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boxman55
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« Reply #50 on: March 27, 2008, 09:59:39 PM »

Afghanistan and Iraq are and have always been havens for terrorists. Saddam was a mass murderer and a terrorist. A normal threat, as you say. I say doubtful more like a major timebomb. We took the fight to them as any normal right minded thinking country would after they have been attacked numerous times. Almost 100% of the country was for the US to go after the terrorists. Now because it became tougher, and 4000 solders are dead all you bleeding heart liberals take up the other side because it makes you "feel good" to say I am against the war now that, that is the popular way to think. No matter what kinda of name you call a terrorist, they are still that. With their ultimate goal to hurt the people of the USA. They have not attacked us since 9/11 can you explain that or maybe could it be because of our actions taken so far....Boxman
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« Reply #51 on: March 28, 2008, 09:47:46 AM »

Afghanistan and Iraq are and have always been havens for terrorists. Saddam was a mass murderer and a terrorist. A normal threat, as you say. I say doubtful more like a major timebomb. We took the fight to them as any normal right minded thinking country would after they have been attacked numerous times. Almost 100% of the country was for the US to go after the terrorists. Now because it became tougher, and 4000 solders are dead all you bleeding heart liberals take up the other side because it makes you "feel good" to say I am against the war now that, that is the popular way to think. No matter what kinda of name you call a terrorist, they are still that. With their ultimate goal to hurt the people of the USA. They have not attacked us since 9/11 can you explain that or maybe could it be because of our actions taken so far....Boxman

You're conflating two different things - Iraq and Afghanistan are two separate issues - particularly before we went in but even now. Sunni (Wahabi) Taliban, Shiite (current) Iraqi government, Baathist Sunni minority (previous) Iraqi government. Three totally different problems. Throwing them in all together is self defeating - we are defeating ourselves. It is not as if every American needs to understand the differences but certainly the people making decision on our behalf ought to be able to distinguish among the various groups - who all have very different ideas of how to organize the world.

I, like many people in 2002, swallowed hard and accepted we had to give the president the benefit of the doubt. He cynically took advantage of our desire to believe the person who holds his office. He betrayed my trust. That gives me no joy. AQ has not attacked us is a spurious justification - there is no way to know. It is clear that many more people would like to take a shot at us now because we went into Iraq. That will be true for the rest of Bush's grandchildren's lives (and all the other American kids) - they will be in more danger for as long as they live because he chose to go into Iraq.
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BigSky
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« Reply #52 on: March 28, 2008, 10:39:18 AM »

Hmm so in other words how many more 9/11's would it have taken bill before you deemed fighting terrorists necessary?

They're not all one big group of terrorists. If AQ had, god forbid, continued to attack us - " more 9/11's" in your words - it would have added zero to the reasons for attacking Iraq. You say " nor did I say he was involved with Al-Qaeda on 9/11" then why would additional 9/11s from AQ make attacking him a better idea?

Saddam was a normal threat. A normal danger. 9/11 did not change how dangerous he was. We stopped fighting the terrorists who attacked us when we went into Iraq.

Simply saying he was part of the same enemy or could be the same or I don't even know what you're saying anymore. AQ's actions did not make Saddam more of a danger. Before and after 9/11 Saddam was an normal danger in a dangerous world. Had AQ continued to somehow attack us Saddam would still have been a normal danger.

No one has said they are one big terrorist group.  Nor did anyone say anything about Al-Qaeda being the only one to commit more 9/11 style attacks.

Saddam a normal threat you claim.  Really now?  How many other countries tried to send homicide bombers to the US?  How many other countries tried to acquire smallpox to infect people and send to the US?  How many other countries tried to poison food and water supplies of  US troops in Saudi?   How many other countries tried time and time again to shoot down US jets enforcing resolutions?

You have a warped sense of reality if you think that constitutes a normal threat or danger.

This "normal" threat view you have of saddam is the very same EXACT view that was taken of Al-Qaeda as they committed one terrorist attack after another on the US.  That view resulted in 9/11!

For you to suggest we should have given this same approach to saddam and waited until he finally got lucky and committed his own 9/11 style attack before we acted is baffling. :o

AQ has not attacked us is a spurious justification - there is no way to know.

