REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Someone's Been Reading This Board Too Long

POSTED BY: HKCAVALIER
UPDATED: Monday, June 27, 2005 20:18
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Friday, June 24, 2005 1:51 PM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal:
Antarctica is not a country. It is a territory administratively held by 28 signatory countries.


Thanks. That's what I figured, an enemy.
At least in part(s).

Let's invade the demon Antactica!!!! Chrisisall

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Friday, June 24, 2005 5:38 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by chrisisall:
( except Canada, they're always our friend, plus they shot Dark Angel there



Not all of us

When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

http://www.oldielyrics.com/lyrics/the_police/de_do_do_do_de_da_da_da.h
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Friday, June 24, 2005 5:55 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal:
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
As for France, Germany and Russia... If you caught them shipping arms to the freedom fighters of Iraq, wouldn't you call them your enemy ?

Yeah, that’s the question I just asked you. France, Germany and Russia sold arms and/or provided assistance to Hussein right up to and possibly after the fall of the Hussein’s regime. So based on your argument, France, Germany and Russia are actively trying to kill Americans and therefore are enemies? Right?



Lets hear your answer to this question ?

If no, then I call bullshit as the US would start bombing / invading Syria or Iran if they could prove their support

( unless you are saying it is inconvient to hold everyone uo to the same standard, which I think is your point )

If yes, I'd thank you for being honest... and ask when will you attack them ?

{ see note above )

Since the end of WorldWar 2, US foreign policy has interfered with / helped wipe out / promote tyranny/ etc / etc. Not in all cases, I'm not saying you can't do good, but in the many cases you have and continue to make enemys for no good reason.

For peace to happen, this has to stop. This war on " terror " cannot be allowed to have anyone win. AJLynch seems to think the world is envyous of Americans and thats why they want to attack you... I feel that it is more because you have helped to take away many peoples right to decide for themselves how they do things, who they do business with, etc

Europe is moving it that direction, without the North Korean threat ( stirred up by the US ) Japan, Korea and region would still be going that way too.

As for the middle-east. In the words of retired Marine General Anthony Zinni, your policys are borderline insane.

It is not a question of right or left, its simply a backlash to some sixty years of crappy, self indulgent policy.

-------------
Qui desiderat pacem praeparet bellum.


When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

http://www.oldielyrics.com/lyrics/the_police/de_do_do_do_de_da_da_da.h
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Friday, June 24, 2005 6:15 PM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
Since the end of WorldWar 2, US foreign policy has interfered with / helped wipe out / promote tyranny/ etc / etc. Not in all cases, I'm not saying you can't do good, but in the many cases you have and continue to make enemys for no good reason.

Well, that’s your story.

According to you, “doing things like giving money and arms and training to tyrants” means that the US “has actively been trying to kill off” certain people. France, Germany and Russia did things like “giving money and arms and training to tyrants” (in this case Hussein’s regime) who were in the process of killing Americans, then according to you, France, Germany and Russia are trying to kill off Americans. Is France, Germany and Russia actively trying to “kill off” Americans?

If you are so confident in this line of thinking that you would presume the above statement without supporting evidence, you must surely be able to answer this simple question. Or is it rather arrogance that leads you to make these kinds of statements? Are you just bashing the US, or do you have some kind of coherent policy?

-------------
Qui desiderat pacem praeparet bellum.

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Friday, June 24, 2005 6:45 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal:

According to you, “doing things like giving money and arms and training to tyrants” means that the US “has actively been trying to kill off” certain people. France, Germany and Russia did things like “giving money and arms and training to tyrants” (in this case Hussein’s regime) who were in the process of killing Americans, then according to you, France, Germany and Russia are trying to kill off Americans. Is France, Germany and Russia actively trying to “kill off” Americans?

If you are so confident in this line of thinking that you would presume the above statement without supporting evidence, you must surely be able to answer this simple question. Or is it rather arrogance that leads you to make these kinds of statements? Are you just bashing the US, or do you have some kind of coherent policy?

-------------
Qui desiderat pacem praeparet bellum.



To begin, I ask again... what was your answer to that question ?

As for US policy killing off and interfering with the internal policys of other countrys where would you like to start ?

How about the mess you made of Iran ?
Lets go back to 1953, Eisenhower was President. Perhaps more important, John Foster Dulles was secretary of state.

I'm just going to stick in some links

http://www.grailwerk.com/docs/bostonglobe17.htm

http://www.rense.com/general40/roots.htm

http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0304-21.htm

So 26 more years of the Shah running Iran, the American trained SAVAK security police arresting or killing ALL opposition including pro-democracy groups and religous groups. Mind you the Shah sold more than half of Irans oil production to US companys, so I guess principles get thrown out the window right ?

My policy, I would have stayed the hell out of it. Iran for Iranians, offer incentives. Fine. Overthrow their government to put in your puppet. If it were my country, that would make you my enemy.


Also providing arms and instructors to Iraq during its war of aggression against Iran ( hey isn't that why the US attacked Iraq when they went into Kuwait ? why did't you support the aggressor then )

http://www.zmag.org/zmag/articles/ShalomIranIraq.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran-Iraq_War

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A52241-2002Dec29?language=pri
nter


Mind you, the US is still committing many acts of war against Iran:

http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/7896BBD4-28AB-48BA-A949-2096A02
F864D.htm




And if you weren't as well armed, they would likely call you on it. But we were talking about right and wrong, not simply because we can get away with it right? And before you say, hey other countrys were involved too, sure... and they are wrong too.


