REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

American Hiroshima: yes to if, no to when

POSTED BY: HKCAVALIER
UPDATED: Tuesday, July 26, 2005 07:06
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Thursday, July 21, 2005 6:47 AM

HKCAVALIER


Hey, everybody, how's everybody doing today? I haven't posted this week because the RWED has suddenly erupted in my personal life and I've been so down hearted about the whole mess.

A close friend of mine has been so frightened by this "American Hiroshima" nonsense that he's started advocating some bizarre brinkmanship shenanigans. See, he's gay and HIV positive and (heretofore) a very liberal artsy-fartsy intellectual type of guy. But the other day he was saying that if George W. Bush had any balls he would make a public statement to the world that if any terrorist sets off a nuclear device on American soil, that the United States would then go right ahead and vaporize Mecca and Medina.

He wanted to know my opinion on this matter. I told him it was an appalling idea. He said that he was in no way advocating going through with it, but that as a sabre rattling ploy, he felt it would make any Islamic fundies think twice about dropping the bomb. I very politely told him he had to be out of his fricken gourd to think that terrorists could be controlled in this way, to say nothing of the fact that it would be the single most infamous thing an American president has ever said.

Anyway, if you've followed certain threads on this board--you know the ones--the ones where two stalwart champions tilt at each other's windmills for pages and pages, you know how he and I passed the next couple hours or so. Just having this kind of discussion with one of my oldest friends makes me nauseous.

Anyway, anyway, getting back to the board and the topic at hand: this whole "American Hiroshima" thing hinges on the eminently questionable assertion of "not if, but when." Ladies and gentlemen, if you will permit me, I am here today to call bull on that. That's right folks, please, lets all take a deep breath and realize that a nuclear strike against this country is no more inevitable today than ever. Don't you know that this kind of "not if, but when" fearmongering nonsense was the order of the day back in the 50's? Didn't the Ruskies have a world-dominating ideology designed with the sole purpose of destroying "our way of life?" The USSR had the means, the motive, the opportunity...and what did they do? Yeah.

"American Hiroshima" scares the bejeebers out of folk. Not to get too terribly psyche 101 on y'all, but I think it's charge is due in no small part to the fact that we are the ONLY nation on Earth to have ever dropped a nuclear bomb on an enemy and deep down we fear that we just might deserve payback. Well, I'm here to tell you that we don't. We really don't.

And another thing, if a nuclear bomb were to go off in this country, it would simply not be the end of the world. I'm gonna say that again: if a nuclear bomb were to go off in this country, it would simply not be the end of the world. (Remember to breath.) It would not be the "end of American innocence" either. It would be terrible, many lives would be lost, for a lot of years to come, but America would go on.

We'd go on, like Japan did, like Germany after Dresden. The world is getting too small for us to go on exporting our violence. We will never stop terrorism through murderous means. "American Hiroshima" can be avoided if we truly want to avoid it. We can find other solutions to the world's problems than violence and retribution. That is, if we have the balls.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 7:02 AM

SIMONWHO


Well, say that there is a nuclear strike, some sort of dirty bomb maybe. It kills tens of thousands. Now what does the President do? If he does nothing, he is held to be weak and terrorists are encouraged. If he destroys the two most sacred places for Muslims, he makes America the enemy of all Islam in perpetuity. Not just for twenty, thirty, forty years. Forever.

Don't forget, you're dealing with terrorists who are prepared to blow themselves to pieces. They'll give their lives to demonstrate their commitment to the cause. There's no threat that will stop them.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 7:30 AM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by SimonWho:
Well, say that there is a nuclear strike, some sort of dirty bomb maybe. It kills tens of thousands. Now what does the President do? If he does nothing, he is held to be weak and terrorists are encouraged. If he destroys the two most sacred places for Muslims, he makes America the enemy of all Islam in perpetuity. Not just for twenty, thirty, forty years. Forever.

Don't forget, you're dealing with terrorists who are prepared to blow themselves to pieces. They'll give their lives to demonstrate their commitment to the cause. There's no threat that will stop them.



See there? Right to the heart of the issue. If we do nothing, they're emboldened and attack us. If we retaliate, they're enraged and attack us. Either way, we're gonna get it. Have dealt up close and personal with their ilk, I can tell you: in my experience, they just don't respond to reason. They hate us not for some specific thing we've done (at least, not originally for some specific thing), but because our way of life is an affront to Islam. They around thinking about places like Las Vegas and spring-break-Daytona-Beach and people like Paris Hilton and just get madder and madder. And because we're infidels, they not only believe they're justified, but they believe they're obligated to kill us man, woman and child.

To my way of thinking, ain't no way to reason with that. All you can do is hunt them down and kill them all before they get you first.
_____________________________
Edited to add:
Before anyone freaks out and accuses me of wanting to kill all Arabs or all Muslims, let me just say that I'm not referring to all of either group. I'm referring to terrorists.
_______________________________________________
I wish I had a magical wish-granting plank.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 7:47 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by InevitableBetrayal:
All you can do is hunt them down and kill them all before they get you first.



Simply not possible. Got any other ideas?

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 7:51 AM

SPIKEANDJEZEBEL


We all get mad thinking of people like Paris Hilton....

"I have never understood why it should be necessary to become irrational in order to prove that you care. Or indeed, why it should be necessary to prove it at all." -Kerr Avon

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 7:52 AM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Quote:

Originally posted by InevitableBetrayal:
All you can do is hunt them down and kill them all before they get you first.



Simply not possible.



True, but that doesn't mean that we shouldn't give the old college try. "I prefer a straight fight to all this sitting around." (Yes, I know I mangled that one all to hell and gone).

_______________________________________________
I wish I had a magical wish-granting plank.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 7:54 AM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by spikeandjezebel:
We all get mad thinking of people like Paris Hilton....



Point. But I don't usually pick up an AK and go out spray down the local market place in my anger against Paris. I usually just rant at the TV for a spell, until my blood pressure resembles something like normal.

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I wish I had a magical wish-granting plank.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 8:04 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by InevitableBetrayal:
Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Quote:

Originally posted by InevitableBetrayal:
All you can do is hunt them down and kill them all before they get you first.



Simply not possible.



True, but that doesn't mean that we shouldn't give the old college try. "I prefer a straight fight to all this sitting around."



