BaliBabyDoc
Lifer
- Jan 20, 2001
- 10,737
- 0
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Brought food with the troops? WTF? Think dammit. You can't have troops trying to haul truck loads of food across the country and fighting at the same time. Also, as soon as they left hundreds of Iraqis would be killed just for accepting the aid from the US if the same government was in power. Damn, man...
Try this on . . .
You live under a despotic regime. You attempted a popular uprising over a decade ago but were deserted by a foreign power which promised but did not deliver support. Today the foregin power has a new leader but the same name. He promises to liberate you from the brutal regime and promises a better tomorrow . . . literally promising that his very arrival will change your country.
Well they arrive . . . and drive by . . . in their wake they disrupt the prior channels of humanitarian aid which supported 3/5 of your country. In the meantime, the foreign leader claims to control the vast majority of your country, while you suffer shelling from the Iraqi military, direct intimidation from paramilitary units, AND your formerly poor food/water resources have further deteriorated. You see the foreign leader broadcast to the world how aid is less than two days away . . . unfortunately that was a week ago. He claims to have Saddam's regime in a box . . . you wonder if his box has running water and more food than the MRE given by passing GI.
Let's see if hundreds of Iraqi would be slaughtered for accepting US food aid . . . apparently the people have NOT been liberated. The US/UK press have claimed the Ba'ath Party offices were looted and the city is under coalition control. Someone is mixing fact (the former)with wishful thinking (latter). Regardless, the absence of potable water and real food aid is a failure of concern and/or planning. Several international agencies announced BEFORE the invasion they were receiving ZERO assistance in coordinating post-invasion humanitarian aid. My point still stands . . . the plight of the southern Iraqis is primarily a function of their condition being an ancillary concern to the US military and civilian planners. IMHO, not a very good way to treat people from which you expect . . . if not absolutely require . . . support.