Lets see some links proving that Germany, France and Russia have been providing arms and money since your troops invaded. If so then as I said yes, they are your enemies. You have been the only source I have seen saying this. What is your answer to that question again ?



When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

http://www.oldielyrics.com/lyrics/the_police/de_do_do_do_de_da_da_da.h
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Saturday, June 25, 2005 4:21 AM

CHRISISALL


Gino, one can't deny the US has done major crappy stuff ( Contras, anyone? ), It's just that your argument is too absolutist. Many nations 'back' questional regimes, and those regimes may have a hand in getting people of yet another nation killed. It's a sick, dirty game- I wish it were different, but it's not.
Japan tried to take over the world with Germany, and failed. Is the world their enemy now?
I can agree with you that the US has made a LOT of enemies, and continues to do so to this day, but it's not a black and white issue. Too many elements are in play.

That's all Chrisisall

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Saturday, June 25, 2005 6:11 AM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by chrisisall:
Gino, one can't deny the US has done major crappy stuff ( Contras, anyone? ), It's just that your argument is too absolutist. Many nations 'back' questional regimes, and those regimes may have a hand in getting people of yet another nation killed. It's a sick, dirty game- I wish it were different, but it's not.
Japan tried to take over the world with Germany, and failed. Is the world their enemy now?
I can agree with you that the US has made a LOT of enemies, and continues to do so to this day, but it's not a black and white issue. Too many elements are in play.

That's all Chrisisall



Sure, it is a complicated issue. But it is coming to the point where everyone will be forced to take sides.

There must be some reason be all the crappy things your country does, I'm no conspiracy nut but I do make the assumption that your leaders are not incompetent and do have SOME type of endgame agenda in mind.

If your coming invasion of Iran is successful, and you hold on to Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait you will control a huge chunk of the worlds energy supply. With Afganistan, you control the best route to market for SW Asian oil, as well as who knows what is underneath them. You keep pushing Venezuela, with your previous misaventures in mind who knows what you are up to there....... and prices keep going up

My guess is the goal is to deprive the emerging economys of China, India, etc of oil so they don't become more of a threat to your slumping economy. This could also be a threat to the EU, or Japan if trade issue, etc heat up.

As I have said before, the countries opposing your Iraq invasion, had nothing to do with supporting Saddam, it was more nobody wanted you to "install" a government that you owned. That is why the allaince stopped the war in 1991, that is why they didn't join in today.

It is a pattern of action which has been followed for sometime, now if my scenario is correct..... how can the world a)stand by and allow it, or b) help cut their own throats

We banded together to fight the threat of military domination by Germany and Japan sixty years ago, perhaps it another ten years we will band together to fight the threat of economic domination by the United States. This is not a good road, it is not black and white. But if your not an American, you find that your mind gets made up everytime you read the damn news.


When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

http://www.oldielyrics.com/lyrics/the_police/de_do_do_do_de_da_da_da.h
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Saturday, June 25, 2005 6:54 AM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
To begin, I ask again... what was your answer to that question ?

Is France, Germany and Russia actively trying to “kill off” Americans?

This question is important because it points out the absurdity of your argument. France, Germany and Russia do what they do because they have agendas and interests that are separate from the US, and this sometimes puts them at odds with the US. But to say they are trying to “kill off” Americans is simply ridiculous. Much like the argument that you make that the US is trying to “kill off” other countries is ridiculous. But the real problem is that while you are willing to use this kind of absurd language to describe the US, you are unwilling to use it to describe countries other then the US which are doing to same thing.

Now you want to claim that the US “provid[ed] arms and instructors to Iraq during its war of aggression against Iran.” Which is true, but it suffers from the same kind of distortion, because less then 0.5% of the Hussein’s arsenal came for the US, which is basically nil. Most of Hussein’s arsenal was purchased from Russia/USSR and China. In fact, the top three arms dealers to Hussein’s Iraq were Russia/USSR, China and France. Now one can argue that that 0.5% of Hussein’s arsenal that came from the US is 0.5% too much, but one cannot make absurd statements about the US “trying to kill off” certain countries because of these arms deals and not make those same comments about other countries that have sold as much as ~200 times more weapons to Iraq.

If you like conspiracies so much, here’s one for you:
The top three biggest arms dealers to Iraq are also permanent UN Security Council member-states who adamantly opposed the coalition invasion of Iraq: Russia, China and France. Coincidence? I won’t even mention that these countries also had the largest oil vouchers in the Oil-for-Food program, and billions of dollars of oil-capital in Iraq.
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
There must be some reason be all the crappy things your country does, I'm no conspiracy nut but. . .

Are you sure about that?

-------------
Qui desiderat pacem praeparet bellum.

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Saturday, June 25, 2005 7:08 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


All nations have, at one time or another, done crappy stuff. At our start, we pretty much wiped out Native Amercians and kept slaves. (And these actions continue to haunt us.)

