REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

The Battle for Iraq - Ethnic Cleansing part deux

POSTED BY: RUE
UPDATED: Wednesday, January 12, 2005 04:42
SHORT URL:
VIEWED: 4748
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Friday, December 31, 2004 11:40 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


Geezer,

Do you really expect me to think your half-hearted try to find the items I was talking about was genuine? You COULD have done what I did - watch the BBC news (the one made for US TV, with anchors in both London and Washington) then go to the BBC web site and try to find the exact same news items. Or you can trust me on this, they won't be there. In addition, you'll find that much of the foreign reportage on BBC news comes from ITN. The exact same videotape on BBC news that is broadcast without attribution can be seen on "The News Hour" attributed to ITN.

It's been a while since I've posted on this topic, and many websites require payment for archived articles. In order to post urls that everyone can access, I've selected some secondary sources.

Here are items about the interdiction of Fallujah, and the treatment of all fighting-age males as legitimate targets (insurgents).

The next set of posts will be about the targeting of two Fallujan hospitals. The following posts will be about US troops targeting civilians (including women and children) attempting to flee the fighting.


http://howlingspoons.blogspot.com/2004/11/fallujah.html
The BBC also confirmed that from the population of 300,000, many women and children have left, 50,000 people remain in Fallujah, and that the US are refusing to let men under 45 through their cordones.
Which effectively means if you are young and male and have the misfortune to find yourself in this city for any reason the US army will consider you as a legitimate target. Far from being a humanitarian gesture this evacuation is the preparation for a massacre

http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory?id=246764
NEAR FALLUJAH, Iraq Nov 12, 2004 (AP) — Hundreds of men trying to flee the assault on Fallujah have been turned back by U.S. troops following orders to allow only women, children and the elderly to leave.
As it believes many of Fallujah's men are guerrilla fighters, it has instructed U.S. troops to turn back all males aged 15 to 55.
Later Prime Minister Ayad Allawi imposed a 24-hour curfew on Fallujah and ordered roads in the area closed, providing the legal background for the U.S. blockade.
Troops have cut off all roads and bridges leading out of the city. Relatively few residents have sought to get through, but officers here say they fear a larger exodus.
On Wednesday, a crowd of 225 people surged south out of Fallujah toward the blocking positions of the Marines' 2nd Reconnaissance Battalion. The Marines let 25 women and children pass but separated the 200 military-age men and forced them to walk back into Fallujah.
"There is nothing that distinguishes an insurgent from a civilian," the 1st Cavalry officer said. "If they're not carrying a weapon, you can't tell who's who." (I suppose unarmed insurgent might throw rocks.)

http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200411/s1236045.htm
US troops urge residents to leave Fallujah
US forces warned residents of Fallujah through loudspeakers and leaflets today that they would detain any man under 45 trying to enter or leave the rebel-held Iraqi city.

http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2004/11/302385.shtml
http://www.sundayobserver.lk/2004/11/07/wor03.html
U.S. Urges Civilians to Flee Targeted Falluja
By Fadel al-Badrani
FALLUJA, Iraq (Reuters) - U.S. air and artillery strikes shook rebel-held Falluja late on Friday after troops, using leaflets and loudspeakers, urged Iraqi civilians to leave.
U.S. troops sealed all roads to Falluja and urged women, children and non-fighting age men to flee, but said they would arrest any man under 45 trying to enter or leave the city.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2004-11-05-voa46.cfm
Overnight, U.S. troops blocked all the roads leading in and out of Fallujah and stepped up bombings of insurgent targets. Women and children were also warned to leave the city.

http://www.voanews.com/english/2004-11-08-voa66.cfm
U.S. officials say at least one half of the city's residents evacuated before the attack, which would leave up to 100,000 people remaining.


original thread:
http://www.fireflyfans.net/thread.asp?b=18&t=7933

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Friday, December 31, 2004 1:18 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Rue.

You probably won't be surprised to know that I find turning back all the military-age men trying to leave Fallujah after the beginning of the offensive to be sound tactics. There was plenty of time and plenty of warning to leave the city before the area was blocked off in early November.

Since the insurgents don't follow the rules of war and wear some kind of uniform or insignia for identification, we have to treat anyone of military age as a potential enemy, lest they get behind our forces, dig up a cache of weapons (hundreds of caches found in Fallujah, BTW) and attack from the rear.

But if we're going to talk about ethnic cleansing, any opinions on the recent insurgent attacks target against the Shi'a civilian population?



"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Sunday, January 2, 2005 12:51 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


Oh, but I'm not done yet.

There are many, many news reports that US troops took control of the two main hospitals first, before any other military action. However, I find this one from the Voice of America (surely a source you won't fault) to be most instructive. So I will let this stand on it's own for a bit:

http://www.voanews.com/english/2004-11-09-voa8.cfm
Quote:

Fallujah's main hospital and train station have been captured by American and Iraqi forces. Two main bridges have also been secured. A senior interim government official says capturing the hospital was considered important, in an effort to control what he called, "wild estimates" of civilian casualties.


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Sunday, January 2, 2005 3:16 PM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


This is a short diversion from the topic to clear up some fictitious claims:
Both Iraq and the US are parties to the Geneva Conventions, and bound by them.
People have posted disinformation that Iraq is not a signatory to the Geneva Conventions, and the US is therefore exempt from following them in Iraq. However, Iraq acceded to the Geneva Conventions in 1956, according the ICRC documents.
http://www.icrc.org/Web/eng/siteeng0.nsf/htmlall/party_gc/$File/Conven
tions%20de%20GenSve%20et%20Protocoles%20additionnels%20ENG-logo.pdf
14.02.1956 A
Quote:

Convention (I)
Art. 2. In addition to the provisions which shall be implemented in peacetime, the present Convention shall apply to all cases of declared war or of any other armed conflict which may arise between two or more of the High Contracting Parties, even if the state of war is not recognized by one of them.

The US is an occupying power and is also bound by the Conventions as an occupying power.
http://csmonitor.com/2003/0501/p07s01-woiq.htm
Quote:

Until a new Iraqi government is established, the US is considered an occupying force - and is prohibited from significantly altering the occupied territory by such actions as setting up a new government or changing preexisting laws. (Bremer could be tried for war crimes. Rue)
In the context of an international conflict, the US is present in Iraqi territory and can impose control, while the former Iraqi government is no longer able to exercise authority. This, by definition, makes the US an occupying force.
Occupation comes with a long list of rules and regulations, as set out by the Geneva Conventions, to which the US and Iraq are signatories. The US must, for example, maintain law and order and ensure sufficient supplies of food, water, and medical care for the civilian population.
But according to some experts, they are prohibited from certain activities, such as reconfiguring the police force.
Occupation formally ends with the reestablishment of a legitimate government, or other form of administration, such as by the UN.

Quote:

Convention (I)
Art. 2. The Convention shall also apply to all cases of partial or total occupation of the territory of a High Contracting Party, even if the said occupation meets with no armed resistance.

The hospitals were occupied BEFORE the attack, not as a result of fire coming from them. They were civilian hospitals. But even IF the hospitals were military hospitals treating insurgents, they could not be targeted by US troops. Military hospitals are protected under the Conventions, and may not lose their protections for reasons including:
Quote:

Convention (I)
Art. 22. The following conditions shall not be considered as depriving a medical unit or establishment of the protection guaranteed by Article 19:
(1) That the personnel of the unit or establishment are armed, and that they use the arms in their own defence, or in that of the wounded and sick in their charge.