We do  know because history has shown us.

From 93-2001

93 WTC bombing
Bombing of USS Cole
Bombing of US Embassy in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania Embassy
Bombing of Kohbar Towers
Bombing of  US Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya
9/11-  Plane flown into Pentagon
9/11-2 planes flown into  2 WTC's
9/11-  Flight 93 deliberately crashed into the ground.




9/12/2001- 03/28/2008
.



« Last Edit: March 28, 2008, 10:55:46 AM by BigSky » Logged
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« Reply #53 on: March 28, 2008, 11:38:16 AM »

Claim: Iraq has consistently demonstrated its willingness to use force against the US through its firing on our planes patrolling the UN-established "no-fly zones."

Reality: The "no-fly zones" were never authorized by the United Nations, nor was their 12 year patrol by American and British fighter planes sanctioned by the United Nations. Under UN Security Council Resolution 688 (April, 1991), Iraq's repression of the Kurds and Shi'ites was condemned, but there was no authorization for "no-fly zones," much less airstrikes. The resolution only calls for member states to "contribute to humanitarian relief" in the Kurd and Shi'ite areas. Yet the US and British have been bombing Iraq in the "no-fly zones" for 12 years. While one can only condemn any country firing on our pilots, isn't the real argument whether we should continue to bomb Iraq relentlessly? Just since 1998, some 40,000 sorties have been flown over Iraq.

Claim: Iraq is an international sponsor of terrorism.


Reality: According to the latest edition of the State Department's Patterns of Global Terrorism, Iraq sponsors several minor Palestinian groups, the Mujahedin-e-Khalq (MEK), and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). None of these carries out attacks against the United States. As a matter of fact, the MEK (an Iranian organization located in Iraq) has enjoyed broad Congressional support over the years. According to last year's Patterns of Global Terrorism, Iraq has not been involved in terrorist activity against the West since 1993 - the alleged attempt against former President Bush.

Claim: Iraq tried to assassinate President Bush in 1993.

Reality: It is far from certain that Iraq was behind the attack. News reports at the time were skeptical about Kuwaiti assertions that the attack was planned by Iraq against former President Bush. Following is an interesting quote from Seymore Hersh's article from Nov. 1993:
Quote
    Three years ago, during Iraq's six-month occupation of Kuwait, there had been an outcry when a teen-age Kuwaiti girl testified eloquently and effectively before Congress about Iraqi atrocities involving newborn infants. The girl turned out to be the daughter of the Kuwaiti Ambassador to Washington, Sheikh Saud Nasir al-Sabah, and her account of Iraqi soldiers flinging babies out of incubators was challenged as exaggerated both by journalists and by human-rights groups. (Sheikh Saud was subsequently named Minister of Information in Kuwait, and he was the government official in charge of briefing the international press on the alleged assassination attempt against George Bush.) In a second incident, in August of 1991, Kuwait provoked a special session of the United Nations Security Council by claiming that twelve Iraqi vessels, including a speedboat, had been involved in an attempt to assault Bubiyan Island, long-disputed territory that was then under Kuwaiti control. The Security Council eventually concluded that, while the Iraqis had been provocative, there had been no Iraqi military raid, and that the Kuwaiti government knew there hadn't. What did take place was nothing more than a smuggler-versus-smuggler dispute over war booty in a nearby demilitarized zone that had emerged, after the Gulf War, as an illegal marketplace for alcohol, ammunition, and livestock.

This establishes that on several occasions Kuwait has lied about the threat from Iraq. Hersh goes on to point out in the article numerous other times the Kuwaitis lied to the US and the UN about Iraq. Here is another good quote from Hersh:

Quote
    The President was not alone in his caution. Janet Reno, the Attorney General, also had her doubts. "The A.G. remains skeptical of certain aspects of the case," a senior Justice Department official told me in late July, a month after the bombs were dropped on Baghdad...Two weeks later, what amounted to open warfare broke out among various factions in the government on the issue of who had done what in Kuwait. Someone gave a Boston Globe reporter access to a classified C.I.A. study that was highly skeptical of the Kuwaiti claims of an Iraqi assassination attempt. The study, prepared by the C.I.A.'s Counter Terrorism Center, suggested that Kuwait might have "cooked the books" on the alleged plot in an effort to play up the "continuing Iraqi threat" to Western interests in the Persian Gulf. Neither the Times nor the Post made any significant mention of the Globe dispatch, which had been written by a Washington correspondent named Paul Quinn-Judge, although the story cited specific paragraphs from the C.I.A. assessment. The two major American newspapers had been driven by their sources to the other side of the debate.