However, over the past 60 years or so, the USA has run roughshod over many more nations than any other nation including the Soviet Union or China. Not talking about right or wrong here... it's all wrong... but the chances are, when you make so many enemies, sooner or later one or more of them will bite you in the *ss.

Why do you think that so many Central and South American countries have recently formed an anti-USA alliance? It's because our attention is fully engaged in the Middle East, and they slipped the leash as soon as they could. We created and/ or supported corruption and dictatorships in Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Nicaragua, Colombia, Honduras, Venezuela, Mexico, S Korea, Phillipines, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Uzbekistan, Ethiopia, Somalia, Zimbabwe, S Vietnam, the Congo, Cambodia...

It would have been better for us if these countries experienced an overall rise in living standards as a result of our meddling, but what happened is that a few people (the direct recipients of our aid and loans) became fabuluously wealthy while most people became poorer. Resentment? YOU BET!

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Saturday, June 25, 2005 12:23 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by lynchaj:
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:

Sure, it is a complicated issue. But it is coming to the point where everyone will be forced to take sides.




Who do you think the "sides" really are?

Which side are you going to choose?

I know what side I am on.

Andrew Lynch



I think I have already chosen, likely the other as I think it will be the US and everybody else

unless of course I am wrong and we are'nt really going down that road. I suppose there is always some ( slight ) hope we will change course.

When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

http://www.oldielyrics.com/lyrics/the_police/de_do_do_do_de_da_da_da.h
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Saturday, June 25, 2005 12:48 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal:
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
To begin, I ask again... what was your answer to that question ?

Is France, Germany and Russia actively trying to “kill off” Americans?

This question is important because it points out the absurdity of your argument. France, Germany and Russia do what they do because they have agendas and interests that are separate from the US, and this sometimes puts them at odds with the US. But to say they are trying to “kill off” Americans is simply ridiculous. Much like the argument that you make that the US is trying to “kill off” other countries is ridiculous. But the real problem is that while you are willing to use this kind of absurd language to describe the US, you are unwilling to use it to describe countries other then the US which are doing to same thing.

Now you want to claim that the US “provid[ed] arms and instructors to Iraq during its war of aggression against Iran.” Which is true, but it suffers from the same kind of distortion, because less then 0.5% of the Hussein’s arsenal came for the US, which is basically nil. Most of Hussein’s arsenal was purchased from Russia/USSR and China. In fact, the top three arms dealers to Hussein’s Iraq were Russia/USSR, China and France. Now one can argue that that 0.5% of Hussein’s arsenal that came from the US is 0.5% too much, but one cannot make absurd statements about the US “trying to kill off” certain countries because of these arms deals and not make those same comments about other countries that have sold as much as ~200 times more weapons to Iraq.

If you like conspiracies so much, here’s one for you:
The top three biggest arms dealers to Iraq are also permanent UN Security Council member-states who adamantly opposed the coalition invasion of Iraq: Russia, China and France. Coincidence? I won’t even mention that these countries also had the largest oil vouchers in the Oil-for-Food program, and billions of dollars of oil-capital in Iraq.
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
There must be some reason be all the crappy things your country does, I'm no conspiracy nut but. . .

Are you sure about that?

-------------
Qui desiderat pacem praeparet bellum.



One, as I have mentioned... yeah other countrys do it, but does that make it right ? They deserve scorn as well, and if they get attacked as a result of interference in the internal matters of other... thats fair

Two, Lets see some links about the statements you are making on arms shipments as I don't think you have your facts straight ?

http://www.fas.org/asmp/fast_facts.htm

http://www.fas.org/asmp/profiles/aid/aidindex.htm

My point being, you start supplying arms ( often on your own dime ) to one side of a conflict, then you are an enemy of the otherside of that conflict... if they choose to attack you, thats fair.

Three You don't want to talk about my very specific Iran example? The training and support of the SAVVAK security forces ?

Four http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A52241-2002Dec29?language=pri
nter


Here is a link from your Washington Post linking the US through Rumsfeld to supporting Iraqi use of chemical weapons...... So if you are going to charge Saddam for his part, how many Americans should be charged as accessories ?

Five You brought this question up, I have answered it to length and detail, how many times now ? What is your answer to this question of yours ?

BTW, The food for oil program was more of a failure of the UN. If their was no vetoes on the security council, I feel comfortable is saying that Iraq would had much of the sanctions lifted, as they had been co-operating with UN inspections. If the US had'nt been trying to force a war with a witch hunt for weapons that still haven't been proven to exist, there would have been no problem. As a matter of fact, I think dropping the veto in the council and adding a few members would solve many problems.

Besides, you must have gotten your cut of the loot..
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4447165.stm
you were in on it



When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

http://www.oldielyrics.com/lyrics/the_police/de_do_do_do_de_da_da_da.h
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Saturday, June 25, 2005 5:00 PM

CHRISISALL


Quote:

Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal:
There must be some reason be all the crappy things your country does, I'm no conspiracy nut but. . .

Are you sure about that?

I don't know about Gino, but you know MY stand on conspiracies.
He makes points, he's just using inaccurate and inflamatory language to make them.
There IS an end result in mind for those mean men in control, and it can't be good for most of us.

