it?

This is my favorite argument because of its lack of all trace of logic. So, you're anti-war, right? But you're saying we should invade NK? Good thinking.
I don't believe you should invade NK. I'm merely questioning the judgement of those who claim that Iraq represents a threat to the US. If that is the metric used to decide who to invade, NK should be higher on the list.
As I said above and in my last post, here are the reasons why Iraq is a higher priority than NK right now: Saddam is as crazy and pernicious as any leader on the planet. He has been engaging on an active campaign to gain nuclear capabilities for years. He's shown his ability to invade other countries on a whim. He doesn't yet have nuclear weapons, and having them would only make him 10x the threat he is now. He has been given chances to comply and has failed. You can claim that he has cooperated, but the US claims that it is he that fails to comply from day one with weapons inspectors. You want to believe a pernicious despot and discredit the US because you would put us on the same level as him. Call me crazy, but in this particular game of "he said, she said," I'll go with what my government claims.

I know, you'll say, "I'm not for invading NK, I'm just saying that NK is a threat too, so what's to stop us from invading them? Why Saddam? Is it oil?"
Well, why is it Saddam?
See above

You have to be a monumental idiot to think that argument gets you anywhere. Arguing that we could be attacking other people IS NOT an argument against this war.
It is an argument against the motivation that some are using for the war. If the war is because Saddam represents a threat to the US, it makes little sense to waste resources on him when there are much greater, and much more immediate threats.
I believe that the motivation is that he is a threat to US and mideast security (yes, I think he's more of a threat to mideast security than the US, specifically when it comes to Israel), he controls a decent amount of oil that would harm the already ailing WORLD (not just US) economy, he has been told to disarm or else by a security council resolution (that we believe gives us enough justification for the war legally), and he can be taken out quickly. North Korea is a different beast altogether. The most important problem there is, while they demonstrate a significant threat to the United States' security, their nuclear abilities (added to the absolute lack of moral compass demonstrated by Kim Jong Il) and terrain make it terribly tough for us to win a war there alone. We HAVE to have full international backing to go into that country. That doesn't mean it's less of a threat to the US, just that it's not something we have the power to deal with right now when a world of doves refuse to face threats when they arise.

Yes, you're right, North Korea is a threat and a problem. However, different factors like oil (*GASP* He said it!!!) and fundamentalist Islamic terrorism make this a more serious and imminent problem.
The Iraqis are not fundamentalists, and the Iraqi regime is a secular one. Islamic fundamentalists are not common in Iraq. If you were invading Saudi then I could understand that motivation. I never said that the Iraqis are fundamentalists. You and many like you assume that I think that there are large Al-Qaeda camps in Iraq. I do not believe that is the case considering how especially brutal Saddam has been to the Shi'ites in the past. However, the very fact that Iraq is in the Middle East means that any action there has an effect on Islamic Fundamentalism.

Just today, the Kurds helped the US take out an Islamic chemical and biological weapons plant that was working with Al Qaeda.
Where?
Here.

I would never make the claim that Saddam is explicitly helping Al Qaeda because they don't like the fact that he has millions of Muslims under his control that don't want to be there. However, they do agree in their hatred for America and Israel.
A hatred for America is perfectly sound given the way that the Americans have treated them over the past decade or so.
Their hatred for America is based on their idea of American culture as sinful and wrong, as well as their Muslim teachings which, when taken even somewhat loosely, clearly dictates that every non-Muslim should die. I'm not claiming that every Muslim is like that, but I've done my own research and the Koran doesn't mince words about this fact.

Plus, and most importantly, NK already HAS nuclear weapons.
They certainly have nuclear reactors; their weapon status is unknown.
They have said that their program is back underway. If they do have even rudimentary nuclear weapons, that will be enough to make my claims valid.

Iraq is still working on them. The best thing to do would be to stop Iraq from producing the weapons in the first place.
Why? Israel developed them in secret and has them. Why shouldn't Iraq have them too? The Iranians are sure to develop them (they have nuclear reactors, they have native uranium ore and I believe processing capabilities, so it's just a matter of time), so will you invade them too? How about Pakistan (you know -- the nuclear power where the Islamic extremists are gaining in strength) or India?

You can't put the genie back in the bottle, and any attempt to do so will be a failure.
Nobody wants any of these countries (save Israel) to have nuclear weapons. Especially when religious fundamentalists are at the helms. But Saddam has managed to make even religious fundamentalists look sane. For the record, I'm kind of agnostic. It's not that I don't know if there's a God, it's just that, even if there is one, I really don't think he wants me bowing on my knees worshipping him. He wants me to do what I can with what I have. Religion drives too many people to do too many stupid things. When I was in Catholic grade school, the school priest came in one day and told the class that every other religion is wrong. Even at 12 I knew that one belief in an intangible being that most people wouldn't even CLAIM to have seen or heard couldn't possibly have much more validity than another. Just a quick background to let you know where I'm coming from.

NK can wait because they've already developed them. They're going to be as bad in the future as they are right now.
Not so. If you were to attack now, they would nuke South Korea and perhaps Japan. If you were to leave it for a few years, they'll be able to strike at the mainland US. From an American perspective, a strike on US soil is far worse than a strike on foreign soil. I'm not saying that a strike on foreign soil would be a good thing, mind you -- I'm just pointing out that the situation can get -- at least from an American perspective -- worse than it presently is.
I personally would like to think that - while I have the same survival instincts as the next human - I value every human life equally. I can tell you that I do not think that an attack that flattens San Francisco is any better or worse than an attack on Seoul. They are both equally horrifying.

Plus, China has said that a "nuclear-free peninsula is in its best interest." So, if something happens with the North Koreans, we hope that China will step in.
Something China has refused to do thus far.
I said if and hope for a reason. The situation has not elevated to a level at which I would fully judge the Chinese's inability to act.

Thy most definitely are not happy with North Korea having the weapons.
But refuse to do anything about it.
See above.

Neither is South Korea or Japan. Hopefully, between the three of them, they can get something accomplished.
South Korea is impotent; Seoul is in artillery range of North Korea and millions could be killed if they pissed off the North Koreans. Japan is within missile reach of NK and is not a nuclear power (by choice; they certainly could develop the technology if they wanted to). Their navy is capable, but faced with nuclear-tipped missiles, what are they going to do?

I don't see any of those nations doing anything. South Korea and Japan's hands are tied. China still seems to be sympathetic to some degree to North Korea and has thus far done nothing.
I didn't make the claim that these two countries could, alone, stop NK, I just said that between them and China, hopefully something would be done.

Oh my God. More proof that we're not talking to anti-war people, we're just talking to Democrats.
I'm not an American, let alone a Democrat.
Democrat's just a label. Your ideals clearly label you a liberal. BTW, what country ARE you from?
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Work's over. I'll get back either tonight or, if I don't get anything to do at work, tomorrow at work.
 

DZip

Senior member
Apr 11, 2000
375
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1 in 3 French want Saddom to win, 2 in 3 French don't = 66.6% think Saddom should get his A$$ kicked.
I also heard that the French are now more carefull on sending Iraq banned weapons. They checked and found out white flags were not on the list of banned weapons and they have millions of them in stock ready for immediate deployment to Iraq.