At the very least, the case against Iraq for the alleged bomb threat is not conclusive.

Claim: Saddam Hussein will use weapons of mass destruction against us - he has already used them against his own people (the Kurds in 1988 in the village of Halabja).


Reality: It is far from certain that Iraq used chemical weapons against the Kurds. It may be accepted as conventional wisdom in these times, but back when it was first claimed there was great skepticism. The evidence is far from conclusive. A 1990 study by the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College cast great doubts on the claim that Iraq used chemical weapons on the Kurds. Following are the two gassing incidents as described in the report:

    In September 1988, however - a month after the war (between Iran and Iraq) had ended - the State Department abruptly, and in what many viewed as a sensational manner, condemned Iraq for allegedly using chemicals against its Kurdish population. The incident cannot be understood without some background of Iraq's relations with the Kurds...throughout the war Iraq effectively faced two enemies - Iran and elements of its own Kurdish minority. Significant numbers of the Kurds had launched a revolt against Baghdad and in the process teamed up with Tehran. As soon as the war with Iran ended, Iraq announced its determination to crush the Kurdish insurrection. It sent Republican Guards to the Kurdish area, and in the course of the operation - according to the U.S. State Department - gas was used, with the result that numerous Kurdish civilians were killed. The Iraqi government denied that any such gassing had occurred. Nonetheless, Secretary of State Schultz stood by U.S. accusations, and the U.S. Congress, acting on its own, sought to impose economic sanctions on Baghdad as a violator of the Kurds' human rights.

    Having looked at all the evidence that was available to us, we find it impossible to confirm the State Department's claim that gas was used in this instance. To begin with, there were never any victims produced. International relief organizations who examined the Kurds - in Turkey where they had gone for asylum - failed to discover any. Nor were there ever any found inside Iraq. The claim rests solely on testimony of the Kurds who had crossed the border into Turkey, where they were interviewed by staffers of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee...

    It appears that in seeking to punish Iraq, the Congress was influenced by another incident that occurred five months earlier in another Iraqi-Kurdish city, Halabjah. In March 1988, the Kurds at Halabjah were bombarded with chemical weapons, producing many deaths. Photographs of the Kurdish victims were widely disseminated in the international media. Iraq was blamed for the Halabjah attack, even though it was subsequently brought out that Iran too had used chemicals in this operation and it seemed likely that it was the Iranian bombardment that had actually killed the Kurds.
    Thus, in our view, the Congress acted more on the basis of emotionalism than factual information, and without sufficient thought for the adverse diplomatic effects of its action.

Claim: Iraq must be attacked because it has ignored UN Security Council resolutions - these resolutions must be backed up by the use of force.


Reality: Iraq is but one of the many countries that have not complied with UN Security Council resolutions. In addition to the dozen or so resolutions currently being violated by Iraq, a conservative estimate reveals that there are an additional 91 Security Council resolutions by countries other than Iraq that are also currently being violated. Adding in older resolutions that were violated would mean easily more than 200 UN Security Council resolutions have been violated with total impunity. Countries currently in violation include: Israel, Turkey, Morocco, Croatia, Armenia, Russia, Sudan, Turkey-controlled Cyprus, India, Pakistan, Indonesia. None of these countries have been threatened with force over their violations.

Claim: Iraq has anthrax and other chemical and biological agents.