IB, IB, no, that's exactly what it does mean. Your "old college try" only exasorbates the problem you're trying to fix. Killing terrorist will never stop terrorism. Ever. Terrorism feeds on what you advocate. Much as you may prefer a straight fight, a straight fight is not possible. You gotta wrap your head around this, we all do. There's an old Chinese saying: if we do not change direction, we will end up where we're headed.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 8:09 AM

HERO


Would it make a differance were the terrorists strike. For example. Destroying Washington or New York would be worth a strike at Mecca. But destrouying Orangeburg, South Carolina (while a tragedy for the fine folk there-bouts) just isnt the same thing.

Perhaps a compromise is to destroy Damascus or Tehran before we destroy Mecca.

Also, destruction of Mecca given the right conditions and precedants could deliver a great psychological blow to Islam. Say Blair (since London seems to be the popular target these days and there's no reason that Bush and the US need be the nuclear vengance seekers) got on TV gave them warning and weeks to evacuate and publically dared Allah, if he exists, to stop the destruction. If Allah does, well then we all convert to Islam and live happily ever after, if not, then maybe they need to reevaluate their belief system. Either way we'd all have a lot better understanding of the way the world works.

I wonder if a British nuclear bomb is really more cultured then an American bomb or if it just has a snooty accent and attitude.

H

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 8:15 AM

SIMONWHO


Well, as one of our great thinkers once said, "Britain invented the nuclear bomb, we did. Only we made the Americans test it in their backyard first. Can you imagine testing a nuclear bomb in Peckham? Yeah, not a good idea. Particularly as there would be no way to tell if the test was successful."

The idea of a like for like attack is dubious at best. They attack like terrorists and we attack like a sovereign nation. They kill 3,000 people and destroy two major buildings. We invade two of their countries and complete replace the governments (killing tens of thousands along the way, obviously). It doesn't necessarily follow that their nuclear strike should be followed by us matching them in that particular manner. Why not, say, take over Iran, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Kuwait?

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 8:21 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by SimonWho:
It doesn't necessarily follow that their nuclear strike should be followed by us matching them in that particular manner. Why not, say, take over Iran, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Kuwait?



Good point. So one little jury rigged bomb by them means we should respond with many of the most sophisticated bombs ever made and simply destory their ability to make war. Perhaps with neutron bombs so we can still get the oil and use the infrastructure. Then we colonize and settle the vacant oil-rich lands in a modern day gold rush and herd the surviving arabs onto reservations, somewher out of the way, like the Arabian dessert or Sinai.

The very idea makes me feel all tingly. Evil tingly that is. (Insert evil laugh here.)

H

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 8:24 AM

CITIZEN


Quote:

I wonder if a British nuclear bomb is really more cultured then an American bomb or if it just has a snooty accent and attitude.


Just like all British citizens our nuclear weapons are terribly reserved and would appologise profusely before wiping out the city/population that they are targeted against. They stop for tea and scones at 11:00 on the lawn followed by crochet, and they are all launched from castles. They also shout tally-ho or chocks away before being launched.

Not like the American oversized ineffectual foolish bombs that simply lull around foriegn cities saying "isn't this quaint?".

:p {sorry couldn't resist...}

A woman drove me to drink and I didn't even have the decency to thank her.
--W.C. Fields

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 8:28 AM

CITIZEN


Anyone been in london today, i've only heard bits and pieces, and where i was the only indication anything happened at all was the police launches tearing up the thames at full throttle instead of their ussual slow sedate pace.

A woman drove me to drink and I didn't even have the decency to thank her.
--W.C. Fields

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 8:33 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Hero:
Also, destruction of Mecca given the right conditions and precedants could deliver a great psychological blow to Islam.



Yeah. No kidding. Too bad Islam is not the enemy. Ach, the blithe inhumanity of your posts never fails to make me shudder, Hero.

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

(Edited for clarity and to move away from the ad hominem trap. Sorry, Hero, IRL I'm sure you're a pretty decent man with excellent taste in television)

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 9:04 AM

BARNSTORMER


I don't think the extremists really care about Mecca.

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/06/03/attack/main556716.shtml


They may not care but I would bet they would'nt mind at all if the "infidels" nuked the place, they would just use the act as propoganda to incite more to join the Jihad. After all, REAL devout Muslims would be inscensed by the act.

You can't honestly believe that if they thought Mecca would be destroyed in retaliation that they would be anywhere near the place would you?







Am I a Lion?... No, I think I'ma tellin' the truth.

BarnStormer

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 9:09 AM

BARNSTORMER



Oh, forgot to add.

The Islamic RELIGION is NOT the problem.


Islam does not murder people, people murder people.

(A little tongue in cheek, but true I think)



Am I a Lion?... No, I think I'ma tellin' the truth.

BarnStormer

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 9:43 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Nuking Mecca or Medina or any other city in the Middle East that you care to name would not either kill or frighten the people responsible (ie terrorists), but it sure would kill a lot of innocent people. Is that where we want to go?

In any case, from a practical standpoint the question isn't how to get rid of terrorists bc a killed terrorist is just another name for martyr. The question is how to get rid of terrorism, which a lot more complicated question, even if you limit it to terrorism aimed at US interests and not Israel.

There is no question that many governments in the Mideast foster- or at least ignore- the presence of terrorists in their midst. One of the worst offenders was not Saudi Arabia but Pakistan, which funded the Taliban directly through its Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI). Aside from the threat of being nuked (which is not something we should be bluffing about because sooner or later someone will call that bluff) what kind of pressure can we bring to bear on the governments in the region to reduce the reliance on terrorism to achieve political goals?

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 10:06 AM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
IB, IB, no, that's exactly what it does mean. Your "old college try" only exasorbates the problem you're trying to fix. Killing terrorist will never stop terrorism. Ever. Terrorism feeds on what you advocate. Much as you may prefer a straight fight, a straight fight is not possible. You gotta wrap your head around this, we all do. There's an old Chinese saying: if we do not change direction, we will end up where we're headed.

HKCavalier



I'm going to ride right on past the part where I get pissed off at your condescension and just get on with the thing...

My argument is simply this: 1) They will attack if we do nothing, 2) They will attack if we do something. 3) Doing something is better than doing nothing.

Your counter argument (for brevity's sake) is that the point isn't doing /nothing/ it's doing nothing that will provoke them, i.e. military action. So let's review the strategies that have been employed thus far.

Pres. Clinton tried to ignore the threat away, and that hasn't worked. Pres. Bush has tried to conventional-war the threat away and that hasn't worked either.