The Geneva Conventions cover Civilians as well as military prisoners.
Some dingleberry claimed it was strictly mutual agreement over POWs. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Quote:

Convention (IV) relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War. Geneva, 12 August 1949.


Now that we have cleared up any ignorance over the Geneva Conventions, perhaps we can proceed with a less delusional discussion.

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Monday, January 3, 2005 5:20 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by rue:
Oh, but I'm not done yet.

There are many, many news reports that US troops took control of the two main hospitals first, before any other military action. However, I find this one from the Voice of America (surely a source you won't fault) to be most instructive. So I will let this stand on it's own for a bit:

http://www.voanews.com/english/2004-11-09-voa8.cfm
Quote:

Fallujah's main hospital and train station have been captured by American and Iraqi forces. Two main bridges have also been secured. A senior interim government official says capturing the hospital was considered important, in an effort to control what he called, "wild estimates" of civilian casualties.




So you would also agree with the next paragraph of the article?

Quote:

The same official says there is a deep concern that insurgents might turn their weapons on civilians, in an effort to increase the number of civilian casualties, in hopes of igniting public anger against the American presence in Iraq.


So capturing the hospitals served both tactical and political ends. When the insurgents killed civilians (a number of executed civilians were found, BTW) the hospital was no longer able to blame it all on the coalition, as they had earlier. Maybe the hospital should have stayed out of politics.

More on this in my response to your next post.



"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Monday, January 3, 2005 5:53 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by rue:
This is a short diversion from the topic to clear up some fictitious claims...
..The hospitals were occupied BEFORE the attack, not as a result of fire coming from them. They were civilian hospitals. But even IF the hospitals were military hospitals treating insurgents, they could not be targeted by US troops. Military hospitals are protected under the Conventions, and may not lose their protections for reasons including:
Quote:

Convention (I)
Art. 22. The following conditions shall not be considered as depriving a medical unit or establishment of the protection guaranteed by Article 19:
(1) That the personnel of the unit or establishment are armed, and that they use the arms in their own defence, or in that of the wounded and sick in their charge.

The Geneva Conventions cover Civilians as well as military prisoners.



First, lets quote Article 19.
Quote:

Art. 19. Fixed establishments and mobile medical units of the Medical Service may in no circumstances be attacked, but shall at all times be respected and protected by the Parties to the conflict. Should they fall into the hands of the adverse Party, their personnel shall be free to pursue their duties, as long as the capturing Power has not itself ensured the necessary care of the wounded and sick found in such establishments and units.


Hmm. Says a hospital shall not be attacked, but that it might fall into the hands of the adverse party (the Coalition in this case). In a war against an insurgency, who as standard practice use protected structures (schools, mosques, hospitals) as military positions, prudence dictates that any such building falling into your hands be searched and that the occupants be identified. This was done, and then hospital staff were freed to return to their duties.

And hospitals may lose their protections under some circumstances.

Quote:

Art. 21. The protection to which fixed establishments and mobile medical units of the Medical Service are entitled shall not cease unless they are used to commit, outside their humanitarian duties, acts harmful to the enemy. Protection may, however, cease only after a due warning has been given, naming, in all appropriate cases, a reasonable time limit, and after such warning has remained unheeded.


Now this doesn't specify whether such warning is general (Any "protected structure" in town used as a fighting position after midnite, Nov. 06) or specific (The clinic at the corner of Saddam and Uday).

On another note. It's interesting that you are so insistent that both the U.S. and the Iraqis (presumably the insurgents) are bound under the various Geneva Conventions (I don't disagree with this, BTW), but that you fail to recognize the gross violations of those conventions by the insurgency on a daily basis, while nitpicking the coalition in the grey areas between the letter of the law and tactical realities.





"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Thursday, January 6, 2005 3:53 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


And more ethnic cleansing:

Quote:

18 Iraqis Found Dead in Field Near Mosul
Updated: Thursday, Jan. 6, 2005 - 8:25 AM

By BASSEM MROUE
Associated Press Writer

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - The bodies of 18 young Iraqi Shiites taken off a bus and executed last month while seeking work at a U.S. base have been found in a field near the volatile city of Mosul, police said Thursday.

Police said the insurgents shot the men, who ranged in age from 14 to 20, on Dec. 8 after stopping their two mini-buses about 30 miles west of Mosul.

Their hands were tied behind their back and each was shot in the head, police said. All of the men were Shiite Muslims from Baghdad's northern neighborhood of Kadhimiya who had been hired by an Iraqi contractor to work at a U.S. base in Mosul.

The bodies were discovered Wednesday, the same day a suicide attacker blew up an explosives-laden car outside a police academy south of Baghdad in Hillah during a graduation ceremony, killing 20 people.

A second car bomber killed five Iraqi policemen in Baqouba _ bringing the death toll to at least 90 so far this week in surging violence aimed at derailing this month's elections.



http://www.wtop.com/index.php?nid=105&sid=1958

Perhaps someone should speak firmly to the insurgents about the Geneva Conventions?



"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Thursday, January 6, 2005 8:21 AM

CONNORFLYNN


/sarcasm Nah, we did it and just said that the terrorists did it. /sarcasm off

Frankly, I'd like to see us pull out immediately and let the Iraqi's sort it out for themselves. Same with teh Israelis and the Palestinians and Somalia and Africa and Indonesia and the Tsunami victims and every other thing we try and do. I'm starting to wonder why we even bother anymore really. Damned if you do and damned if you don't. Americans are evil. Our government is evil, our military is evil..our sons and daughters over there are evil and are breaking every rule in the book according to all the handwringers.

I think we should give Osamalama ding dong, Zarqawi, Iraq, Iran, Egypt, Libya, Syria and all the other 3rd world, biblical age living, countries nukes(in all sizes and colors)and hand over the codekeys. Time to just get this shit over with. Time for a nuclear winter to help slow this gorram Global warming.

Then we can let the handwringers ask us why we let them get nukes. Why we didn't "interfere"? Why we used "Kid" gloves on them? Why..why why why why why why why....

All I ask is that I have time enough for a good steak dinner, a nice bottle of wine and a nice roll in the hay before it's all over.

I'm all for a complete "NON INTERVENTION FOREIGN POLICY" period. No more aid to anyone, no more military support, no more American dollars. No more world policing..no more anything. Let's close all the bases and businesses etc..etc.. They can live without us and we can live without them..at least for the remainder of my lifetime(another 30 years or so..god willing). As for what happens after that.../shrug. It's time Ameriucans started thinking in the short term..rather then long term.

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Friday, January 7, 2005 3:47 PM

NEUTRINOLAD


Remember the quote, "There ain't no good guys, there ain't no bad guys, there's just a whole bunch of guys"?

Maybe it should be, "There ain't no good guys."

And now, for Operation Rest of the Brown Ones.

Hope I can snag one of those juicy KPMG née "Bearing Point" subcontracts.

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Friday, January 7, 2005 3:54 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I vote with ConnorFlynn. (gasp!) At least as far as the non-interventionist part goes. Who the hell promoted this war, anyway? I think we get railroaded into foreign interventions far too often, usually protecting banana companies or some such nonsense. Enuf alright already!