Reality: That may be true. However, according to UNSCOM's chief weapons inspector 90-95 percent of Iraq's chemical and biological weapons and capabilities were destroyed by 1998; those that remained have likely degraded in the intervening four years and are likely useless. A 1994 Senate Banking Committee hearing revealed some 74 shipments of deadly chemical and biological agents from the U.S. to Iraq in the 1980s. As one recent press report stated:

    One 1986 shipment from the Virginia-based American Type Culture Collection included three strains of anthrax, six strains of the bacteria that make botulinum toxin and three strains of the bacteria that cause gas gangrene. Iraq later admitted to the United Nations that it had made weapons out of all three...

The CDC, meanwhile, sent shipments of germs to the Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission and other agencies involved in Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs. It sent samples in 1986 of botulinum toxin and botulinum toxoid - used to make vaccines against botulinum toxin - directly to the Iraqi chemical and biological weapons complex at al-Muthanna, the records show.

These were sent while the United States was supporting Iraq covertly in its war against Iran. U.S. assistance to Iraq in that war also included covertly-delivered intelligence on Iranian troop movements and other assistance. This is just another example of our policy of interventionism in affairs that do not concern us - and how this interventionism nearly always ends up causing harm to the United States.

Claim: The president claimed last night that: "Iraq possesses ballistic missiles with a likely range of hundreds of miles; far enough to strike Saudi Arabia, Israel, Turkey and other nations in a region where more than 135,000 American civilians and service members live and work."


Reality: Then why is only Israel talking about the need for the U.S. to attack Iraq? None of the other countries seem concerned at all. Also, the fact that some 135,000 Americans in the area are under threat from these alleged missiles just makes the point that it is time to bring our troops home to defend our own country.

Claim: Iraq harbors al-Qaeda and other terrorists
.

Reality: The administration has claimed that some Al-Qaeda elements have been present in Northern Iraq. This is territory controlled by the Kurds - who are our allies - and is patrolled by U.S. and British fighter aircraft. Moreover, dozens of countries - including Iran and the United States - are said to have al-Qaeda members on their territory. Of the other terrorists allegedly harbored by Iraq, all are affiliated with Palestinian causes and do not attack the United States.

Claim: President Bush said in his speech on 7 October 2002: " Many people have asked how close Saddam Hussein is to developing a nuclear weapon. Well, we don't know exactly, and that's the problem..."

Reality: An admission of a lack of information is justification for an attack?


me: Who do you suppose laid all that out on the floor of the House in Speech before the US House of Representatives, October 8, 2002? Someone not intimidated by the cynical timing of the vote. Someone not brow beaten by the administration's despicable use of fear.

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BigSky
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« Reply #54 on: March 28, 2008, 02:50:59 PM »

Claim: Iraq has consistently demonstrated its willingness to use force against the US through its firing on our planes patrolling the UN-established "no-fly zones."

Reality: The "no-fly zones" were never authorized by the United Nations, nor was their 12 year patrol by American and British fighter planes sanctioned by the United Nations. Under UN Security Council Resolution 688 (April, 1991), Iraq's repression of the Kurds and Shi'ites was condemned, but there was no authorization for "no-fly zones," much less airstrikes. The resolution only calls for member states to "contribute to humanitarian relief" in the Kurd and Shi'ite areas. Yet the US and British have been bombing Iraq in the "no-fly zones" for 12 years. While one can only condemn any country firing on our pilots, isn't the real argument whether we should continue to bomb Iraq relentlessly? Just since 1998, some 40,000 sorties have been flown over Iraq.

UN authorized member states to use ANY MEANS NECESSARY TO ENFORCE RESOLUTIONS AGAINST Iraq.

As such it is illogical that member states needed to go back to the UN to get authorization to use any means necessary.





Claim: Iraq is an international sponsor of terrorism.[/b]

Reality: According to the latest edition of the State Department's Patterns of Global Terrorism, Iraq sponsors several minor Palestinian groups, the Mujahedin-e-Khalq (MEK), and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). None of these carries out attacks against the United States. As a matter of fact, the MEK (an Iranian organization located in Iraq) has enjoyed broad Congressional support over the years. According to last year's Patterns of Global Terrorism, Iraq has not been involved in terrorist activity against the West since 1993 - the alleged attempt against former President Bush.

Truth

Iraq was forbidden to support or contact ANY terrorist or terrorist group by the UN. 

Despite this he continued to do so.