What we have not yet tried is talking the threat away. This is sort of in the left-wing vein that "this war represents a failure to communicate" or some such, or "if we could only talk with them we'd find we have more in common than not". That's ridiculous. The terrorists have no interest in getting to know us better. They simply want to exterminate us. Again, there's no reasoning with that.

I'm not proposing more invasions. I'm proposing that we find their hidey-holes, crawl down inside, and pop those motherers in the forehead.

BTW, HK, you keep saying I don't get it. Please enlighten me on your 5-point plan for eliminating terrorism. It's easy to say, "That's broke" but it's another matter to fix it.

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I wish I had a magical wish-granting plank.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 10:09 AM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by citizen:
Quote:

I wonder if a British nuclear bomb is really more cultured then an American bomb or if it just has a snooty accent and attitude.


Just like all British citizens our nuclear weapons are terribly reserved and would appologise profusely before wiping out the city/population that they are targeted against. They stop for tea and scones at 11:00 on the lawn followed by crochet, and they are all launched from castles. They also shout tally-ho or chocks away before being launched.

Not like the American oversized ineffectual foolish bombs that simply lull around foriegn cities saying "isn't this quaint?".

:p {sorry couldn't resist...}

A woman drove me to drink and I didn't even have the decency to thank her.
--W.C. Fields



Funniest. Ever.

_______________________________________________
I wish I had a magical wish-granting plank.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 10:23 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Ach, the blithe inhumanity of your posts never fails to make me shudder, Hero.

...Sorry, Hero, IRL I'm sure you're a pretty decent man with excellent taste in television)



Strange. I took the first comment as a compliment.

I've always considered myself both a decent man and capable of blithe inhumanity. I consider myself a Renaissance Man after all.

And my taste in television is really very good. I could go pro...

H

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 10:25 AM

PERFESSERGEE


Personally, I like to think that most Americans (and most Brits, and Canadians, etc., etc. - hell probably even the French) are morally superior to the terrorists. In fact, I'm pretty darned confident of it. But, the problem with invoking moral superiority (and there can be no doubt that nearly all of us on these boards have invoked it at one time or another) is that in order to avoid being a hypocrite, you have to actually act morally superior. Doing the same things they do (or worse) just doesn't cut it. Killing all the terrorists (even though they may richly deserve it, and I confess that I personally find that it's a very tempting idea) just makes us as bad as they are. Ain't no place I want to be......

And then, of course, since you really can't kill 'em all, you succeed in breeding more terrorists at the same time that you give up any claim to moral superiority.

perfessergee

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 10:52 AM

PIRATEJENNY


orginally posted by inevitablebetrayal

Quote:

My argument is simply this: 1) They will attack if we do nothing, 2) They will attack if we do something. 3) Doing something is better than doing nothing.



I have to disagree with this for the sake of sanity. If someone nukes us..in your opinion we should nuke them back ..thats just madness, because then everyone will be bombing eachother.

unfortunetly I hate to say this, but sometimes I think we Americans really need a bomb dropped on us so that we can experience the true horror of such actions I think if we did we wouldn't hear opinions like these. Its easy to talk about these things its easy to say bomb someone take out a few cities..but its certainly not easy to live through something like that.

Violence on brings on more violence. I don't doubt that someone at some point is going to drop a bomb on us maybe a few bombs...but bombing them back is only going to spread more radiation around the world..its crazy...and its not the answer.

the facts are we are bringing the wrath of these terrorist and countries on us..maybe not you and me personally although alot of Americans attitudes don't help..but our government policies are , why don't we try correcting that..it seems alot saner!!

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 11:01 AM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Edited to avoid a screaming match.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 11:10 AM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by perfessergee:
Killing all the terrorists (even though they may richly deserve it, and I confess that I personally find that it's a very tempting idea) just makes us as bad as they are.



Actually, I have to disagree on this point. The reason that you claim the moral high ground over terrorists is all in who you're visiting violence upon.

Terrorism, by its very nature, inflicts violence on the innocent (e.g. people on the underground, market-goers, people at work in an office building). These people are not a threat to the terrorists or their way of life. In military parlance, they are "non-combatants" and cannot be specifically targeted.

On the other hand, an individual who would visit violence upon your nation, its people or its military forces (e.g. terrorists) is fair game, because they are a threat. We enter into the "kill-or-be-killed" economy of combat.

Regardless of the propaganda that spins around the RWED, the U.S. military does not specifically target non-combatants. As a veteran of Afghanistan and Iraq I can assure you of that fact. And that is why we have the moral high ground on terrorists. Killing terrorists and killing civilians can't be considered as ethically equivalent. One is self-defense, one is murder.

_______________________________________________
I wish I had a magical wish-granting plank.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 11:22 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by InevitableBetrayal:
Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
IB, IB, no, that's exactly what it does mean. Your "old college try" only exasorbates the problem you're trying to fix. Killing terrorist will never stop terrorism. Ever. Terrorism feeds on what you advocate. Much as you may prefer a straight fight, a straight fight is not possible. You gotta wrap your head around this, we all do. There's an old Chinese saying: if we do not change direction, we will end up where we're headed.

HKCavalier



I'm going to ride right on past the part where I get pissed off at your condescension and just get on with the thing...



InevitableB, I sincerely apologize. I was talking to you the way I talk to people who I think are getting a little carried away. It is really tough not to sound a little condescending when you're trying to calm a body down, you know? Again, I apologize, lets just say it was the internet talking.

Quote:

My argument is simply this: 1) They will attack if we do nothing, 2) They will attack if we do something. 3) Doing something is better than doing nothing.

Your counter argument (for brevity's sake) is that the point isn't doing /nothing/ it's doing nothing that will provoke them, i.e. military action. So let's review the strategies that have been employed thus far.



I'm going to ride right on past the part where I get pissed off at your--sorry, I couldn't resist. Just kidding

Quote:

...What we have not yet tried is talking the threat away. This is sort of in the left-wing vein that "this war represents a failure to communicate" or some such, or "if we could only talk with them we'd find we have more in common than not". That's ridiculous. The terrorists have no interest in getting to know us better. They simply want to exterminate us. Again, there's no reasoning with that.

...BTW, HK, you keep saying I don't get it. Please enlighten me on your 5-point plan for eliminating terrorism. It's easy to say, "That's broke" but it's another matter to fix it.