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Friday, January 7, 2005 4:03 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Geezer- the difference between our ethnic cleansing and theirs is that we use bombs, tanks, and artillery while they use IEDs, RPGs and small arms. We target whole cities while they target key roads or neighborhoods. We target hospitals and clinics and all males between the ages of 15-55 while they target security forces and contractors... both sides claiming that its done because they "might" be on the other side. Oh yeah, we are MUCH better than they are! We're so much more effective.

If you didn't get the point, I'll make it more explicit: You can hardly excuse every single American atrocity that was every comitted with the blanket phrase "good tactics". I COULD say the same thing about the insurgents... after all, are they not following good tactics? But seeing as I don't intend to excuse our actions, I won't excuse theirs either.

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Friday, January 7, 2005 4:39 PM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


The difference is that they (the terrorists, aka insurgents) knowingly and purposefully target innocent people and often seek to intentionally use the most painful and inhuman methods as policy. The US does not. In fact, the US seeks to avoid the targeting of innocent people even when such avoidance places American soldiers at risks.

They (the former Iraqi government under Sadam Hussein) practiced the killing of unfavored ethnicities as a policy, which is by definition ethnic cleansing. Once again, something the US does not do, and in fact, has fought repeatedly in several arenas to specifically prevent ethnic cleansing.

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Friday, January 7, 2005 6:40 PM

UNICORN


An amazingly informative thread, thanks Browncoats. I knew I could count on you guys for Geneva knowhow.

As for all of us just pulling out and leaving it to Iraq to sort it out? BAD IDEA. WE started this mess. We made mistakes all the way through. First, we jumped the gun on sanctions and the UN and preemptively declared war on a sovereign nation under false or sadly mishappen pretenses. Then we decided to send half the manpower we actually would have needed to do the thing right. We pissed off all our friends who had people and supplies we could have used in the fight. We really pissed off all of the Muslim nations out there who saw us preemptively attacking a foreign nation whose populace is Muslim and who, by the way, have a lot of oil.

But we're there. We created the chaos that's reigning now, and we're responsible for the way things are over there. And it's getting better, I hope, slowly. (That's if you listen to the optimists, so for now, we'll give them the benefit of the doubt.) But if we pull out now, if we just cut and run, we'll be creating the most dangerous situation yet, politically, for the Iraqi people but also for us. Can you say power vaccuum?

No, now that we're there, we're in it for the long haul, Baby, and if we're smart, we'll try to make nice with the UN and see if we can gradually turn most of our duties over to them, thus dramatically reducing the number of our people over there while simoultaneously reducing our image as invading hordes of infidels who are just in it for the oil.

I am ill and must to bed!

There is no such thing as a weed.

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Friday, January 7, 2005 6:46 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Oh yeah Finn... THEY knowingly target "innocent civilians" WE just assume every male between the ages of 15 and 45 is guilty - ergo we're clean!! YAY for the good guys!

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Friday, January 7, 2005 8:53 PM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


Remind me. How many of those males between the ages of 15 and 45 did we behead?

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Saturday, January 8, 2005 4:21 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Oh, our "hands" are clean, which gives us moral superiority. We just corral them into a city and then bomb/ mortar/ shell/ shoot/ interdict (medical help)/ starve/ dehydrate them.

You seem to think that physical distance= moral distance.



Idiot.

F*cking, heartless, b*astard idiot.

You should see the part of "Hearts and Minds" where the pilot talks about the flowers of fire; the 30,000 ft physical distance that gives him emotional insulation from the death he's dispensing.

Idiot. Mindless. immoral idiot who buries his head in a cloud of fables, tales, lies, and excuses.
Obviously has NEVER confronted the harsh reality of war. Which is death by ANY means.

Go put on blue gloves. It suits you.


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Saturday, January 8, 2005 5:18 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Geezer- the difference between our ethnic cleansing and theirs is that we use bombs, tanks, and artillery while they use IEDs, RPGs and small arms.


IEDs are usually bombs or artillery shells. And it doesn't matter what's used; it's intent. Shooting 15 bound teenagers in the back of the head because they were looking for work only takes 15 bullets, but it's still a war crime.
Quote:

We target whole cities while they target key roads or neighborhoods.

We give everyone in a city months of warning to get out before we do anything, where as the insurgents look for crowds to attack. We also use the much more dangerous house-to-house method of securing areas, rather than just leveling it all from a distance, to reduce civilian casualties.
Quote:


We target hospitals and clinics and all males between the ages of 15-55 while they target security forces and contractors...


During the Fallujah offensive we captured one hospital without any casualties, and let them go about their business after identity checks. One clinic in the city may have been bombed. Insurgents have conducted several suicide bomb attacks on hospitals, and have removed and executed patients from others.
After months of warning to get out, we turned back men of military age in Fallujah only after the actual combat operations had begun. If they heeded our warning and stayed under cover, they had a good chance. Anyone captured by the insurgents is executed.
Quote:

If you didn't get the point, I'll make it more explicit: You can hardly excuse every single American atrocity that was every comitted with the blanket phrase "good tactics". I COULD say the same thing about the insurgents... after all, are they not following good tactics? But seeing as I don't intend to excuse our actions, I won't excuse theirs either.


Relating to Fallujah, I do consider most Coalition actions there good tactics.

The fact that you consider everything the Americans do an "atrocity" pretty much lets me know that your mind won't change. But let's consider what happens in actual atrocity situations. American soldiers are charged by their own service with the crimes, and some go to jail when convicted. Any insurgents being tried by their peers for killing Margaret Hassam?



"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Saturday, January 8, 2005 5:19 AM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Oh, our "hands" are clean, which gives us moral superiority.

In other words, none of them.

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Saturday, January 8, 2005 10:08 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

The fact that you consider everything the Americans do an "atrocity" pretty much lets me know that your mind won't change. But let's consider what happens in actual atrocity situations.


Geezer, you are seriously putting words in my mouth. I didn't say that "everyhting" we did was an atrocity. I DID say that we have committed atrocities, the greatest of which is invading a country for no good reason and then killing thousands of civilians for no good reason. Even your favorite site, the IBC, says that the USA is responsible for far more civilian deaths than the insurgents and even more than Saddam in the last three years of his tyranny. So despite all our hand-wringing and hand-washing, as far as I can tell we're still the number one killer in Iraq.

YOu see, even dictators have justifications for the "necessity" of their actions. In the end, you just gotta strip away the BS and look at the results.


And as far as the "good tactics" is concerned, let me ask you: Are the insurgents then following "bad tactics"? If so, how? In other words, how do we differentitate what "we" do from what "they" do on that basis?

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Saturday, January 8, 2005 10:28 AM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Geezer: Even your favorite site, the IBC, says that the USA is responsible for far more civilian deaths than the insurgents and even more than Saddam in the last three years of his tyranny. So despite all our hand-wringing and hand-washing, as far as I can tell we're still the number one killer in Iraq.

Possibly. If Saddam's tyranny were actually limited to only the last three years, then you might actually have a point. Unfortunately for your point, Saddam’s tyranny actually extends a little further back. In fact, according to the UN, it extends as much as 1.5 million Iraqi deaths back, just to get to the last gulf war. And then you've got a couple more decades still to go.

The US was the aggressor in World War II, if you ignore everything that happened prior to 1942.

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Saturday, January 8, 2005 10:33 AM

WEASY


Connorflynn
Quote:

No more aid to anyone

I can't believe you even wrote that.
America is and will probably always remain the richest country in the world - to deny aid is murder by neglect.