Mediator Chrisisall

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Saturday, June 25, 2005 6:19 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Now you want to claim that the US “provid[ed] arms and instructors to Iraq during its war of aggression against Iran.” Which is true, but it suffers from the same kind of distortion, because less then 0.5% of the Hussein’s arsenal came for the US, which is basically nil. Most of Hussein’s arsenal was purchased from Russia/USSR and China. In fact, the top three arms dealers to Hussein’s Iraq were Russia/USSR, China and France. Now one can argue that that 0.5% of Hussein’s arsenal that came from the US is 0.5% too much, but one cannot make absurd statements about the US “trying to kill off” certain countries because of these arms deals and not make those same comments about other countries that have sold as much as ~200 times more weapons to Iraq.
I think you may be referring to these statistics: www.sipri.org/contents/armstrad/atirq_data.html
Click on the link to the .pdf file showing the TIV of arms transfers to Iraq.

According to these stats, the USA was NOT a major conventional arms supplier to Iraq. However, our leaders (Reagan, HW Bush, Weinberger, Carlucci, Baldridge, Shultz, Baker) supplied the equipment and ingredients of both chemical and biological weapons to Hussein (note that the .pdf file only refers to conventional weapons) and provided strategic and tactical intel on their use (Iranian troop positions, weather, drop rates, kill rates etc.)

The point that you're missing is that while China, France and Russia (and Sweden, UK, USA, Germany, Brazil etc.) sell conventional weapons and systems around the world, there is only ONE nation that has troops and over 800 military installations scattered around the globe. Any group- Romans, Turks, Spanish, French, and British- who decide to set up an empire will naturally be hated. If our fearless leaders decide to set up an empire, well then, we should get used to the idea of being hated and resented.

And I think you're missing another point. We often treat "nations", including our own, as a blob of undifferentiated interests. In fact, selling arms around the world is not really in the interest of the common person of ANY nation. The common person is usually the one to be killed or maimed in hostilities (Do you think the rich are on the front lines?) and arms sales don't have a real positive effect on "stimulating" the economy. Arms sales, extensive military outlays, wars, etc. really only benefit a very very very small group of people.

Instead of defending or castigating arms sales, invasions, occupation, and military spending as if WE pushed for them (we didn't) why don't we recognize those actions for what they are: products of an out-of-control group of wealthy people who are so totally divorced from real life that they are willing to threaten the world with utter destruction for money.

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Sunday, June 26, 2005 2:26 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by lynchaj:

I have more confidence than you that European and Asian nations are not going to turn on the US anytime soon. So many unappreciated things that the US does now that if left undone would force it to stop and those nations know it. For example, if the US decided to stop enforcing sea lanes how long would Japan or Taiwan last? Or China's economy? Not long. They would have to enthusiastically remilitarize and the entire region would destabilize like it did in the 1920's and 1930's.

If the US did not protect shipping and international trade then Europe would have to militarize as well rather than relying on soft power diplomacy. Their economies are weak enough without an additional 5%-10% GDP premium for an effective military not counting the rebuilding costs to fix the dilapitated shape most European and Asian militaries are actually in. How many aircraft carriers does the European continent actually have? I count only one (the very poorly performing French carrier the Charles De Gaul) which is more a menace to itself and her crew than a real threat to anyone.

Mind you, I am not talking about the US actually attacking international shipping, rather that if the US Navy were no longer a presence you would see a wholesale return to shipping lane piracy and/or regional blocking of sea lanes.




An intersting point, and one I must admit I know little about. One thing I think is clear is that nobody really wants the US to attack as a " world police " not even the US. It would be better if every country managed it's own affairs ( and sea lanes ). Doing a little research it these leads me to believe that the major sealanes in the North Atlantic, and North Pacific are ( and will ) be completely uneffected by piracy leaving the worlds oceans with four major troublespots...

1. The Strait of Malacca
2. India costal waters
3. East Africa
4. West Africa

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/2148444.stm

The first area mentioned, the Strait of Malacca has the problem of being both a chokepoint for maritime traffic, and being costal waters belonging to some of the worlds poorest nations. But looking further I dug up a memo from the US Office of Naval Intellegence detailing action in the area.

http://pollux.nss.nima.mil/MISC/wwtts/wwtts_20050615000000.txt

Basically negotiations are underway for Malaysia, Singapore, and Indonesia to co-operate as well as pool resources in order to more effectively police their sealanes. In addition Japan ( whose ships consist of much of the traffic ) has provided a ship to support surveillance operations so that the local forces ( who are at present under-equipped for the task ) can operate with each other better.

Of course, one way the US could help is to tranfer or sell it obsolete equipment to some of these countrys. If done equally and without a political agenda, it would'nt change the regional balance of power... and the use of any Frigate or Destroyer class ship would be ideal. Mind you I did read somewhere the US just decommissioned an entire class of ocean going minesweeper type vessel, I am sure these would also do the trick nicely. The regional powers could ( and would ) look after their own concerns as well as international shipping.