I think you're right on the money except the "they" is not the terrorists, it's the much maligned Islamic world. As Signy said, many Islamic nations turn a blind eye to the terrorists in their midst, because they certainly have a profoundly serious beef with us, and to get back to my original post, so did the USSR. Couldn't we learn from the first cold war and start negotiating with opposing nations before they have the power to destroy us?

We need to seriously rethink our Middle East policies because the people who live and govern over there seriously want us to leave them alone. Iran has no dream of taking over the United States as the USSR surely did (I'm talking about the people and the real government, not fifty crazed fools hiding in a cave). Lets do everything we can so that the Islamic people reject whole-heartedly the purposes and methods of the terrorist extremists.

We go to Iran (for instance), we say, "Look, what will it take for you to sit down and talk seriously with us about ending terrorism on this planet. The world is getting too small for us to continue business as usual." They say, what? I don't know, "Get your bases out of Saudi Arabia" or something and so we say, "Okay, let's talk about that." And then we do something. We reduce our presence in the Middle East in a meaningful way. I'm not saying a unilateral withdrawl of all military force in the area, this isn't some pie in the sky liberal "let's give the terrorists therapy" canard, just a real and meaningful reduction that Iran (or whoever) can appreciate. Then we say, "Well, now, we've started a process in good faith, now here's what we ask of you, etc."

We need to change our image in the world. C'mon all you capitalists, we need to start selling something the market actually wants!


HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 11:33 AM

SERGEANTX


Quote:

Originally posted by InevitableBetrayal:
My argument is simply this: 1) They will attack if we do nothing, 2) They will attack if we do something. 3) Doing something is better than doing nothing.



Your argument is broken. (Doesn't make sense)

Niether 1 nor 2 is acceptable as a factual premise, and 3 depends entirely on what something means.

The something we're doing now is making the problem much worse, so in relation to that, doing nothing is preferable. If we'd done nothing in the first place,(for example, let's that say we didn't build permanent military bases the middle east, and we didn't invade countries at the drop of a hat there and we didn't attempt to force our values and ideals on their culture) I doubt we'd be in this situation.

The notion that Islam is driving the hatred of the United States is nonsense. The leaders of Fundamentalist Islam (which is a very small minority in the whole of the religion) use religion in the same way unscrupulous leaders do anywhere. They use it as an excuse for people to act irrationally on existing frustration and anger. But the root of it all is the frustration and anger that comes from more mundane sources - namely unwelcome western interference.



SergeantX

"Dream a little dream or you can live a little dream. I'd rather live it, cause dreamers always chase but never get it." Aesop Rock

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 11:34 AM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
Quote:

Originally posted by InevitableBetrayal:
Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
IB, IB, no, that's exactly what it does mean. Your "old college try" only exasorbates the problem you're trying to fix. Killing terrorist will never stop terrorism. Ever. Terrorism feeds on what you advocate. Much as you may prefer a straight fight, a straight fight is not possible. You gotta wrap your head around this, we all do. There's an old Chinese saying: if we do not change direction, we will end up where we're headed.

HKCavalier



I'm going to ride right on past the part where I get pissed off at your condescension and just get on with the thing...



InevitableB, I sincerely apologize. I was talking to you the way I talk to people who I think are getting a little carried away. It is really tough not to sound a little condescending when you're trying to calm a body down, you know? Again, I apologize, lets just say it was the internet talking.

Quote:

My argument is simply this: 1) They will attack if we do nothing, 2) They will attack if we do something. 3) Doing something is better than doing nothing.

Your counter argument (for brevity's sake) is that the point isn't doing /nothing/ it's doing nothing that will provoke them, i.e. military action. So let's review the strategies that have been employed thus far.



I'm going to ride right on past the part where I get pissed off at your--sorry, I couldn't resist. Just kidding

Quote:

...What we have not yet tried is talking the threat away. This is sort of in the left-wing vein that "this war represents a failure to communicate" or some such, or "if we could only talk with them we'd find we have more in common than not". That's ridiculous. The terrorists have no interest in getting to know us better. They simply want to exterminate us. Again, there's no reasoning with that.

...BTW, HK, you keep saying I don't get it. Please enlighten me on your 5-point plan for eliminating terrorism. It's easy to say, "That's broke" but it's another matter to fix it.



I think you're right on the money except the "they" is not the terrorists, it's the much maligned Islamic world. As Signy said, many Islamic nations turn a blind eye to the terrorists in their midst, because they certainly have a profoundly serious beef with us, and to get back to my original post, so did the USSR. Couldn't we learn from the first cold war and start negotiating with opposing nations before they have the power to destroy us?

We need to seriously rethink our Middle East policies because the people who live and govern over there seriously want us to leave them alone. Iran has no dream of taking over the United States as the USSR surely did (I'm talking about the people and the real government, not fifty crazy guys hiding in a cave). Lets do everything we can so that the Islamic people reject whole-heartedly the purposes and methods of the terrorist extremists.

We go to Iran (for instance), we say, "Look, what will it take for you to sit down and talk seriously with us about ending terrorism on this planet. The world is getting too small for us to continue business as usual." They say, what? I don't know, "Get your bases out of Saudi Arabia" or something and so we say, "Okay, let's talk about that." And then we do something. We reduce our presence in the Middle East in a meaningful way. I'm not saying a unilateral withdrawl of all military force in the area, this isn't some pie in the sky liberal "let's give the terrorists therapy" canard, just a real and meaningful reduction that Iran (or whoever) can appreciate. Then we say, "Well, now, we've started a process in good faith, now here's what we ask of you, etc."

We need to change our image in the world. C'mon all you capitalists, we need to start selling something the market actually wants!


HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.



As always, a breath of fresh air in RWED.

I agree /in principle/ with the idea that we need to address some of the root causes of terrorism. Work with the countries that tacitly support it (e.g. Saudi Arabia).

But the only point at which that might be ineffective is the life-style issue. Bases in Saudi isn't the only problem they have with us. It's the much broader issue of our culture that concerns me. The Islamic fundamentalists will not be placated by mere military withdrawal, because their horror comes from what they perceive to be our morally bankrupt lifestyle. We;re infidels and in their logic we've got to die. It's hard to reason with that. Not to mention that they aren't solely state funded which means that if one nation (e.g. Saudi Arabia) cracks down, they'll simply pack up and move elsewhere (e.g. as from Sudan to Afghanistan).