So far as terrorism goes have one of you people asked *why* there is terrorism? Why there is war? Why people rebel? It's because they're poor or starving and they go through all the right channels - they plead to charities and the US and everbody ignores them until they blow up some people or take some hostages - and even then governments won't 'negotiate' with terrorists, so nobody ever bother finds out why they fuckin' did it in the first place.

Do you really think it's about Jihad? It's not. It's because we have so much more than them, and we promised them, promised them schools and hospitals and aid and we never gave it to them. No wonder they're pissed off.

I don't condone what terrorists do - it's wrong, there can't be any doubt about that - but barging in and demanding they change their ways without finding out what the problem was isn't *ever* going to work.

That's why we've fought this Iraq war four times already and we'll do it again.

Quote:

Americans are evil. Our government is evil, our military is evil...

Oh, we know you're not evil - you're just the most ill-informed nation anywhere. You don't have one single 'straight' news network. I know this for a fact, over here in the UK when I was waiting to find out who won the US election I looked at all the American news network sites and then I looked at the BBC's. The BBC was the only site that waited until officials had called the result for each state before they called it on their site. Not one of the American ones waited for the actual result.

Don't you see? The governments tells your reporters what to say and they say it and you *believe it* not one country I have ever been to or lived in does that - and screw that, what about actual truth and honesty?

What about Bush saying that Saddam was responsible for 9/11 and had links to Al'Qaida - a blatant lie - Saddam and Osama are different types of extremist Muslim - they would never ever have anything to do with each other - but he said it and 60% of the population got over their half-hearted doubts baout the war and said oh okay, we'll get rid of him then, not because he was an evil dictator that killed anyone who disagreed with him (well that argument wouldn't make sense - that's we went in to do last time and we just put him back in power after a wrist slap!)

An interesting point - donations from US and UK public (not governments) towards Tsunami relief are equal. The US has a population six times the size as the UK... your donation should logically speaking be six times as high. Shame your so eager to spend money on defense and not on dying civilians.

America could be great, it is now the World's only superstate and it should be amazing. But it's not. You can make it better or you can curl up at home and pretend the real world isn't out there. The rest of us don't have that luxury - we live too close.

But then maybe what y'all lack is a conscience - not brains.

I apologise for my harshness, but I am so utterly offended by your arrogant ignorance on this matter that I have no qualms about posting this. If you want to have an opinion maybe you should know something about what you're talking about.

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Saturday, January 8, 2005 11:17 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:

And as far as the "good tactics" is concerned, let me ask you: Are the insurgents then following "bad tactics"? If so, how? In other words, how do we differentitate what "we" do from what "they" do on that basis?



For the umpty-umpth time...

The Iraqi insurgents are following classical insurgency doctrine, which goes back at least to the Spanish guerrillas of the Napoleonic wars. They are doing it quite well. Unfortunately for everyone else, their doctrine calls for implicitly ignoring, in fact purposefully violating, all of the commonly accepted rules of war which you and Rue go on about so much.

The Coalition, on the other hand, must walk the thin line between:
(A) complete, letter-of-the-law, obedience to several, sometimes contradictory protocols and agreements, and have their troops slaughtered by folks who don't play by any of those rules. Or,
(B) the closest adherence possible to those rules, taking into account the realities of the situation.
Coalition troops have undoubtedly been killed because we try to play by the rules as much as possible.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Saturday, January 8, 2005 7:46 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Geezer, I don't believe I've "gone on about" the rules of war. I think you've conflated us.

From what I see of the insurgents, they generally target foreign troops, Iraqi security, US contractors, and Iraqi employees and appointees of the US occupation. Yes, there are exceptions. Some of them may be due to the relatively small number of foreign elements w/in the insurgency, some of them may be due to lack of training or emotions running away, just as happens with US troops. But, I don't see them en masse targeting women or children or in general being responsible for an inordinate number of civilian deaths. What is it that "they" do that you find so much worse than what WE do?

And then you have to ask- why are we in Iraq? I mean, I know why the INSURGENTS are in Iraq- they live there, for chrissake- but why are WE there?

Quote:

But let's consider what happens in actual atrocity situations. American soldiers are charged by their own service with the crimes, and some go to jail when convicted.

Oh yeah, let's consider what happens to people who narrowly define torture as organ failure or death. THEY get nominated as Attorney General!

Damn, we're good!


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Saturday, January 8, 2005 8:48 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Finn, they picked the last three years to make comparable stats- apples to apples you know. DUH.

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 5:35 AM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


Nonetheless, it doesn't make us the number one killer. DUH.

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 5:58 AM

CONNORFLYNN


Well..I guess since they are only killing "Generally" foreign troops, Iraqi security, US contractors, and Iraqi employees and appointees of the US occupation (We'll disregard the fact that all these folks are humans and have some worth) with a "Few" exceptions (We'll disregard all the civilian deaths from car and roadside and mortar bombs and the executions of people looking for work etc..etc..), I guess it makes it OK that the "Insurgents" aren't a party to the Geneva Conventions, and also don't follow the traditional rules of war.

My hope is that the Iraqi's finally decide to take control of their country and their own lives and destiny.


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Sunday, January 9, 2005 6:02 AM

CONNORFLYNN


Quote:

Originally posted by Weasy:
Connorflynn
Quote:

No more aid to anyone

I can't believe you even wrote that.
America is and will probably always remain the richest country in the world - to deny aid is murder by neglect.

So far as terrorism goes have one of you people asked *why* there is terrorism? Why there is war? Why people rebel? It's because they're poor or starving and they go through all the right channels - they plead to charities and the US and everbody ignores them until they blow up some people or take some hostages - and even then governments won't 'negotiate' with terrorists, so nobody ever bother finds out why they fuckin' did it in the first place.

Do you really think it's about Jihad? It's not. It's because we have so much more than them, and we promised them, promised them schools and hospitals and aid and we never gave it to them. No wonder they're pissed off.

I don't condone what terrorists do - it's wrong, there can't be any doubt about that - but barging in and demanding they change their ways without finding out what the problem was isn't *ever* going to work.

That's why we've fought this Iraq war four times already and we'll do it again.

Quote:

Americans are evil. Our government is evil, our military is evil...

Oh, we know you're not evil - you're just the most ill-informed nation anywhere. You don't have one single 'straight' news network. I know this for a fact, over here in the UK when I was waiting to find out who won the US election I looked at all the American news network sites and then I looked at the BBC's. The BBC was the only site that waited until officials had called the result for each state before they called it on their site. Not one of the American ones waited for the actual result.

Don't you see? The governments tells your reporters what to say and they say it and you *believe it* not one country I have ever been to or lived in does that - and screw that, what about actual truth and honesty?

What about Bush saying that Saddam was responsible for 9/11 and had links to Al'Qaida - a blatant lie - Saddam and Osama are different types of extremist Muslim - they would never ever have anything to do with each other - but he said it and 60% of the population got over their half-hearted doubts baout the war and said oh okay, we'll get rid of him then, not because he was an evil dictator that killed anyone who disagreed with him (well that argument wouldn't make sense - that's we went in to do last time and we just put him back in power after a wrist slap!)

An interesting point - donations from US and UK public (not governments) towards Tsunami relief are equal. The US has a population six times the size as the UK... your donation should logically speaking be six times as high. Shame your so eager to spend money on defense and not on dying civilians.