Saddam Hussein’s dictatorship provided headquarters, operating bases, training camps, and other support to terrorist groups fighting the governments of neighboring Turkey and Iran, as well as to hard-line Palestinian groups.  Saddam Hussein gave safe haven to a Al-Qaeda member who participated in the 93 WTC bombing. 

All of which were violations of UN resolutions.


Claim: Iraq tried to assassinate President Bush in 1993.

Reality: It is far from certain that Iraq was behind the attack. News reports at the time were skeptical about Kuwaiti assertions that the attack was planned by Iraq against former President Bush. Following is an interesting quote from Seymore Hersh's article from Nov. 1993:

    Three years ago, during Iraq's six-month occupation of Kuwait, there had been an outcry when a teen-age Kuwaiti girl testified eloquently and effectively before Congress about Iraqi atrocities involving newborn infants. The girl turned out to be the daughter of the Kuwaiti Ambassador to Washington, Sheikh Saud Nasir al-Sabah, and her account of Iraqi soldiers flinging babies out of incubators was challenged as exaggerated both by journalists and by human-rights groups. (Sheikh Saud was subsequently named Minister of Information in Kuwait, and he was the government official in charge of briefing the international press on the alleged assassination attempt against George Bush.) In a second incident, in August of 1991, Kuwait provoked a special session of the United Nations Security Council by claiming that twelve Iraqi vessels, including a speedboat, had been involved in an attempt to assault Bubiyan Island, long-disputed territory that was then under Kuwaiti control. The Security Council eventually concluded that, while the Iraqis had been provocative, there had been no Iraqi military raid, and that the Kuwaiti government knew there hadn't. What did take place was nothing more than a smuggler-versus-smuggler dispute over war booty in a nearby demilitarized zone that had emerged, after the Gulf War, as an illegal marketplace for alcohol, ammunition, and livestock.

This establishes that on several occasions Kuwait has lied about the threat from Iraq. Hersh goes on to point out in the article numerous other times the Kuwaitis lied to the US and the UN about Iraq. Here is another good quote from Hersh:


   The President was not alone in his caution. Janet Reno, the Attorney General, also had her doubts. "The A.G. remains skeptical of certain aspects of the case," a senior Justice Department official told me in late July, a month after the bombs were dropped on Baghdad...Two weeks later, what amounted to open warfare broke out among various factions in the government on the issue of who had done what in Kuwait. Someone gave a Boston Globe reporter access to a classified C.I.A. study that was highly skeptical of the Kuwaiti claims of an Iraqi assassination attempt. The study, prepared by the C.I.A.'s Counter Terrorism Center, suggested that Kuwait might have "cooked the books" on the alleged plot in an effort to play up the "continuing Iraqi threat" to Western interests in the Persian Gulf. Neither the Times nor the Post made any significant mention of the Globe dispatch, which had been written by a Washington correspondent named Paul Quinn-Judge, although the story cited specific paragraphs from the C.I.A. assessment. The two major American newspapers had been driven by their sources to the other side of the debate.


At the very least, the case against Iraq for the alleged bomb threat is not conclusive.


Whom invaded whom without provocation and whom continually lied for 12+ years?

From declassified CIA report on the subject.

On 15 April 1993, a team of terrorists was arrested by Kuwaiti authorities for plotting to assassinate former President George Bush during an official visit to Kuwait City on the previous day.  The two leaders of the team confessed to Kuwaiti authorities and later to US investigators that they had been recruited: trained: and equipped with arms, explosives, and false passports by Iraqi intelligence agents based in Basra. Forensic tests conducted by US experts proves conclusively that the explosive devices were identical to others recovered before and after the Kuwait event and were known to have been manufactured by Iraq.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Around half a million Iraqi documents were captured by Coalition forces after the liberation of Kuwait and they serve to show the full extent of the repression. Among the documents can be found:

    * orders to execute owners of houses bearing anti-Iraqi slogans.

    * orders to kill on sight any civilian caught on the streets after curfew or anyone involved in any resistance activity.

    * orders to use machine guns, grenade launchers and flame throwers against civilian demonstrators.


14 people were convicted of the attempt on Bush Sr. 