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 11:38 AM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by SergeantX:
Quote:

Originally posted by InevitableBetrayal:
My argument is simply this: 1) They will attack if we do nothing, 2) They will attack if we do something. 3) Doing something is better than doing nothing.



Your argument is broken. (Doesn't make sense)

Niether 1 nor 2 is acceptable as a factual premise, and 3 depends entirely on what something means.

The something we're doing now is making the problem much worse, so in relation to that, doing nothing is preferable. If we'd done nothing in the first place,(for example, let's that say we didn't build permanent military bases the middle east, and we didn't invade countries at the drop of a hat there and we didn't attempt to force our values and ideals on their culture) I doubt we'd be in this situation.

The notion that Islam is driving the hatred of the United States is nonsense. The leaders of Fundamentalist Islam (which is a very small minority in the whole of the religion) use religion in the same way our leaders do. They use it as an excuse for people to act irrationally on existing frustration and anger. But the root of it all is the frustration and anger that comes from more mundane sources - namely unwelcome western interference.



SergeantX

"Dream a little dream or you can live a little dream. I'd rather live it, cause dreamers always chase but never get it." Aesop Rock



Disagree.

Also, I know I've got a formal falacy in my argument. But I'm not going for logical validity, but just attempting to describe my thought process. I've neither the time nor interest to frame that in a logically air-tight syllogism. So sorry. I'm not picking apart anyone else's logic. Don't start in on mine.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 11:46 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by piratejenny:
orginally posted by inevitablebetrayal

Quote:

My argument is simply this: 1) They will attack if we do nothing, 2) They will attack if we do something. 3) Doing something is better than doing nothing.



I have to disagree with this for the sake of sanity. If someone nukes us..in your opinion we should nuke them back ..thats just madness, because then everyone will be bombing eachother.



PirateJenny, welcome to my thread! I must honor you with having been the inspiration for my first post. I read over in another thread, and you've been kind enough to restate here, your belief that a nuclear strike against this country is inevitable. I thought, oh no, not Jenny too! So I started a a thread with the hope that folks might talk about whether they believed a nuclear attack was inevitable or not. 'Cause I really don't think it is. Ah well, best laid plans...

Quote:

...sometimes I think we Americans really need a bomb dropped on us so that we can experience the true horror of such actions I think if we did we wouldn't hear opinions like these.


"You ever been shot? You oughta be shot. Or stabbed. Lose a leg. To be a surgeon, y'know? Know what kinda pain you're dealing with. They make psychiatrists get psychoanalyzed before they can get certified, but they don't make a surgeon get cut on. Does that seem right to you?"

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 11:49 AM

SERGEANTX


Quote:

Originally posted by InevitableBetrayal:
Disagree.

Also, I know I've got a formal falacy in my argument. But I'm not going for logical validity, but just attempting to describe my thought process. I've neither the time nor interest to frame that in a logically air-tight syllogism. So sorry. I'm not picking apart anyone else's logic. Don't start in on mine.


Fair enough. I don't want to go down that road either. I was just having a little fun with the BDH quotes. Seriously, my point was just that doing nothing can sometimes be as productive, if not moreso, than doing something. Dong ma?

SergeantX

"Dream a little dream or you can live a little dream. I'd rather live it, cause dreamers always chase but never get it." Aesop Rock

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 11:56 AM

SIMONWHO


Actually that little theory is very similar to what we call "politicians logic" in that if you present any politician with a problem and a possible cause of action, they will take it on the logic that:

a) this situation is terrible
b) we must do something
c) this is something
d) ergo we must do this.

But let's look at it from a slightly different perspective. July 1988, London is struck by a dirty bomb and the IRA takes responsibility. Do you think the British government should:

a) track down precisely those responsible and go through proper procedures

or

b) nuke Dublin and Boston?

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 12:04 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

But the only point at which that might be ineffective is the life-style issue. Bases in Saudi isn't the only problem they have with us. It's the much broader issue of our culture that concerns me. The Islamic fundamentalists will not be placated by mere military withdrawal, because their horror comes from what they perceive to be our morally bankrupt lifestyle. We're infidels and in their logic we've got to die. It's hard to reason with that. Not to mention that they aren't solely state funded which means that if one nation (e.g. Saudi Arabia) cracks down, they'll simply pack up and move elsewhere (e.g. as from Sudan to Afghanistan).
There are many rationales for terrorism, and not all terrorists are unreasonable "lifestyle/ religious" fanatics. The Palestinians just want their houses and their land back. The Sunni Arab Iraqi insurgents want control of the Iraqi government again (not possible) and their foreign helpers want US withdrawal from Iraq (possible). And don't forget that we armed the Taliban to the teeth in our fight against the USSR, so even WE are guilty of fostering terrorism! Lumping "them" all into one category makes the problem insolvable.

I agree that they're not solely state-funded. Afghanistan is basically a narco state; the warlords prolly get a lot of their funding that way. (And BTW- for some strange reason, although we officially support Karzai, our $$ went to the warloards. Go figure.)

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 12:08 PM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by HKCavalier:
So I started a a thread with the hope that folks might talk about whether they believed a nuclear attack was inevitable or not. 'Cause I really don't think it is. Ah well, best laid plans...



I, for one, don't think that a nuclear bombing in this country is inevitable. There's just no data on which to make that assessment.

I do, on the other hand, think that it's only a matter of time before there's another terrorist attack here for 2 reasons: 1) they're still pissed off at us, and 2) they've done it before (there's precedent).

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 12:11 PM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by SergeantX:
Seriously, my point was just that doing nothing can sometimes be as productive, if not moreso, than doing something. Dong ma?



Seems to me we all agree that terrorism is bad. Where we seem to have disagreement is 1) the root causes, and 2) what we should do about it.

Is that a pretty fair summary?

Oh, also, it seems that there's a fair amount of concensus that nuking something isn't the answer.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 12:49 PM

PIRATEJENNY


Quote:

I read over in another thread, and you've been kind enough to restate here, your belief that a nuclear strike against this country is inevitable. I thought, oh no, not Jenny too! So I started a a thread with the hope that folks might talk about whether they believed a nuclear attack was inevitable or not. 'Cause I really don't think it is. Ah well, best laid plans...



at the rate we are going, I do feel that its inevitiable. our policies and our actions are only leading to a tragic outcome, unfortuntly its going to be tragic for us.

we aren't doing anything to foster peace and goodwill, with the middle east, china and even the former soviet union, all of these nations can probably and will benifit from taking us down a few notchs if not outright They each maybe motivated by diffrent agendas but they all have a stake in seeing it happen. maybe I'm just jaded but I don't think so , not based on what I've observed. I don't see any actions on the part of our current government to make changes that would bring an end to the choas, if anything it seems they are doing their best to keep it going.