America could be great, it is now the World's only superstate and it should be amazing. But it's not. You can make it better or you can curl up at home and pretend the real world isn't out there. The rest of us don't have that luxury - we live too close.

But then maybe what y'all lack is a conscience - not brains.

I apologise for my harshness, but I am so utterly offended by your arrogant ignorance on this matter that I have no qualms about posting this. If you want to have an opinion maybe you should know something about what you're talking about.



Tough shit..deal with it. Give me your address and I'll send you a box of tissues. Frankly I could give a flying hooey whether I offend you or not. Again I say..the US should adopt a policy of 100% Non-Intervention. It's all thankless anyways and besides even when we give more then all the rest of the world annually..well we still aren't doing enough. Go screw yourself Weasy..really I mean that whole heartedly. I know I'm not donating another red cent to any UN agency. There are folks here at home who could do with a little of my help and would thank me for it rather then spitting it back in my face.

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 6:47 AM

WEASY


Don't you get it?
Doing the right things isn't about being thanked for it.
Do you think that's why Martin Luthor King did what he did? or Ghandi? Or any of your presidents?

And I'm sorry if I don't think any of those 'supposedly important' deficencies in America mean anything - you want to help the people in your country what about redressing your totally imbalanced taxation policy that taxes the poor more heavily than the rich and the scandalous welfare to work programme.
But I get the feeling you don't really care about those either.

That's alright, no-one can make you. But if America keeps going the way it is the next time you need help on want to crusade forward on your pointless war on terror maybe you should remember this...
you're loosing your last chance with the rest of the world. We're really not gunna bother helping you anymore. I know you don't think you'll ever need us...
fine. we don't need arrogant inbred asses like you either.

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 7:16 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Geezer, I don't believe I've "gone on about" the rules of war. I think you've conflated us.

From what I see of the insurgents, they generally target foreign troops, Iraqi security, US contractors, and Iraqi employees and appointees of the US occupation. Yes, there are exceptions. Some of them may be due to the relatively small number of foreign elements w/in the insurgency, some of them may be due to lack of training or emotions running away, just as happens with US troops. But, I don't see them en masse targeting women or children or in general being responsible for an inordinate number of civilian deaths. What is it that "they" do that you find so much worse than what WE do?


What strange world do you live in? Want to know what "they" do that is worse than what we do? Ask Margaret Hassam. Ask the 121 Shi'ite pilgrims killed by a suicide bomb in Karbala 03/02/2004, or the 67 in Baghdad the same day. The 53 at a funeral in Najif 12/19/2004. The 42, mostly children, at the opening of a sewer plant in Baghdad on 10/30/2004. Ask the hundreds of Iraqis taken prisoner by the insurgents and then executed en masse. Ask the ordinary Shi'a who are killed just because they are Shi'a. Ask the dead from the car bombs at the U.N. and Red Cross headquarters in Baghdad. Ask Nicholas Berg.

I'm hoping that you are just arguing here, and don't actually believe that the insurgents are just brave freedom fighters.

Quote:

And then you have to ask- why are we in Iraq? I mean, I know why the INSURGENTS are in Iraq- they live there, for chrissake- but why are WE there?

Right now, we're there so the Iraqis can hold an election in January. There is still no time machine available for us to take what has happened back, so we're dealing with the current situation. The insurgents are there to stop the election, and any possibility of a representative government. They hope to terrorize the population to the point at which they'd rather live under a Baathist dictatorship again than see their families and children killed.

Quote:

But let's consider what happens in actual atrocity situations. American soldiers are charged by their own service with the crimes, and some go to jail when convicted.


Quote:

Oh yeah, let's consider what happens to people who narrowly define torture as organ failure or death. THEY get nominated as Attorney General!

Damn, we're good!


Nah. We don't even videotape our beheadings and executions of women for world-wide distribution. Only your heros of the insurgency do that.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 7:58 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Actually, if the US stopped ALL of its aid, the only countries that would realy hurt would be Israel and Egypt. Most US governmental "aid" is either military or a roundabout way of funneling money into corporations that have bent Congressional ears. More than likely the net effect of stopping all US governmental aid would be beneficial to the average world citizen. Of course, US citizens could continue to donate to the various NGOs of their choice.

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 8:03 AM

WEASY


I apologise for calling you an inbred arrogant ass.
I'm not sure I've changed my mind about that - but we're not going to agree about this: so if you'll agree to just drop this I will as well.
Fair?

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 8:22 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Oh yeah, Geezer- you point to some specific cases, you've totalled up- what- 250 dead in your citations? BTW- show citations for those "hundreds of Iraqis taken prisoner and executed en masse". I have been away on vaction, perhaps you have news I don't. But you haven't been able to counter the fact that we pile 'em higher and deeper: 15,000+ and counting.

BTW- "MY HEROES"? Geezer, you're seriously putting words in my mouth again. Just because I'm unhappy with our performance doesn't mean I'm "for" the other guy.

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 8:56 AM

RUE

I have a vote and I'm not afraid to use it!


Wow. Go away for a few days and look what happens. I'll probably not get time to read this and enter into ongoing debate. Just presume I won't be back any time soon.

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 12:45 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Oh yeah, Geezer- you point to some specific cases, you've totalled up- what- 250 dead in your citations?


Just a few, off the top of my head and IBC.

Quote:

BTW- show citations for those "hundreds of Iraqis taken prisoner and executed en masse". I have been away on vaction, perhaps you have news I don't.


Just another sample, from a few minutes of Googling.

...21 More Murder Victims Found In Iraq
30,000 Terrorists May Be Working In Iraq

BAGHDAD, Iraq -- Officials said the bodies of three Jordanian truck drivers are the latest civilians to be found executed by Iraqi militants.

An Associated Press photographer at the scene in Ramadi said a note on one of the bodies threatens, “This is the fate of anyone who cooperates with the Americans."

The truckers had each been shot in the head.

Earlier Thursday, Iraqi police announced that they found the bodies of 18 men and boys in a field near the city of Mosul. They were killed last month.

Police said insurgents executed the victims last month, after the victims sought work at a U.S. base. They were between the ages of 14 and 20. Police said insurgents stopped two mini-buses that were taking the Iraqis from Baghdad to their jobs at a U.S. base in Mosul. Police said rebels bound the victims' hands and shot each in the head...
http://www.news4jax.com/news/4054168/detail.html

...Al-Qaida video shows five Iraqi police executed
By Associated Press
Published January 2, 2005
BAGHDAD, Iraq - Al-Qaida's arm in Iraq released a video Saturday showing its militants lining up five captured Iraqi security officers and executing them in the street, the latest move in a campaign to intimidate Iraqis and target those who collaborate with U.S.-led forces...
http://www.sptimes.com/2005/01/02/Worldandnation/Al_Qaida_video_shows_
.shtml


...Army recruits 'executed'
24/10/2004 14:41 Baquba - More than 40 unarmed Iraqi army recruits were gunned down execution-style in a remote area of eastern Iraq, officials said on Sunday, while a US diplomat was killed in a mortar attack on a military base in Baghdad.

The ambush that left a total of 48 dead followed twin suicide car bombings against police and the national guard on Saturday and further undermined efforts by the US-backed government to restore order ahead of elections planned for January...
http://www.news24.com/News24/World/Iraq/0,,2-10-1460_1609990,00.html

...9 Iraqi Soldiers Executed in Mosul
Sunday, November 21, 2004

BAGHDAD, Iraq — The bodies of nine Iraqi soldiers, all shot execution-style, were discovered in the northern city of Mosul (search) on Saturday, the U.S. military said.