The Second area, being India. India has an naval expansion program, and looks to be well equipped to monitor its own waters
http://indiannavy.nic.in/

And in this article, it appears they will soon be patrolling not only their own waters, but will also be assisting Indonessian / Malaysia

" THROUGH a prudent concentration of force and its judicious dispersal, the Navy plans to play a proactive role that is operationally capable of countering effectively distant, emerging threats, protecting sea lanes of communication (SLOC) and combating piracy. It also wants to control the strategically located IOR, the world’s busiest waterways, by dominating "choke points, important islands and vital trade routes". Over the past decade, the IOR had been the largest recipient of warships - almost half of those transferred worldwide.

To activate this strategy the Navy plans to start policing the IOR later this year, along with the navies of Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines, to check piracy, trafficking of weapons and narcotics, and all potential threats to commercial sea lanes. "

http://india.eu.org/2026.html

The third and fourth areas. East and West Africa are the hardest. Mind you the piracy acts listed were not as organized as the first two regions, most consisting of people boarding and robbing the crew ( sometimes armed with knives only )

I think these are more indications of a lack of government in these areas and efforts to assist should be more to correcting that than any miltary display. In any case, these acts ( as far as I have read ) only occur on vessels moving in and out of ports in these countrys so it wouldn't really be an international problem as such.

Quote:



That is just one facet of the disaster the world economy would see. With weakened economies and revitalized militaries in Europe and Asia it would be just a matter of time before the old rivalries and genocidal nationalist tendancies of the past resurface. Without safe passage, you would see non locally produced fossil fuels surge in price and the resulting economic carnage of those dependent on it.




I am seeing in the links I posted increased co-operation. It addition, has any of the recent US actions lowered the price of fossil fuels ?

I think supports the regional powers efforts to stop this problem and police their own areas is by far the way to go. Perhaps the insurance carriers who cover the traffic operating in the area should also help out by providing some funding.

Quote:


I believe the European nations would quickly become Eurostan as Islamic influences and unchecked migration would soon overwhelm them. You just can't have weak militaries in an environment where safe international trade by sea is not possible. The US is that guarrantor.




Not sure if I am following you here. Are you suggesting the US is directly involved in the immigration policys of European nations ?

Quote:



I think you very much underestimate the positive US influence on the world economy and its role in political stability. For example, how effective would the UN security council actually be if the US were removed? The UN may continue but it would be an empty gesture and useless. Many western countries are only viable in the presence of a strong US acting as its security guarrantor.




Yes, the US has had some positives, the problem is most Americans refuse to acknoledge the many negatives. By not admitting where you went horribly wrong, and then repeating the same error in policy you undo much if not all the good. As for the UN, reforms are needed, the US is not the " security guarrantor " of the UN, far from it. The US has very selectively enforced the UN policy it likes, and ignored everything else. I think unless this changes the UN is irrelavant. ( The UN sanctions against Israel during their invasion of Lebanon for example )

Quote:


It is a popular fantasy of the hard core left to think that the world would suddenly rise up and throw off the imaginary yoke of US capitalistic oppression. I think it will remain in the fantasy category for a good long time if not forever.



It isn't a question of right and left except maybe in your country. These same problems existed went Clinton was President, Republican-Democract it doesn't really matter. The major problem is your country act without limits, in what it considers its own interests, and without reguard to whatever the locals ( or the international community )think or want.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4619377.stm

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4123200.stm

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/4623195.stm





When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

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Sunday, June 26, 2005 5:44 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Just a minor addition, from reading your post I got the feeling that you were trying to say that any naval power requires an aircraft carrier to operate effectively. Here is a quote:

"A Royal Malaysian Navy Chief Admiral explained
pirates usually operate using small boats and often do not travel
far from their hideouts since their vessels lack the sophistication
to stay at sea for long periods of time. "

From this observation of the capability of these pirates, in I might add the area which priracy is most active, you do not need ( or really want )such a expensive asset to work against this. Helicopter equiped Frigates with a surface scan radar, teamed with fast patrol boats ( WW2 PT boats would be perfect, or something commercially available
http://shipexpo.com/sales/list_vessels.asp?C=12

Throw in search and tracking support from shore based aircraft, you have a very effective force without bankrupting the defence budget. Likely a fraction of the cost of send one US carrier group as well...



When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

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Monday, June 27, 2005 2:27 PM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
I think you may be referring to these statistics: www.sipri.org/contents/armstrad/atirq_data.html
Click on the link to the .pdf file showing the TIV of arms transfers to Iraq.

That’s not what I was referring to, but those are good statistics.

US leaders did not supply Hussein with Chemical or biological weapons. This is a myth. Some US companies, Dow Chemical for instance, did sell Iraq chemicals that could have been used as precursors to the Iraqi manufacture of certain chemical weapons. This myth started in 1988 when Hussein gassed a Kurdish town with VX. Concern rose with the US that it was possible that this VX could have been manufactured from some products that were commercially sold to Iraq. As is typical with the Left the ridiculous hyperbole started to amass.

There is plenty of room here for criticizing US foreign policy which may have unwittingly and some might say negligently assisted, albeit indirectly, in the proliferation of some chemical and biological weapons, but your argument, like gino’s is a distortion of reality. To my knowledge, the US never sold Saddam Hussein either chemical or biological weapons, and although some US companies did commercially sell Iraq so called “dual use” chemicals that could have been used as precursors to certain chemical compounds use in chemical weapons, the reality is that Iraq was buying real chemical weapon systems and munitions from the USSR and any impact that the commercial selling of US dual use products was likely minor.

