It must be wonderful to have such amazing intelligence concerning the opinions of all those Iraqis. And it's really remarkable that your press is confirming it.Clocker said:I'm going based on what people tell me, not what I hear from the press. The press merely confirms what I'm hearing from real people I know. The Iraqi people are happy to get rid of Saddam and they are welcoming us because of the oppression they have been living under.
I guess you hadn't noticed that there's quite a few "corrupt dictatorships" about - many of them US allies. Unfortunately, we don't seem to have the resources (money) to go and beat them all up, let alone rebuild their shattered countries after they've had the crap bombed out of them.Many of you would have rathered for the Iraqi people to suffer and avoid interfering/dealing with the dealings of the 'soverign nation of Iraq' and their corrupt dictatorship.
Truly cerebral, Clocker. I salute you.You would have rathered that Saddam laugh in the face of the United Nations because they could not pull their fingers our of their asses long enough to smell what stinks in Iraq.
time said:It must be wonderful to have such amazing intelligence concerning the opinions of all those Iraqis. And it's really remarkable that your press is confirming it.
Clocker said:... think all those idiotic celebrities and defeatist politicians (as well as the French, Russians, Canadians, and everybody else who would rather just sit on the sidelines and let the people of Iraq suffer while they profit ...
The Giver said:Sour grapes anyone?
Time hit the nail on the head. U.S and U.K. will both give big money contracts to companies of their respective countries (especially those who financially supported the party on power) and in return, they'll get oil for cheap.time said:If the war alone costs $130 billion, how much will reconstruction cost? Or will the Iraqis have to pay for that with oil?
Apparently.Howell said:The Giver said:Sour grapes anyone?
OH. Is that how you make whine?
One of the several problems of your government is that it often guess or presumes, but seldom ask.Clocker said:my guess is that if you asked an Iraqi person if they would spend a little oil money for their liberation, they would glady pay up.
CougTek said:One of the several problems of your government is that it often guess or presumes, but seldom ask.Clocker said:my guess is that if you asked an Iraqi person if they would spend a little oil money for their liberation, they would glady pay up.
On the streets of Baghdad yesterday, it was Kabul, November 2001, all over again. Then, enthusiasts for the war on terror were in triumphalist mood as the Taliban regime was overthrown. The critics had been confounded, they insisted, kites were flying, music was playing again and women were throwing off their burqas.
Seventeen months later, such confidence looks grimly ironic. For most Afghans, "liberation" has meant the return of rival warlords, harsh repression, rampant lawlessness, widespread torture and Taliban-style policing of women. Meanwhile, guerilla attacks are mounting on United States troops, and the likelihood of credible elections next year appears to be close to zero.
More or less what I just said. There is some hope.In Baghdad and Basra, perhaps the cheering crowds have been a bit thinner on the ground than George Bush and Tony Blair might have hoped - and the looters and lynchers more numerous. But it would be extraordinary if many Iraqis didn't feel relief or euphoria at the prospect of an end to a brutal Government, 12 years of murderous sanctions and a merciless bombardment by the most powerful military machine in the world.
Afghanistan is not, of course, Iraq, though it is a salutary lesson to those who believe the overthrow of recalcitrant regimes is the way to defeat anti-Western terrorism. It would nevertheless be a mistake to confuse the present mood in Iraqi cities with enthusiasm for the foreign occupation now being imposed. Even Israel's invading troops were feted by south Lebanese Shiites in 1982 - only to be driven out by the Shiite Hezbollah resistance 18 years later.
Nor does the comparative ease with which US and British forces have bombed and blasted their way through Iraq in any way strengthen the case for their war of aggression, as some seem to have convinced themselves. Not even the smallest part of the anti-war argument rested on any illusion that a broken-backed Third World regime could win a set-piece military confrontation with the most technologically advanced fighting force in history. Rather, the surprise has been the extent of the resistance and bravery of many fighters, who have confronted tanks with AK-47 rifles and died in their thousands.