The discovery came on top of four beheaded bodies that the U.S. military reported on Saturday that troops had found several days earlier. Those four bodies were still being identified...
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,139170,00.html

...11 Iraqi troops executed, video shows
Last Updated Thu, 28 Oct 2004 11:46:43 EDT
CBC News
BAGHDAD - An Iraqi extremist group has posted a video on its website showing the execution of 11 Iraqi troops who'd been taken hostage near Baghdad.

"After investigating with them and [hearing] their confessions, it turned out this group was responsible for guarding the Crusader American troops in Radwaniya area and what's around it in southern Baghdad," the Ansar al-Sunnah-Army said in a statement posted on the website on Thursday.

A video link on the site shows the National Guardsmen, some squatting with their hands tied behind their backs, reading their names, just before one is beheaded and the others shot...
http://www.cbc.ca/story/world/national/2004/10/28/iraq041028.html

Quote:

But you haven't been able to counter the fact that we pile 'em higher and deeper: 15,000+ and counting.


Not much point, since you'd disagree with me anyway.

Quote:

BTW- "MY HEROES"? Geezer, you're seriously putting words in my mouth again. Just because I'm unhappy with our performance doesn't mean I'm "for" the other guy.


Sure you are. Or at least you're an apololgist for them.

Quote:

Yes, there are exceptions (to the insurgents not killing civilians). Some of them may be due to the relatively small number of foreign elements w/in the insurgency, some of them may be due to lack of training or emotions running away, just as happens with US troops. But, I don't see them en masse targeting women or children or in general being responsible for an inordinate number of civilian deaths.


Just hot-blooded freedom fighters who occasionally blow up a few mosques full of Shi'a from an excess of zeal, or line up 50 or so bound prisoners and shoot them in the back of the head. Crazy fun for sure.

Wake up and see who these people are. They're the folks who'd like Saddam back in power so they can get back on the gravy train, and their tools brainwashed by the Wahabi Sunni mullahs into believing that killing anyone who doesn't follow their exact brand of madness is a non-stop ticket to heaven.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 2:40 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Shooting a wounded man point-blank is "good tactics"

Coralling all men between the ages of 15-55 in a city about to be attacked is "good tactics"

Invading a country and killing 15,000+ civilians is an honest mistake.

Setting up a detention system that encourages torture deserves promotion.

Turning over Iraqi national assets (water, power, etc.) to outside bidders and fucking up the Iraq income and asset accounting will make Iraq economically more sound.

You know, you're absolutely right Geezer! How could I have thought otherwise???


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Sunday, January 9, 2005 5:03 PM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Shooting a wounded man point-blank is "good tactics"



In a combat environment where similar "wounded" men have turned out to be wired with explosives? Yes. Somewhat different from shooting bound prisoners in the back of the head.

Quote:

Coralling all men between the ages of 15-55 in a city about to be attacked is "good tactics".


After warning them for months to go to safety, and only after the attack has started? Yes. Compare and contrast with 18 Shi'a youths looking for work, who were executed, or children killed by a car bomb because they were too close to restored infrastructure.

Quote:

Invading a country and killing 15,000+ civilians is an honest mistake.

IBC (source of the 15,000 figure?) considers every civilian casualty our fault. If you examine them, even the big numbers during the invasion, there's often no way to distinguish who killed them. As an aside, how many French civilians do you think the Allies killed during the liberation of Europe during WWII?

Quote:

Setting up a detention system that encourages torture deserves promotion.


Tell me again how many prisoners we've beheaded? Haven't seen the tapes yet.

Quote:

Turning over Iraqi national assets (water, power, etc.) to outside bidders and fucking up the Iraq income and asset accounting will make Iraq economically more sound.

Give me a cite of this actually happening, not just wild-ass interpretations of CPA rules.

Quote:

You know, you're absolutely right Geezer! How could I have thought otherwise???



Glad you finally figured that out.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Sunday, January 9, 2005 6:57 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

In a combat environment where similar "wounded" men have turned out to be wired with explosives? Yes. Somewhat different from shooting bound prisoners in the back of the head.


Oh yes, I agree. Shooting wounded men is an effective way of disabling boobytraps, MUCH more effective than actually checking them. If I saw wounded people that had been checked by my comrades the day before or who were in their own homes eating dinner, I probably would assume they were boobytrapped too. In fact, ANY wounded person COULD be boody-trapped. Absolutely Geezer, MUCH safer to assume that ALL wounded are booby trapped. I agree that we really should just shoot them.


Quote:

Tell me again how many prisoners we've beheaded? Haven't seen the tapes yet.

Yes, I know... beheading is just soo... messy. it's much more humane to beat them to death or suffocate them in sleeping bags. WHAT were those barbarians thinking? Beheading is just so.... barbaric. As far as our own tapes are concerned- I know they're still classified. I'm eagerly awaiting their release so that we can demonstrate to the world how humane we are.

Quote:

Give me a cite of this actually happening, not just wild-ass interpretations of CPA rules.

www.americanfreepress.net/html/billions_swiped.html
Here is the cite. But I KNOW that it's just baseless accusation. Just because we lost track of billions of dollars of Iraqi revenues doesn't mean that they're REALLY lost, I'm sure we've just misplaced them, and will replace them right away!

As far as Iraqi assets, I'm sure that that the Iraqi provisional government and the investors were operating on a complete misunderstanding. Likely, the USA will restore Iraqi national assets and compensate the disappointed investors as soon as this mistake is cleared up.
www.canadiandimesion.mb.ca/extra/d1000tg.htm

I'm confident that the United States has Iraq's interests in mind, as well as the US taxpayers' and that we will institute financial transparency and autonomy right away.


But, I am still waiting for that cite of "hundreds" of Iraqis imprisoned and killed en masse. I've already told all my friends about it... I need the evidence to prove to them how barbaric the insurgents are. Please don't disappoint me!


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Monday, January 10, 2005 3:36 AM

CONNORFLYNN


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Actually, if the US stopped ALL of its aid, the only countries that would realy hurt would be Israel and Egypt. Most US governmental "aid" is either military or a roundabout way of funneling money into corporations that have bent Congressional ears. More than likely the net effect of stopping all US governmental aid would be beneficial to the average world citizen. Of course, US citizens could continue to donate to the various NGOs of their choice.



Yeah..the aid to Africa is nothing. If we pulled that it wouldn't affect anyone but Israel and Egypt. Thats one example. My problem with this whole thread and my sarcastic (Yes it was sarcastic..sorry Weasy..Obviously you are too thin skinned and blinded by your own sense of PC save the world bullshit to see sarcasm for what it is) response is thus..

All this goddamned thread does is demonize our troops. They're the ones over there. They are the ones following orders and yes war is goddamn ugly, particularly when one side doesn't follow ANY rules of war. However I will not stand by and let anyone criticize our boys and girls in the coalition period. If you don't like our politics..thats fine. I find alot of fault in them as well. However if you come in here and criticize our boys and girls..expect to get an eyefull.