It doesn't take a brainiac to know hate only breeds more hate, violence breeds more hate and violence. even people who didnot have anything against us now do, because we've invaded their country and forcing our polices on them. These people may not have the technology or the sophistication to do anything right at the moment, but they've got something even more powerful, they have the motivation the will and the determination to hurt and destroy us. Its an all consuming passion and if someone wants something bad enough believe in something strong enough its going to happen..thats the law of nature!!

you can only bully someone for so long before they fight back and kick your arse!!

you can only hit a dog so many times before he bites you.

our time is running out..fast!!! thats the way I see it, its only a matter of time call it Karma..but its coming.

I don't want us to get bombed or attack, but when it happens I think part of me will feel like in someway we all deserve it because we see with our own eyes whats happening and we do nothing to stop it to prevent it, we close our eyes go on about our daily life, ignore whats happening or live in outright denial pumping ourselves up with moral superiority and self-rightiousness hanging on to our attitudes with all our might and not evolving to the changes thats happening in a forever changing world, because were scared, because its easier to go along then to do anything we make excuses for our governments actions because we don't really believe we can do anything or make a diffrence

we've set ourselves on path and there is no turning back, the question now is what are we going to and what can we do.

I don't have any solutions but I know that bombing people isn't the answer that surely will just make things worse for everyone in the longrun..

maybe the solution is to start thinking about the longrun ....ask ourselves what kind of future do we want to live in , do we want our children to live in, and take action to make that future happen!!!







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Thursday, July 21, 2005 1:26 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Thanks for bringing the discussion back on track. The header SHOULD have given me a clue! I don't think it is at all "inevitable". However, I also think it's realistic- even preferable- to talk about what we should do IF it should happen, even if that involves doing NOTHING except act in response mode (medical treatment, decontamination etc.) It's like any emergency - if you've thought it through and you've gone through the motions beforehand, you'll be able to respond thoughfully. Your friend has had a chance to explore his emotions with you before the event. That's a GOOD thing.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 1:39 PM

HKCAVALIER


Take heart, PirateJenny! Take a look at this speach here from Republican Congressman Ron Paul, from Texas, no less:

Quote:

Mr. Speaker, more than half of the American people now believe that the Iraqi war has made the U.S. less safe. This is a dramatic shift in sentiment from 2 years ago. Early support for the war reflected a hope for a safer America, and it was thought to be an appropriate response to the 9/11 attacks. The argument was that the enemy attacked us because of our freedom, our prosperity, and our way of life. It was further argued that it was important to engage the potential terrorists over there rather than here. Many bought this argument and supported the war. That is now changing.

It is virtually impossible to stop determined suicide bombers. Understanding why they sacrifice themselves is crucial to ending what appears to be senseless and irrational. But there is an explanation.

I, like many, have assumed that the driving force behind the suicide attacks was Islamic fundamentalism. Promise of instant entry into paradise as a reward for killing infidels seemed to explain the suicides, a concept that is foreign to our way of thinking. The world's expert on suicide terrorism has convinced me to rethink this simplistic explanation, that terrorism is merely an expression of religious extremism and resentment of a foreign culture.

Robert Pape, author of "Dying to Win," explains the strategic logic of suicide terrorism. Pape has collected a database of every suicide terrorist attack between 1980 and 2004, all 462 of them. His conclusions are enlightening and crucial to our understanding the true motivation behind the attacks against Western nations by Islamic terrorists. After his exhaustive study, Pape comes to some very important conclusions.

Religious beliefs are less important than supposed. For instance, the Tamil Tigers in Sri Lanka, a Marxist secular group, are the world's leader in suicide terrorism . The largest Islamic fundamentalist countries have not been responsible for any suicide terrorist attack. None have come from Iran or the Sudan. Until the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Iraq never had a suicide terrorist attack in all of its history. Between 1995 and 2004, the al Qaeda years, two-thirds of all attacks came from countries where the U.S. had troops stationed. Iraq's suicide missions today are carried out by Iraqi Sunnis and Saudis. Recall, 15 of the 19 participants in the 9/11 attacks were Saudis.

The clincher is this: the strongest motivation, according to Pape, is not religion but rather a desire "to compel modern democracies to withdraw military forces from the territory the terrorists view as their homeland."

The best news is that if stopping suicide terrorism is a goal we seek, a solution is available to us. Cease the occupation of foreign lands and the suicide missions will cease. Between 1982 and 1986, there were 41 suicide terrorist attacks in Lebanon. Once the U.S., the French, and Israel withdrew their forces from Lebanon, there were no more attacks. The reason the attacks stop, according to Pape, is that the Osama bin Ladens of the world no longer can inspire potential suicide terrorists despite their continued fanatical religious beliefs.

Pape is convinced after his extensive research that the longer and more extensive the occupation of Muslim territories, the greater the chance of more 9/11-type attacks on the U.S. He is convinced that the terrorists strategically are holding off hitting the U.S. at the present time in an effort to break up the coalition by hitting our European allies. He claims it is just a matter of time if our policies do not change.

It is time for us to consider a strategic reassessment of our policy of foreign interventionism, occupation, and nation-building. It is in our national interest to do so and in the interest of world peace.



http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2005/cr071405.htm



HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 1:42 PM

CHRISISALL


Nuke them before they Nuke you
Another quality home game from Butler Bros.

RoboChrisisall

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 2:01 PM

GINOBIFFARONI


" They hate us not for some specific thing we've done (at least, not originally for some specific thing), but because our way of life is an affront to Islam. "

What ? Thats a load of crap.

Do you want a list of reasons why US foreign policy in the region has made these people hate the US ? Don't be blind to the past

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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Thursday, July 21, 2005 2:11 PM

FINN MAC CUMHAL


Nuking Mecca would only be an effective retaliation against a nuclear strike on US soil if it was known that the Arabs were knowingly and willingly responsible for the attack and were able effect more such attacks. In that case, I would think that we would have no other choice but to strike somewhere in Saudi Arabia. Maybe not Mecca, but somewhere.

