Iraqi Freedom

Discussion in 'Politics' started by dotslashfuture, Apr 4, 2003.

  1. Babak

    Babak

    Might want to track down the Iraqi attorney that risked his life and those of his family to tell the Marines about the POW Lynch. Although I doubt that words would elucidate how he feels better than his courageous actions.
     
    #81     Apr 5, 2003

  2. Db, I'm glad you're not going to get involved. Because if you can't see the difference between the Ottoman Empire and Iraq today then you're not going to have much value to add.
     
    #82     Apr 5, 2003

  3. Babak, how can you take one isolated (or even a dozen isolated) case of human compassion (which I have never suggested Iraqis are incapable of) and exptrapolate that to mean the Iraqis are just gonna love having an American military "presence" -- or "occupation", it amounts to the very same thing -- on their soil? How?
     
    #83     Apr 5, 2003

  4. Just how is occupation "much different" from presence Kymar?

    I was obviously overzealous in describing Arab resentment of American troops on their soil as "practically universal", so I apologise for that.

    However, the instances of acceptance you cite are different from the Iraq case because the troops present there did not spend weeks (and maybe months) bombing buildings, killing civillians (unintentionally, but it still builds resentment) and barking orders -- or "liberating" if you prefer -- prior to establishing their presence. A significant difference don't you think?

    And why does any suggestion that your policy could, or should be, different have to be described as seeking "utopia"?
     
    #84     Apr 5, 2003
  5. dbphoenix

    dbphoenix

    And where did I say I couldn't see the difference? :confused:

    Good example of why I'd rather not join this "debate".

    --Db
     
    #85     Apr 5, 2003
  6. It is only a debate when you have a debate moderator who can point out when one party is out of line, illogical, using inflamed language, bias, non sequiturs, logically fallacious arguments, strawman arguments, ad hominem arguments, etc.

    Here it is just a shouting match by those who have an axe to grind against the USA, those who are ultra right wing in their statements, and those like Kymar, DG, Babak and others who are simply, and can calmly employ the rational process to present a position, and then demonstrate the ability to argue from premise to conclusion, rather than argue from hate the Bush administration first and then gather anything in the world, logical or not, factual or not, to support that bias.

    It becomes a flame war at some point, as the more it becomes apparent that fact is overcoming conjecture in the current situation in Iraq, there is little else to do but flame or admit defeat.

    I suspect the handles like MSFE, Iceman and Alfonso will become martyrs for their cause and flame out in some spectacular, if unsuccessful display of anger, bitterness, powerlessness and hatred.
     
    #86     Apr 5, 2003

  7. You didn't say it. I inferred it because you sarcastically suggested that the Ottoman Empire was a good thing.

    Yes, what I said was a "flame", but then I regard your interjection that Kymar, Babak, dgabriel et al were making "great arguments" (!) as extraneous to the "debate" also. (And, it seems to me, not based on any examination of the arguments put forward at all.)
     
    #87     Apr 5, 2003

  8. Optional, here's a "flame" for you. It is YOU who has had every one of his "logical arguments" overturned, defeated and shown the door, yet still pretends he has some rational foundation to stand on.

    How about using some "rational process" moving from the premise to the conclusion that what I say is logically unsound, rather than deciding a priori that there is no way you will accept that your exalted leadership or beloved America might not be everything you go to sleep believing it is and thus smugly hiding behind the pretense of "ignoring" me.
     
    #88     Apr 5, 2003
  9. dbphoenix

    dbphoenix

    Did I? Hmmm. Where did I say that? :confused:

    And where did I say that? :confused:

    --Db
     
    #89     Apr 5, 2003
  10. msfe

    msfe

    re: Operation Iraqi Freedom

    As occupying powers, the US and Britain will have a legal obligation to secure the welfare of all Iraqis once the shooting stops. But allied forces that are already stretched thin, battle-weary and largely untrained in stabilisation, policing and humanitarian duties may be overwhelmed by this enormous task. There are just too few of them. In this immediate context, the idea of a retired US general, with baseball cap replacing pith helmet, calmly sitting down in Baghdad to sagely administer a united, grateful nation looks utterly absurd. Here is evidence of the final irresponsibility of the Rumsfeld plan. By minimising the number of troops on the ground, the US has maximised the chances of a rapid, chaotic descent into post-war mayhem
     
    #90     Apr 5, 2003