Frankly..I posted some pics of the good stuff our troops are doing over there. The only person who has had an anti-iraq war opinion that posted about that was Signym, (which in my opinion says alot about his character). These are things you don't read or hear about on the goddamn news. You chastise me for being an inbred un-informed ass..when the fact is that I am very well informed, I'm not inbred and I can be an ass. I draw my opinions from what I read and see from all sides of the spectrum, not from a left leaning nutjob boohoo website or a goddamn republican hack site. I know what fear is..though I have never fought in military combat. I know what loss is and I know what it's like to sit here in the states and worry my ass off for my friends over there. THEY ARE FOLKS WHO ARE NOT EVIL GENOCIDAL ANIMALS!!!!

As for aid.. no I don't think we should be "Thanked" per se for our aid..but goddamn it, we shouldn't have to hear every night that the United States isn't giving enough..that we are a "Stingy" country..and the last thing I want to see is the goddamn UN having anything to do with the distribution of funds donated. They are the most impotent corrupt organization on the face of the planet period. Hell we still don't know how many died over there..for all we know the numbers are inflated or are underestimated. Here we are as a world pouring Billions of dollars into 3 or 4 3rd world countries without so much as an inkling as to what really is going on over there. Hell those countries and the aid agencies still don't know who's in charge...who's getting what. But hey ya know..I'm a goddamn stingy American who loves his country and loves his friends and family. They come first before anybody else.

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Monday, January 10, 2005 6:29 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


If I can turn my sarcasm off for a minute... it's hard, but I'll try...

When I read that some units train to "dead check" with a bullet, I worry more for our troops than for Iraqis. War is difficult enough without the added trauma of being a barbarian. It does incredible damage to the morals and psyche of our enlisted, who live with... and come home with... all bad that they feel they have done, as well as the good.

Which is why I'm livid about this war. We're shredding our ideals and our young for either (a) a lie or (b) a f*ckup that stretches the imagination, depending on how you look at it. And NOBODY has taken responsibility for it. Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld, Perle, Feith, Libby, Abrams, Bolton, Gonzales... they're still in place, still collecting the old government paycheck, still f*cking up or committing treason depending on how you see it. Still sending in troops without enough armor or support, still charging the wounded for long-distance phone calls, still reducing pay.... Oh yeah, we want the leaders of the insurgency to pay for their crimes. HANG 'EM HIGH I SAY! But what about our fearless leaders? Don't they deserve at least a pink slip? Our enlisted deserve a LOT better than being sent into a shredder for no good reason, and then being hung out to dry.

EDITED to add link re "DEAD-CHECK"
www.villagevoice.com/news/0447,wright,58644,1.html

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Monday, January 10, 2005 7:00 AM

CONNORFLYNN


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
If I can turn my sarcasm off for a minute... it's hard, but I'll try...

When I read that some units train to "dead check" with a bullet, I worry more for our troops than for Iraqis. War is difficult enough without the added trauma of being a barbarian. It does incredible damage to the morals and psyche of our enlisted, who live with... and come home with... all bad that they feel they have done, as well as the good.

Which is why I'm livid about this war. We're shredding our ideals and our young for either (a) a lie or (b) a f*ckup that stretches the imagination, depending on how you look at it. And NOBODY has taken responsibility for it. Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld, Perle, Feith, Libby, Abrams, Bolton, Gonzales... they're still in place, still collecting the old government paycheck, still f*cking up or committing treason depending on how you see it. Still sending in troops without enough armor or support, still charging the wounded for long-distance phone calls, still reducing pay.... Oh yeah, we want the leaders of the insurgency to pay for their crimes. HANG 'EM HIGH I SAY! But what about our fearless leaders? Don't they deserve at least a pink slip? Our enlisted deserve a LOT better than being sent into a shredder for no good reason, and then being hung out to dry.



I agree with you for the most part. Rumsfeld should have been fired after the WMD debaucle and the insufficent war plan. However..our troops shouldn't be the ones demonized. If Anyone should be demonized it should be the leaders of our goddamned government..both Dems and Repubs alike..they are all responsible for the situation we created and the situation we are in. Terrorism and Insurgency weren't fabricated in 5 years..they were created over decades. As for the "Dead Check", it is a known ploy used by the "Terrorists" to play dead and then shoot the hell out of our folks when they get close. There is trauma that occurs because of these policies to our kids..but theres also trauma from watching your best friend die to a supposed corpse's bullet. War is nasty shit..all I care about is that our folks get the credit they are due and aren't demonized for it. Not every policy is 100% sound, but some are greater necessary evils of war then others, and our boys and girls aren't just slinging bullets and bombs over in Iraq. ALOT of good is being done that is almost never mentioned.

I personally don't see the battle for Iraq as a method of ethnic cleansing. Its a battle to finish off the old regime and bring about a new Iraqi government. Ultimately it is up to the Iraqi people (of whom a LARGE majority want peace and a new democratic government) to bring this to fruition. It's not up to the US. You can't bring a horse to water and make him drink..he needs to want to do it himself.

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Monday, January 10, 2005 7:15 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


ConnorFlynn- please don't take my comments as criticism of the enlisted, I'm only pointing out their horrific situation... just pretty pink pieces whirling in a blender. Iraq is FUBAR because of the very top of the chain of command. Even the generals know its FUBAR, but they don't have the authority to change things. Only the politicos have that power. But they're too busy stroking each other to notice the damage that they're doing.

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Monday, January 10, 2005 6:47 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Geezer, I had an AHA moment. I think I realized why you and I will prolly never agree, and I'll use "dead checking" as an example of how we differ.

I find it an abhorrent practice. To pump a couple of rounds into a helpless person, shrug and walk on is a stunning example of callousness I'm not sure I want to see in our returning soldiers. A ethically strong soldier would be damaged, a morally flimsy one could be a danger in civilian life. But sometimes factors accumulate - the soldier hasn't slept for 24 hours, the situation is dangerous, the practice is accepted in his unit- warranted or not I can sympathize with the soldier. I can even understand that in grave circumstances of national self defense, when troops may be temporarily undermanned and don't have the luxury of attending to "details", it can be necessary.

But that's not enough for you, I think. It's not enough to understand, sympathize, sometimes even accept. You want me to BE THAT WAY. You want me to metaphorically pump a couple of rounds into Iraqi victims, shrug, and walk away. That way, we don't have to feel responsibility. Our image of ourselves as "good people" stays bright and shiny, untarnished by guilt and regret.

BTW, just as an aside- soldiers are NOT "ordered" to dead check. The military command is too smart for that. I can't remember the term they use- it's stronger than a "suggestion" but less than an "order". But that way, the culpability goes to the individual soldier. Talk about letting them twist in the wind...
----------------------

On balance and not being able to forget that Iraqis are human beings too, I find our purpose in Iraq simply doesnt' justify the moral cannibalism that our soldiers endure. If we had good motives for invading Iraq, those motives didn't even survive pre-war planning. EVERYTHING was up for contracts, so while our unarmored soldiers were rationing water, down to one MRE a day and getting blown apart, Kellog, Brown & Root was making a fortune. It was more important to the CPA to buy whole generating turbines from GE, necessitating a complete plant rebuild (unfinished) than repairing the French and Russian-built power plants in Baghdad. The oil revenues and nationalized industries that should have been handled in a transparent fashion until the day they could be handed over to the Iraqi government were looted. Meanwhile, our enlisted were supposed to patch over these crimes by handing out candy and painting schools.

In short, I can't find a shred of evidence supporting the notion that the Administration goal was ever to make Iraq an independent, functioning democracy because they have done just about everything possible to torpedo that reality. I don't know what YOU call it when people place American soldiers in harm's way for something other than the defense of the United States, but I know what I call it.