The evidence was so convincing that President Clinton ordered missile strikes against Iraq as retaliation.



Claim: Saddam Hussein will use weapons of mass destruction against us - he has already used them against his own people (the Kurds in 1988 in the village of Halabja).

Ahem, It was the anti-war people who first brought this claim up as to why we should not hold saddam accountable.


Reality: It is far from certain that Iraq used chemical weapons against the Kurds. It may be accepted as conventional wisdom in these times, but back when it was first claimed there was great skepticism. The evidence is far from conclusive. A 1990 study by the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College cast great doubts on the claim that Iraq used chemical weapons on the Kurds. Following are the two gassing incidents as described in the report:

    In September 1988, however - a month after the war (between Iran and Iraq) had ended - the State Department abruptly, and in what many viewed as a sensational manner, condemned Iraq for allegedly using chemicals against its Kurdish population. The incident cannot be understood without some background of Iraq's relations with the Kurds...throughout the war Iraq effectively faced two enemies - Iran and elements of its own Kurdish minority. Significant numbers of the Kurds had launched a revolt against Baghdad and in the process teamed up with Tehran. As soon as the war with Iran ended, Iraq announced its determination to crush the Kurdish insurrection. It sent Republican Guards to the Kurdish area, and in the course of the operation - according to the U.S. State Department - gas was used, with the result that numerous Kurdish civilians were killed. The Iraqi government denied that any such gassing had occurred. Nonetheless, Secretary of State Schultz stood by U.S. accusations, and the U.S. Congress, acting on its own, sought to impose economic sanctions on Baghdad as a violator of the Kurds' human rights.

    Having looked at all the evidence that was available to us, we find it impossible to confirm the State Department's claim that gas was used in this instance. To begin with, there were never any victims produced. International relief organizations who examined the Kurds - in Turkey where they had gone for asylum - failed to discover any. Nor were there ever any found inside Iraq. The claim rests solely on testimony of the Kurds who had crossed the border into Turkey, where they were interviewed by staffers of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee...

    It appears that in seeking to punish Iraq, the Congress was influenced by another incident that occurred five months earlier in another Iraqi-Kurdish city, Halabjah. In March 1988, the Kurds at Halabjah were bombarded with chemical weapons, producing many deaths. Photographs of the Kurdish victims were widely disseminated in the international media. Iraq was blamed for the Halabjah attack, even though it was subsequently brought out that Iran too had used chemicals in this operation and it seemed likely that it was the Iranian bombardment that had actually killed the Kurds.
    Thus, in our view, the Congress acted more on the basis of emotionalism than factual information, and without sufficient thought for the adverse diplomatic effects of its action.

Eye witness's who survived attacks clearly identified Iraqi planes as those that had gassed the villages.

Of which one burn victim said:  "We saw the (Iraqi) planes come and use chemical bombs. I smelled something like insecticide."


Claim: Iraq must be attacked because it has ignored UN Security Council resolutions - these resolutions must be backed up by the use of force.

Reality: Iraq is but one of the many countries that have not complied with UN Security Council resolutions. In addition to the dozen or so resolutions currently being violated by Iraq, a conservative estimate reveals that there are an additional 91 Security Council resolutions by countries other than Iraq that are also currently being violated. Adding in older resolutions that were violated would mean easily more than 200 UN Security Council resolutions have been violated with total impunity. Countries currently in violation include: Israel, Turkey, Morocco, Croatia, Armenia, Russia, Sudan, Turkey-controlled Cyprus, India, Pakistan, Indonesia. None of these countries have been threatened with force over their violations.

Red herring.  Issue is Iraq, not what others may or may not have done.  Especially since Iraq was the one who invaded another country with provocation and tried to attack Saudi Arabia, and Israel.





Claim: Iraq harbors al-Qaeda and other terrorists[/b].

Reality: The administration has claimed that some Al-Qaeda elements have been present in Northern Iraq. This is territory controlled by the Kurds - who are our allies - and is patrolled by U.S. and British fighter aircraft. Moreover, dozens of countries - including Iran and the United States - are said to have al-Qaeda members on their territory. Of the other terrorists allegedly harbored by Iraq, all are affiliated with Palestinian causes and do not attack the United States.