The problem is that Islamic Terrorism, unlike Nazism or Fascism or Japanese Imperialism, is a product of a culture that is unconfined to any region or group of states (even though certain states and regions are obviously more heavily infected with this culture). Most of the terrorist in the London attack were British citizens born in Britain. Nuclear weapons are weapons against states, not cultures, and as such they are very ineffective as an offensive tool in the war on terror. In order to attack Islamic Terrorism, one must attack the culture that breeds it.

Blowing up Mecca would probably kill quite a few terrorists, but it wouldn’t damage the culture of Islamic Terrorism, because they really don’t care whether Mecca gets blown up or not. The ruined, feudal Afghanistan, under the Taliban, was a perfect example of what the culture of Islamic Terrorism considered a perfect state. Blowing these people back to the stone-age is exactly what they want.

Now if you really want to strike fear into the heart of Islamic terrorists, then turn Iraq into a liberal democracy. That will do far more damage to Islamic Terrorism then nuking Mecca.

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

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 2:15 PM

RUE

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


I do see some type of terrorist attack on US soil as inevitable. Some gas, some fertilizer, it doesn't take much.

As to whether or not a nuke attack (probably dirty bomb as it's easier to do) on the US is 'inevitable' - I guess I wonder in what time frame 'inevitable' happens.

In the short-term I'd say no. The US does not have a large enough radical Muslim population to do that internally (though one well-connected radical Islamist could prove me wrong).

In terms of foreigners, they could enter the US and try to obtain materials, but they would probably not have enough of the right kind of contacts. And getting both the material AND personnel into the US would take a concerted and possibly repeated effort. Not that this CAN'T be done, but the difficulties multiply compared to conventional bombs.

So I see a nuclear strike on the US as a matter of opportunities. Opportunities go up with time and with the lack of a coordinated int'l effort.

As I mentioned before, from a security/defense perspective, terrorism can't be defeated on the battlefield, it can only be dealt with by international cooperation. The longer the world goes along without cooperation, the more opportunities there are for nuclear terrorists. With time, the more inevitable an attack like that becomes. OTOH, should the world change direction on terrorism, the less likely an attack.

And that is just from one perspective. Should the world be able to deal fairly with freedom-seeking groups, the motivation for the attacks would decrease.


Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 2:29 PM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by GinoBiffaroni:
" They hate us not for some specific thing we've done (at least, not originally for some specific thing), but because our way of life is an affront to Islam. "

What ? Thats a load of crap.



Now there's a compelling argument for you.

In one breath, you've lowered the whole tone of the discussion into the type of emotional slugfest that I hate so much about RWED. It's not enough to disagree--no, we have to insult and belittle each other.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 2:31 PM

SERGEANTX


Quote:

The clincher is this: the strongest motivation, according to Pape, is not religion but rather a desire "to compel modern democracies to withdraw military forces from the territory the terrorists view as their homeland."

Ron Paul is awesome. He's one Republican I'd truly love to see in the white house.

SergeantX

"Dream a little dream or you can live a little dream. I'd rather live it, cause dreamers always chase but never get it." Aesop Rock

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 2:33 PM

PERFESSERGEE


Quote:

Originally posted by InevitableBetrayal:
Quote:

Originally posted by perfessergee:
Killing all the terrorists (even though they may richly deserve it, and I confess that I personally find that it's a very tempting idea) just makes us as bad as they are.



Actually, I have to disagree on this point. The reason that you claim the moral high ground over terrorists is all in who you're visiting violence upon.

Terrorism, by its very nature, inflicts violence on the innocent (e.g. people on the underground, market-goers, people at work in an office building). These people are not a threat to the terrorists or their way of life. In military parlance, they are "non-combatants" and cannot be specifically targeted.

On the other hand, an individual who would visit violence upon your nation, its people or its military forces (e.g. terrorists) is fair game, because they are a threat. We enter into the "kill-or-be-killed" economy of combat.

Regardless of the propaganda that spins around the RWED, the U.S. military does not specifically target non-combatants. As a veteran of Afghanistan and Iraq I can assure you of that fact. And that is why we have the moral high ground on terrorists. Killing terrorists and killing civilians can't be considered as ethically equivalent. One is self-defense, one is murder.

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I wish I had a magical wish-granting plank.



IB, your point is well taken here. I was doing a poor job of expressing my thought, and I conflated the killing of individual terrorists (i.e., people who have in fact killed innocents to achieve their political goals, or who are an imminent threat of doing so) with less discriminating acts of violence such as bombing. I'll try to maintain the distinction in the future. But the problem remains that it's virtually impossible to kill the real terrorists in such a discriminating manner, and we do need to keep in mind the issue of how we would identify the real terrorists and what might constitute due process. Simply claiming someone is a terrorist and killing him/her doesn't really qualify for the moral high ground. So, we're left with the use of indiscriminate methods like the nuclear weapon idea (or any form of indiscriminate violence) that started this thread. I'm glad to see that so many people reject that approach.

But on a point of historical correctness, the US military has in the past deliberately targeted non-combatants (Dresden, Hiroshima, Nagasaki). Perhaps not recently, but it is not without precedent. I would hope that we don't follow that precedent.

perfessergee

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 2:48 PM

INEVITABLEBETRAYAL


Quote:

Originally posted by perfessergee:
Quote:

...the problem remains that it's virtually impossible to kill the real terrorists in such a discriminating manner, and we do need to keep in mind the issue of how we would identify the real terrorists and what might constitute due process. Simply claiming someone is a terrorist and killing him/her doesn't really qualify for the moral high ground.




Ooh. Point. (zero sarcasm, seriously) That is a sticky one. Again, this is why assymetric warfare is infinitely more irriatating than conventional warfare. No uniforms=difficulty IDing the bad guys. You can't just pop every guy carrying an AK. On the other hand, you never know if that cute little tyke is gonna role a concussion grenade under your Humvee...

See, here's where I make what I hope will be my final point of the evening (since I have class in 45 minutes): deep down, I'm afraid that nothing will work. Deep down I really feel that diplomacy will merely embolden terrorists and military action enrage them. The only path I see is to do everything they want and then seal the borders and cut off all contact with the world (which would tickle them pink, no doubt). Seriously, we're up against an enemy that's more committed winning than we are. Yikes.