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Tuesday, January 11, 2005 5:53 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Geezer, I had an AHA moment. I think I realized why you and I will prolly never agree, and I'll use "dead checking" as an example of how we differ.

I find it an abhorrent practice. To pump a couple of rounds into a helpless person, shrug and walk on is a stunning example of callousness I'm not sure I want to see in our returning soldiers. A ethically strong soldier would be damaged, a morally flimsy one could be a danger in civilian life. But sometimes factors accumulate - the soldier hasn't slept for 24 hours, the situation is dangerous, the practice is accepted in his unit- warranted or not I can sympathize with the soldier. I can even understand that in grave circumstances of national self defense, when troops may be temporarily undermanned and don't have the luxury of attending to "details", it can be necessary.



Googling "dead checking", every Iraq-related reference I find is based on un-attributed quotes in a Village Voice article by Evan Wright.
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0447,wright,58644,1.html
If it was actually a wide-spread practice, I'd expect to have more than one source.

Quote:

But that's not enough for you, I think. It's not enough to understand, sympathize, sometimes even accept. You want me to BE THAT WAY. You want me to metaphorically pump a couple of rounds into Iraqi victims, shrug, and walk away. That way, we don't have to feel responsibility. Our image of ourselves as "good people" stays bright and shiny, untarnished by guilt and regret.


Not at all. I'd just like you to stop demonizing American forces by labeling almost every action they take as an "Atrocity", and harping on them incessantly. Every once in a while you say you're not trying to do this, but the rest of your retoric belies your protestations. It would also be nice if you got a clue about the actual tactics of the insurgency. That's where you'd find your atrocities.

You repeat one instance of "Shooting a wounded man point-blank" ad nauseum, yet ask me to verify every single instance of insurgents executing prisoners, blowing up innocent civilians, etc., despite the fact that you can hardly turn on a TV or open a news site without hearing about another car bomb or group of bound prisoners shot in the head.


Quote:

On balance and not being able to forget that Iraqis are human beings too, I find our purpose in Iraq simply doesnt' justify the moral cannibalism that our soldiers endure. If we had good motives for invading Iraq, those motives didn't even survive pre-war planning. EVERYTHING was up for contracts, so while our unarmored soldiers were rationing water, down to one MRE a day and getting blown apart, Kellog, Brown & Root was making a fortune. It was more important to the CPA to buy whole generating turbines from GE, necessitating a complete plant rebuild (unfinished) than repairing the French and Russian-built power plants in Baghdad. The oil revenues and nationalized industries that should have been handled in a transparent fashion until the day they could be handed over to the Iraqi government were looted. Meanwhile, our enlisted were supposed to patch over these crimes by handing out candy and painting schools.

In short, I can't find a shred of evidence supporting the notion that the Administration goal was ever to make Iraq an independent, functioning democracy because they have done just about everything possible to torpedo that reality. I don't know what YOU call it when people place American soldiers in harm's way for something other than the defense of the United States, but I know what I call it.



If you have problems with the conduct of the reconstruction, or oil money going missing, or other malfeasance, by all means talk about that and you'll get no argument from me. I only have a problem with your depiction of the American combat forces.

"Keep the Shiny side up"

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Tuesday, January 11, 2005 11:02 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


I look at it this way... We're taught by our mainstream religions that life is sacred. Our Constitution, based on the Enlightenment, holds the right to life as the most important. Murder, in civilian life, is the ultimate crime.

When you send young people into war and you expect them to violate everything you have taught them is right and decent, you need at least give them a bullet-proof reason. Not a grab-bag of rationalizations, but an honest reason to kill. Otherwise, you risk creating hollow-eyed vets who can't even answer the question "why". Or you risk creating vets for whom killing is no big deal.

So, I keep asking "why" and I can't come up with a good reason, either by examing what our Fl;s say or what they do. Which means to me that they are willing to damage thousands of young people for no reason whatsover.

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Tuesday, January 11, 2005 11:36 AM

CONNORFLYNN


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
I look at it this way... We're taught by our mainstream religions that life is sacred. Our Constitution, based on the Enlightenment, holds the right to life as the most important. Murder, in civilian life, is the ultimate crime.

When you send young people into war and you expect them to violate everything you have taught them is right and decent, you need at least give them a bullet-proof reason. Not a grab-bag of rationalizations, but an honest reason to kill. Otherwise, you risk creating hollow-eyed vets who can't even answer the question "why". Or you risk creating vets for whom killing is no big deal.

So, I keep asking "why" and I can't come up with a good reason, either by examing what our Fl;s say or what they do. Which means to me that they are willing to damage thousands of young people for no reason whatsover.



Well..unfortunately War usually doesn't have a bullet-proof reason for someone.

Personally, I'm doing my best to look at the war as a good thing for the Iraqis eventually. No more Saddam isn't a bad thing. I look at the administration's handling and selling of the Iraq war as complete @#$%@ bullshit. They really played alot of us (including myself) as gullible constituents, taking advantage of our emotions after 9/11, not taking into account that that would eventually backfire. Instead of coming to us with the real reasons they went into Iraq..i.e. establishing a base in Iraq (Per the PNAC ), they sold us on the incredible stockpile of WMDs. Mark my words..we as a people won't be eating their words like candy anymore.

I'll be the first to say..I will NEVER TRUST a government official again period.
However, Our enlisted folks for the most part believe in what they are doing because they see for themselves the reactions from the "Majority" of the Iraqi people. Their initial mission to take Iraq is done. Now they are doing the good stuff in trying to rebuild and aid the Iraqis. That doesn't say that the killing and fighting of Sunni Iraqi/Foreign insurgents and what not doesn't affect them (Our enlisted folks). It was the whole reason I posted the "Smiles from Iraq" topic. Ultimately, our troops will be remembered as having done something great for the world and the Iraqis..hopefully they won't be remembered posthumously.


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Tuesday, January 11, 2005 4:43 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Geezer- Just because an incident (say, shooting a wounded Iraqi) is understandable, perhaps even necessary, does not make it any less of an atrocity. Preventing some deaths does not make the remainder less consequential, both for the Iraqis and for us. I hold the administration entirely responsible. I think that is as close to a common understanding that we are likely to get.

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Wednesday, January 12, 2005 4:42 AM

GEEZER

Keep the Shiny side up


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Geezer- Just because an incident (say, shooting a wounded Iraqi) is understandable, perhaps even necessary, does not make it any less of an atrocity. Preventing some deaths does not make the remainder less consequential, both for the Iraqis and for us. I hold the administration entirely responsible. I think that is as close to a common understanding that we are likely to get.



But I don't consider that particular instance an atrocity. I consider it a sad event which occurred in the heat of battle. An atrocity, on the other hand, would be a horrible crime committed in cold blood, and designed to make a political impact.

I have some experience with being blamed for the government's policies, having spent a year as a "baby-killer" in Viet Nam. Although I never killed any babies, or anyone else for that matter, I managed to get called that, and other endearments, by folks who'd never been outside the U.S., just because they didn't like Nixon's policy. I can tell you it's not pleasant.

So if you consider the administration's actions to be an atrocity, cuss them all you want. Don't forget the Congress, which approved them. But please quit denegrating our fighting men and women, who are doing a fine job under difficult circumstances.




"Keep the Shiny side up"

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