The US was not a major distributor of arms either conventional or nonconventional to Saddam Hussein’s regime. And while intelligent minds can criticize US foreign policy in this area, to claim that the US armed Saddam Hussein is maliciously inaccurate and to claim that the US is trying to kill off certain countries or that the US was worse then the USSR is just so absurd as to be comical.

-------------
Qui desiderat pacem praeparet bellum.

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Monday, June 27, 2005 3:46 PM

RUE

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


LynchAJ
I see the discussion has gone far past the point where I left it. But I said I would reply, so even if this is redundant or irrelevant:
Quote:

... In short, the US has done incredible things although you rarely hear about it. Most of which is the US provides a infrastructure where less powerful democratic nations can thrive. "Soft Powers" like diplomacy only work with they can be backed up with military means. The US acts as a guarantor of diplomatic efforts through the implicit use of force as necessary. The US does thankless tasks like keep the sea lanes clear, suppress rogue regimes, and acts as the bulwark defense against aggressive wars in Europe and Asia.

The US also endlessly promotes international law and diplomatic solutions such as the UN even when they are contrary the to US objectives -- for example President Bush spent at least six months trying to get more UN resolutions against Saddam Hussein when apparently his advisors had written them off. President Clinton didn't even bother getting one for Desert Fox because I think he knew it was futile.

However, as important as what the US does is what the US *DOES NOT* do and has not done. When given many opportunities for empire building, the US has walked away (ie, Europe and Asia after WWII). When offered the chance to destroy its foes, the US has repeatedly shown mercy and even rebuilt defeated nations frequently turning them into direct competitors(Germany, Japan, etc). If the US were an empire we would see Carthage style "salt the earth" treatment, unrestrained use of WMDs, and a lot more aggressive military actions. The US does not allow military control of the military, rather, it insists on civilian control and has bred a tradition of a nonpolitical military. These traits are very different from previous great powers and superpowers.

When did the US achieve that status? I do not know but I believe it is intrinsic. The US philosophical basis really an outgrowth of the European renaissance in many ways so maybe it started then prior to the actual establishment of the US in 1776.

I believe anti-US sentiment is and has been prevalent in Europe since prior to WWII. It is very strong in Asia, especially the Middle East. I think the basis is many of the nations in those areas suffer or have suffered from despotic regimes and failing economies. It is not too hard to be envious and learn to hate when your own country is struggling. Numerous regimes have uses anti-US as a distraction to their own people to keep them from focusing on their own problems. Specific examples should be fairly obvious -- France and South Korea.

I hope this helps explain and answers your questions. I take it from your question you do not share this viewpoint?

Thanks!

At first I didn't know if I agreed or disagreed, because I did not know at all to what you were referring. So, to reply, I learned some things, disagreed with much (as either not historically supported or no longer historically supported), left a few things decidedly undecided, and agreed with some.

To start back at the beginning, if the US did at one point have civilian control of the military, that is no longer the case. And, I have some doubt as to whether the citizenry originally did control the military or the wealthy landholders did. Also, as other countries evolved from monarchies or federations into democracies, military control slipped from hereditary powers to representative bodies. I see more resemblance between the US and other countries in the past than you see. And to finish on the modern era, when the US developed the 'military industrial complex', the military became a juggernaut of entrenched power, and a political force in its own right (with its political K Street arm etc.)

In terms of 'Empire Building', the US came eagerly but late to the game of formally acquiring and ruling foreign colonies (compared to the Europeans) though it did actually get some of the ones it actively sought. But during that time period the westward expansion, the annexation of territories and the extermination of the Indian was the US's own version of overt colonialism (similar to the Boers in S. Africa). Not that the US was hesitant about covert colonialism ('banana republics'), using the US military to enforce economic domination and maintain proxy rule.

It might be that the US was mainly responsible for stopping 'the Hun' in WWI, Japan in WWII, and North Korea during the conflict. (You history buffs will have to resolve these items.) But many countries will dispute whether the US deserves credit for stopping Germany in WWII, a good case has been made for Russia having bled Germany to collapse.

As to what happened to Germany and Japan afterward, it's true they were not pulverized by treaty. But it is seriously questionable that 'Empire Building' by overtly carving out chunks of Europe or Asia was an option for the US. That the US did not establish an empire I see as moot.

I trace the rise of anti-Americanism to the era when 'The Ugly American' was published (1958). In the Cold War contest, the US was too frequently a supporter of brutal dictators and a beneficiary of rapacious economics. Many of the people who hate the US now received that brand of US 'help' in the past. And such transparently self-serving policies didn't enhance its reputation with anyone else, for example Europeans. It is true that some countries quietly allow anti-Americanism to deflect attention from their own failures. But it has to be based on something, or it wouldn't fly. Luxembourg is democratic, successful, even wealthy. But can you imagine anti-Luxembourg fervor in Egypt?