Quote:

But on a point of historical correctness, the US military has in the past deliberately targeted non-combatants (Dresden, Hiroshima, Nagasaki). Perhaps not recently, but it is not without precedent. I would hope that we don't follow that precedent.

perfessergee



Point again. What I was referring to is that we are not now, to the best of my knowledge, doing any such thing. You ought to see the gyrations we go through in mission planning to prevent such things.

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 4:39 PM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by piratejenny:


I have to disagree with this for the sake of sanity. If someone nukes us..in your opinion we should nuke them back ..thats just madness, because then everyone will be bombing eachother.



Its not madness, its MAD'ness. Mutual Assured Destruction. Sounds wacky but that little idea kept the peace for what? Over fifty years. That and other ideas thought by liberals to be sure fire recipes for global destruction.

MAD, collective security, engagement, containment, cowboy diplomacy, military buildups...basically anything we tried that worked was opposed at some point by the liberals at some point or another.

H

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Thursday, July 21, 2005 4:58 PM

RUE

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


I'm just curious as to why hardly anybody seems to be making a case for actively preventing a nuclear attack in the first place (and I don't mean waving big sticks and taking up threatening poses).

It's a truism that people lose perspective when stressed. They focus on the acute rather than the essential. (Which might be your friend's problem, HK. Perhaps something's got him stressed and he's responding in crisis mode, which leads to a further loss of perspective. The problem with that is, once your nervous system is amped up, it can be hard to restore it to a neutral state.)

Perhaps instead of focusing on who's *ss to kick, when to kick it, exactly where to kick it, how to kick it and why to kick it; we could focus solving the problems in the first place that might lead to a situation where people would end up wanting to kick *ss.


Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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Friday, July 22, 2005 7:00 AM

HERO


Quote:

Originally posted by rue:
we could focus solving the problems in the first place that might lead to a situation where people would end up wanting to kick *ss.



Ah, the 'its all our fault' line of thought. I say there's too much understanding from the Democrats and not enough ass kicking. Thats why they keep getting their collective asses kicked in national elections.

They've lost nearly every race since 1994, including control of the House, Senate, Presidency, the majority of State legislatures and Governorships.

One good example is Howard Dean who urges us not to condem Osama Bin Laddin without a trial but demands we jail Karl Rove without one.

You want us to step back and solve the underlying problems. Problems that are the legacy of cold war, colonialism, corruption of international institutions and thousands of years of religeous conflict. And while your studying that, they are murdering innocent men, women, and children on the streets of our friends, allies, and brothers in arms and dreaming of the day they can do the same thing on every streetcorner in every town of our own country.

The only underlying issue now that needs solved is this: we are at war. War means fighting. Fighting means killing. And victory means killing them until they are all dead or they give up. We can address their other concerns at the peace table and in the history books when its over, but we should be dictating the terms: liberty, democracy, opportunity to our former enemies (just like we did for Germany and Japan). Because their terms: fear, death, intollerance, dispair; wont don't seem as desirable.

H

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Friday, July 22, 2005 9:24 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

...we are at war. War means fighting. Fighting means killing. And victory means killing them until they are all dead or they give up.
To some extent Hero is correct. Israel (with multi-B$ assist from the US) has stalled local terrorists to the point where Palestinians and their suporters no longer want to wipe Israel off the face of the earth, they merely want SOME of their land back. (Thanks to the Brits for setting up this conflict, and the Jews for immigrating far beyond the originally agreed-to limit) Of course, the Israelis have a totally militarized society and spend a large portion of their budget (and our aid) on "defense", and have engaged in a form of state-sponsored terror that even many Israelis aren't comfortable with.

So, could the USA reproduce this kind of success? It depends on how narrowly or how broadly you define "them". Every dictatorship in the world? Every dictatorship in the Mideast? Every nation that activley or tacitly supports internal and/or international terrorism? Or every nation that actively supports anti-USA terrorism? None of these are do-able. We simply don't have the military resources for this kind of response. We COULD use the nuclear option. But then China and Russia would wipe us off the face of the earth, to universal applause.

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Friday, July 22, 2005 9:55 AM

RUE

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


I spent quite a number of words on international security/defense cooperation to avert attacks. I specifically said the longer the world goes without that cooperation, the greater the chances of a nuclear attack on US soil. Improved relations with our allies to develop coordinated security is a must.

I also said that terrorism can't be defeated on the battlefield, which I think the US is finding out.

"there's too much understanding" If you are talking about actually knowing what's going on and what to do about it, there can never be 'too much understanding'.

But there are other aspects to the effort to combat international terrorism. Diplomatic efforts to address grievances against the US would ALSO be fruitful.

http://www.isim.nl/files/newsl_14/newsl_14-8.pdf
"... ultimately those strategies addressing and lessening the grievances and humiliations of populations that give rise to suicide attacks are required for their elimination. Support for suicide attacks is unlikely to diminish without tangible progress in achieving at least some of the fundamental goals ... "
http://www.jamestown.org/publications_details.php?volume_id=400&issue_
id=2975&article_id=2368050

While "Osama bin Laden (and others) ... seek no compromise, and will probably fight with hard power to the death", "... tens of millions of people who sympathize with bin Laden ... are likely open to the promise of soft-power alternatives ..."
And "study after study finds suicide terrorists and supporters to be more educated and economically well off than surrounding populations. They also tend to be well-adjusted in their families, liked by peers, and – according to interrogators – sincerely compassionate to those they see themselves helping. A report on The Sociology and Psychology of Terrorism used by the Central and Defense Intelligence Agencies (CIA and DIA) finds “no psychological attribute or personality distinctive of terrorists.”"
http://pewforum.org/news/display.php?NewsID=5035
"I have compiled the first complete database of every suicide terrorist attack around the world from 1980 to the beginning of 2004--315 completed suicide attacks by 462 suicide terrorists who killed themselves in order to kill others. The facts show that suicide terrorist attacks are not primarily an outgrowth of Islamic fundamentalism and are, almost always, part of an organized campaign to compel a modern democracy to withdraw military forces from territory that the terrorists consider home." In another extended quote, Robert A Pape, from "When Death is an Option: The strategic logic of suicide terrorism and how to defeat it", equates evolutionary survival not with freedom, but with control of the territory you think belongs to you. He indicates that is the driving force behind most suicide bombers.

So, do you not agree that preventing a nuclear attack on US soil is worth diplomatic effort?



Nearly everything I know I learned by the grace of others.

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