Actual truth was that Iraq did in fact harbor Al-Qaeda that committed the 93 WTC bombing after he fled the US after the bombing.


Claim: President Bush said in his speech on 7 October 2002: " Many people have asked how close Saddam Hussein is to developing a nuclear weapon. Well, we don't know exactly, and that's the problem..."

Reality: An admission of a lack of information is justification for an attack?

Another red herring.  Numerous reasons were laid forth in the case for action in Iraq.  To try to point to this as being the only reason for action is disingenuous and repugnant to say the least


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« Reply #55 on: March 28, 2008, 03:44:13 PM »

Quote
me: Who do you suppose laid all that out on the floor of the House in Speech before the US House of Representatives, October 8, 2002? Someone not intimidated by the cynical timing of the vote. Someone not brow beaten by the administration's despicable use of fear.

You didn't even guess. That was in 2002. October 2002. By a Representative facing election (as were all Representatives). From Texas.
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« Reply #56 on: March 28, 2008, 06:37:06 PM »

Quote
me: Who do you suppose laid all that out on the floor of the House in Speech before the US House of Representatives, October 8, 2002? Someone not intimidated by the cynical timing of the vote. Someone not brow beaten by the administration's despicable use of fear.

You didn't even guess. That was in 2002. October 2002. By a Representative facing election (as were all Representatives). From Texas.

I didnt guess cause I give a sh*t less who it was.
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« Reply #57 on: April 11, 2008, 04:40:15 AM »

A little more fat to chew on. Is this really a concern or just propaganda?



http://edition.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/08/08/gingrich/index.html#cnnSTCVideo
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« Reply #58 on: April 11, 2008, 10:21:46 AM »

If we were to follow McCain/Gingrich's vision for a new Imperial era and 100 years occupation they'll keep taking swings at us until they connect. But we can change the framework. We can point where the root of the problem lies - not in Iraq. Not in Iran. But in Saudi Arabia. The money for those schools he talks about comes from Saudi Arabia not Iran or Iraq. The hijackers on 911 came from Saudi Arabia not Iran or Iraq. We have a President who literally kisses the Saudi leaders while they fund another generation of indoctrinated children.

The President of Iran is a figure head pointing to him as a threat is propaganda; there is no evidence that the Mullahs who control Iran are immune to world pressure and incentives. We had an excellent opportunity to continue to work with them in 2003. Iran was helping us in 2002 and offered us a deal in the build up to our going into Iraq - we're the ones who decided after our apparent ease in marching to Baghdad that we did not need to work with them.

The idea that we are in more danger today than we perceived in the 1950s is crazy. Not looking back with hindsight, but the view from the United States in the 50s was that we would have a nuclear exchange with the Soviet Union. I know that there were plenty of people going around at the time talking about loosing American cities (plural). There were serious proposals about how we had to spread out across the country instead of clustering in cities - to make it harder for the soviets to kill large groups of Americans. Robert Heinlein for one lectured that we must do this now to save ourselves before it is too late. We practiced duck and cover. We built a huge network of shelters. We prepared to be nuked.

We do not face a greater threat from Islam than we did from the Soviet Union. It's not even close. There is a threat. If we had spent the resources we flittered away in Iraq on nonproliferation and other non-sexy, boring but critically important work (http://obama.senate.gov/press/070628-obama_lugar_sec/) we'd be so much safer that it would not come up in foreign policy discussions. As soon as we have a Democratic administration (Democratic in the sense of both meanings) we can start to rebuild the alliances and institutions that can defuse the hatred the current administration has fueled.

Is this a real concern or propaganda? It's a little of both but the implied solution in Gingrich framework is unsustainable. We can not be an Imperial power. We can not fight the entire world. The current administration has made us much less safe by fueling the radicals, by proving their point. Pulling back from the precipice will take time but we can do it. If GIngrich was to run in October it would be a good thing - I can think of no other one thing that would do more to ensure strong Democratic majorities in 2009.
« Last Edit: April 11, 2008, 10:25:24 AM by Bill Peckham » Logged

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