As to its restraint regarding WMDs, during the Cold War the US was deterred by MAD. But what deters it now is several items: 1) Russia is not defeated, only quiet. It possesses technologies which can defeat US WMDs in several ways. Should the US pick a target dear to Russia it still risks massive retaliation. 2) The US doesn't have sufficient conventional military force for world-domination. 3) The US is rapidly losing sufficient economic clout to coerce countries as they reach independent trade and defense agreements (China, Russia and India being the most recent).

As to the US being the main supporter of international law, that has been sufficiently addressed elsewhere. To that I might add, the US has not signed the land-mine treaties, treaties to restrict small-arms sales, recent CW and BW treaties, is backing out of nuclear weapons treaties, did not join the ICC etc...

The US can claim some high ground. But with a mostly negative past around the globe supporting political and economic despotism, coupled with recent aggression, the US has made itself into a target.

Regards,
Rue

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Monday, June 27, 2005 4:41 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Just one quick point to your last post

" if the US did at one point have civilian control of the military, that is no longer the case. "

With the parts of US foreign policy I find objectionable, I for one don't find that much fault with the armed forces.

Iran in 1953, Afganistan in 1978, and on were misadventures started by politicans. The services, even to the Joint Chiefs only tried to follow policy to the extent they could.

Another example are former Soldiers turned diplomats like Wesley Clark, Colin Powell, or Anthony Zinni.... I think these people will try to do the honorable thing despite policy, and in the case of the latter two retire before serving goals with which they do not agree.

Just my view


When my eloquence escapes you
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Monday, June 27, 2005 4:55 PM

RUE

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


And yet the military is an organization that seems quite beyond the power of the aggregate of US civilians to either stop it or control it, either politically or economically.

PS So perhaps there is a gap. As SignyM cogently argued elsewhere, military build-up is not in the interests of nearly all citizens. If policies re the military don't benefit but a small percentage, then who is in control of those policies? If it is not the citizens, and it is not the military itself, who runs the show? Perhaps the military is more like a bureaucracy. There are the professionals who are paid to do good work, and then there are the elite wonks who run it. These wonks sometimes occupy elected office, but mostly they form a self-reinforcing group of appointees, board members, think-tank members, major stock-holders, policy advisors etc. What do you think?

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Monday, June 27, 2005 4:56 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


The Washington post quotes several senior officals about your so called " myth "

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&conten
tId=A52241-2002Dec29¬Found=true


And my quote was not to claim that the US is trying to kill off certain countries, I believe I said groups of people or words to that effect.

The article also discusses that very same policy towards Iran, the victim of aggression in this particular war that the US decided to support. Could it be because the US had a bit of a black eye after their picked ruler, the Shah fell and the Iranians dared to be openly hostile to the " freedom loving nation " which help to inflict that despot on them for over twenty-five years......

With this track record, and a build up of US troops in a neighboring country no wonder Iran feels they need nukes to maintain the peace.

With Condo Rice shooting her mouth off, I would think a little deterence was quite neccersary too.



When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

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Monday, June 27, 2005 5:28 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

US leaders did not supply Hussein with Chemical or biological weapons. This is a myth. Some US companies, Dow Chemical for instance, did sell Iraq chemicals that could have been used as precursors to the Iraqi manufacture of certain chemical weapons.
As Sc'y of Commerce, Baldridge had to sign all of these exports, which he did.

More, and links later

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Monday, June 27, 2005 5:33 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by rue:
And yet the military is an organization that seems quite beyond the power of the aggregate of US civilians to either stop it or control it, either politiclaly or economically.



I would say that it is more the top end of the command structure ( the President and cabinet ) that has stepped beyond control.

I think an example of my point is the coming base closures, if the military had the ability to opperate beyond budget limits... this wouldn't happen.

The cutbacks your Navy faces... from 15 to 9 carrier groups in the next ten years. Down to 18 Fast attack subs, entire classes of ships ( battleships ) retired, etc

Another analogy, do you blame your tools when the job they do is not to your liking....

Or do you blame the hand guiding the tool



When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

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Monday, June 27, 2005 5:59 PM

RUE

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


You seem quite up on military forces. You'd be a good resource for anyone wanting to learn about that.

Yes, base closures, and yet at the same time "US Plans More Plutonium" (or words to that effect, today's headline), 'Star Wars' and 'Missile Defense': basically cutting forces but throwing $$$ down the toilet at other things. I've read that the buds over in industry and think tanks dream up these lovely ideas, sell their notions to their buds in policy development groups, by the time it gets to the Pentagon appointees it's been corn-fed and pampered to a healthy size .... and it matters some who's in office, but the military industrial complex is not totally under their control either ...

I would blame the hand of course, I'm just not sure who has a hand (so to speak) in it.

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Monday, June 27, 2005 6:11 PM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
The Washington post quotes several senior officals about your so called " myth "

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&conten
tId=A52241-2002Dec29Found=true

This article talks about diplomatic relations between the US and Hussein’s regime, which intelligent minds can differ on. As I said, there is legitimate criticism of US foreign policy here. You're just too far out there in Leftfield with the crazy talk to find it.
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
And my quote was not to claim that the US is trying to kill off certain countries, I believe I said groups of people or words to that effect.