Excuse me while I add a little emphasis to this next bit.In reality, the course of the conflict has strengthened the case against a war supposedly launched to rid Iraq of "weapons of mass destruction" - but which has now morphed into a crusade for regime change because evidence for the original pretext has so embarrassingly not materialised.
(Tea? About that optimisim of yours....)Not only have US and British forces so far been unable to find the slightest evidence of Saddam Hussein's much-vaunted chemical or biological weapons. But the Iraqi regime's failure to use such weapons up to now, even at the point of its own destruction, suggests either that it doesn't possess any - at least in any usable form - or that it has decided their use would be militarily ineffective and politically counter-productive. Short of a last-ditch deployment in Tikrit or Mosul, the main pre-emptive pretext for war has already been exposed as a fraud.
And what cannot now be disguised, as US marines swagger around the Iraqi capital swathing toppled statues of Saddam with the Stars and Stripes and declaring "We own Baghdad", is the crudely colonial nature of this enterprise. Any day now, the pro-Israeli retired US general Jay Garner is due to take over the running of Iraq, with plans to replace the Iraqi dinar with the dollar, parcel out contracts to US companies and set the free-market parameters for the future "interim Iraqi administration".
Shashi Tharoor, the UN Under Secretary-General, warned the US against treating Iraq as "some sort of treasure chest to be divvied up", but the Pentagon, which is calling the shots, isn't listening. Its favoured Iraqi protege, Ahmed Chalabi - scion of the old Iraqi ruling class who last set foot in Baghdad 45 years ago - was flown into Nasiriyah by the Americans at the weekend and, almost unbelievably for someone convicted of fraud and embezzlement, is being lined up as an adviser to the finance ministry.
And as the Bush Administration hawks circle Syria and Iran, a powerful boost to nuclear proliferation and anti-Western terror attacks seems inevitable, offset only by the likelihood of a growing international mobilisation against the new messianic imperialism.
The risk must now be that we will all pay bitterly for the reckless arrogance of the US and British governments.
Dozer said:While there are those who have been liberated from the Saddam regime, there remain those that have been institutionalized under his rule (much like a prisoner), and there are those that are truly supportive of Saddam. Then there are those that have mixed feelings, happy to be out from under Saddam's rule, yet disturbed that it took foreign powers to make this happen, and a bit embarassed perhaps. Then there are those that will be downright angry about having foreigners invade and occupy their country. There will be those saddened by loss. Such is the result of many wars throughout history. It is never an easy road.
Dozer said:Having said this, I believe that majority of what I've read and seen seems to be genuine joy and excitement for being free of the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein. Was this worth cost? I believe so. And if you ask the majority of Iraqi citizens, I believe you would get the same response.
Victory, as shown throughout history, is never won without a price.
Tea said:It is a lot harder to win the peace than it is to win the war...
Tea said:Dozer said:While there are those who have been liberated from the Saddam regime, there remain those that have been institutionalized under his rule (much like a prisoner), and there are those that are truly supportive of Saddam. Then there are those that have mixed feelings, happy to be out from under Saddam's rule, yet disturbed that it took foreign powers to make this happen, and a bit embarassed perhaps. Then there are those that will be downright angry about having foreigners invade and occupy their country. There will be those saddened by loss. Such is the result of many wars throughout history. It is never an easy road.
I agree fully with this balanced, objective view, Dozer.
Tea said:Besidez, I'm only an ape and I can never remember which one'z Howell and which one's Clippy.
Howell said:For all those who say we don't get full reporting, I'd say you're right.
NY TIMES
Jake the Dog said:
Mercutio said:And I *still* want to know how all this works in to Al Queda.
So Québec is next?jtr1962 said:Mercutio said:And I *still* want to know how all this works in to Al Queda.
IRAQ
AL QUEDA
The connection is as clear as can be. :mrgrn:
Mercutio said:All the administration did was say over and over "Iraq is bad and will have nukes soon."... and people went along with it.