Yeah it was “something to that effect.” Are France, Russia and Germany trying to kill off certain “groups of people” who are American?
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
The article also discusses that very same policy towards Iran, the victim of aggression in this particular war that the US decided to support. Could it be because the US had a bit of a black eye after their picked ruler, the Shah fell and the Iranians dared to be openly hostile to the “freedom loving nation " which help to inflict that despot on them for over twenty-five years......

Or possibly it was that the militant Islamic terrorists who took control of Iran held almost a hundred Americans hostage for 444 days, recommencing widespread repression as bad as, if not, worse then the Shah.

Although US support for the Shah, at least from about the mid 60’s was probably ill-conceived, at least to some degree.

-------------
Qui desiderat pacem praeparet bellum.

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Monday, June 27, 2005 7:09 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by rue:
You seem quite up on military forces. You'd be a good resource for anyone wanting to learn about that.

Yes, base closures, and yet at the same time "US Plans More Plutonium" (or words to that effect, today's headline), 'Star Wars' and 'Missile Defense': basically cutting forces but throwing $$$ down the toilet at other things. I've read that the buds over in industry and think tanks dream up these lovely ideas, sell their notions to their buds in policy development groups, by the time it gets to the Pentagon appointees it's been corn-fed and pampered to a healthy size .... and it matters some who's in office, but the military industrial complex is not totally under their control either ...

I would blame the hand of course, I'm just not sure who has a hand (so to speak) in it.



Well as they say, know thy enemy...hehe

Back in the late eightys / early ninetys when I was in the Canadian Military, I was in a position which I ended up reading quite a bit about the organization of the Soviet Military... I guess it just gave me an interest in the subject matter, you start to look at the whats and hows.. but usually get lost in the whys.

The Pentagon is like any Western style government agency to a large extent. Everyone wants their projects funded and try to use whatever influences they can to pursue that.
The base closure thing is just like that, right now the Senator from Maine is making lots of noise about lost jobs, and how the base in Kings Bay Georgia can't be expanded to take in the relocated personnel, etc. The Senator from Georgia is saying , no the Naval base is perfect, but we can't shut down this other station, and so on.

The Politics are so enmeshed with the way your Military functions, I'd say anyone two star and up would have to be a very good political operator in their own right.


When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

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Monday, June 27, 2005 7:21 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


Quote:

Originally posted by Finn mac Cumhal:
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
The Washington post quotes several senior officals about your so called " myth "

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&conten
tId=A52241-2002Dec29Found=true

This article talks about diplomatic relations between the US and Hussein’s regime, which intelligent minds can differ on. As I said, there is legitimate criticism of US foreign policy here. You're just too far out there in Leftfield with the crazy talk to find it.




Ok, this contradicts your entire stance :from the same link

" The administrations of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush authorized the sale to Iraq of numerous items that had both military and civilian applications, including poisonous chemicals and deadly biological viruses, such as anthrax and bubonic plague. "
Quote:



Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
And my quote was not to claim that the US is trying to kill off certain countries, I believe I said groups of people or words to that effect.

Yeah it was “something to that effect.” Are France, Russia and Germany trying to kill off certain “groups of people” who are American?




You still haven't answered your own question there ?

Quote:


Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
The article also discusses that very same policy towards Iran, the victim of aggression in this particular war that the US decided to support. Could it be because the US had a bit of a black eye after their picked ruler, the Shah fell and the Iranians dared to be openly hostile to the “freedom loving nation " which help to inflict that despot on them for over twenty-five years......

Or possibly it was that the militant Islamic terrorists who took control of Iran held almost a hundred Americans hostage for 444 days, recommencing widespread repression as bad as, if not, worse then the Shah.




The hostage crisis was in response to the US refuing to turn over the Shah for trial in Iran ( for all the nastyness you help him commit )

As your country invaded Afganistan recently for the same reasons... hmmmm double standard ( must be an American thing )
Quote:



Although US support for the Shah, at least from about the mid 60’s was probably ill-conceived, at least to some degree.




So then you would say overthrowing an elected government to install a brutal dictator to expand your own economic interests to not be ill-conceived until a decade later ? hmmmmm

Need an eyes rolling emoticon

BTW, I'm considered to be fairly rightwing...just not an American

When my eloquence escapes you
My logic ties you up and rapes you

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Monday, June 27, 2005 8:18 PM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
Ok, this contradicts your entire stance :from the same link

" The administrations of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush authorized the sale to Iraq of numerous items that had both military and civilian applications, including poisonous chemicals and deadly biological viruses, such as anthrax and bubonic plague. "

No it doesn’t. It supports my stance. It’s certainly worded suggestively, but that’s journalism for you. In the end all it says is that the US sold dual use products to Iraq. As far as anthrax and plague, the US sold medical grade samples for medical research commercially, but this is more of the same: dual use products.
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
You still haven't answered your own question there ?

And I don’t intend to. I’m not in the habit of answering my own questions particularly when they are posed to other people, who refuse to answer them.
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
The hostage crisis was in response to the US refuing to turn over the Shah for trial in Iran ( for all the nastyness you help him commit )

You mean a beheading. Islamofascists don’t hold trials.
Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
So then you would say overthrowing an elected government to install a brutal dictator to expand your own economic interests to not be ill-conceived until a decade later ? hmmmmm

Seemed like a good idea at the time.

-------------
Qui desiderat pacem praeparet bellum.

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