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"Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
This is from the Wall Street Journal's Editorial page: Opinion Journal
Revisionist History
Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked.
BY PETER WEHNER
Tuesday, May 23, 2006 12:01 a.m. EDT
"Iraqis can participate in three historic elections, pass the most liberal constitution in the Arab world, and form a unity government despite terrorist attacks and provocations. Yet for some critics of the president, these are minor matters. Like swallows to Capistrano, they keep returning to the same allegations--the president misled the country in order to justify the Iraq war; his administration pressured intelligence agencies to bias their judgments; Saddam Hussein turned out to be no threat since he didn't possess weapons of mass destruction; and helping democracy take root in the Middle East was a postwar rationalization. The problem with these charges is that they are false and can be shown to be so--and yet people continue to believe, and spread, them. Let me examine each in turn:
The president misled Americans to convince them to go to war. "There is no question [the Bush administration] misled the nation and led us into a quagmire in Iraq," according to Ted Kennedy. Jimmy Carter charged that on Iraq, "President Bush has not been honest with the American people." And Al Gore has said that an "abuse of the truth" characterized the administration's "march to war." These charges are themselves misleading, which explains why no independent body has found them credible. Most of the world was operating from essentially the same set of assumptions regarding Iraq's WMD capabilities. Important assumptions turned out wrong; but mistakenly relying on faulty intelligence is a world apart from lying about it.
Let's review what we know. The National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) is the intelligence community's authoritative written judgment on specific national-security issues. The 2002 NIE provided a key judgment: "Iraq has continued its [WMD] programs in defiance of U.N. resolutions and restrictions. Baghdad has chemical and biological weapons as well as missiles with ranges in excess of U.N. restrictions; if left unchecked, it probably will have a nuclear weapon during this decade."
Thanks to the bipartisan Silberman-Robb Commission, which investigated the causes of intelligence failures in the run-up to the war, we now know that the President's Daily Brief (PDB) and the Senior Executive Intelligence Brief "were, if anything, more alarmist and less nuanced than the NIE" (my emphasis). We also know that the intelligence in the PDB was not "markedly different" from that given to Congress. This helps explains why John Kerry, in voting to give the president the authority to use force, said, "I believe that a deadly arsenal of weapons of mass destruction in his hands is a threat, and a grave threat, to our security." It's why Sen. Kennedy said, "We have known for many years that Saddam Hussein is seeking and developing weapons of mass destruction." And it's why Hillary Clinton said in 2002, "In the four years since the inspectors, intelligence reports show that Saddam Hussein has worked to rebuild his chemical and biological weapons stock, his missile delivery capability and his nuclear program."
Beyond that, intelligence agencies from around the globe believed Saddam had WMD. Even foreign governments that opposed his removal from power believed Iraq had WMD: Just a few weeks before Operation Iraqi Freedom, Wolfgang Ischinger, German ambassador to the U.S., said, "I think all of our governments believe that Iraq has produced weapons of mass destruction and that we have to assume that they continue to have weapons of mass destruction."
In addition, no serious person would justify a war based on information he knows to be false and which would be shown to be false within months after the war concluded. It is not as if the WMD stockpile question was one that wasn't going to be answered for a century to come.
The Bush administration pressured intelligence agencies to bias their judgments. Earlier this year, Mr. Gore charged that "CIA analysts who strongly disagreed with the White House . . . found themselves under pressure at work and became fearful of losing promotions and salary increases." Sen. Kennedy charged that the administration "put pressure on intelligence officers to produce the desired intelligence and analysis."
This myth is shattered by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence's bipartisan Report on the U.S. Intelligence Community's Prewar Intelligence Assessments on Iraq. Among the findings: "The committee did not find any evidence that intelligence analysts changed their judgments as a result of political pressure, altered or produced intelligence products to conform with administration policy, or that anyone even attempted to coerce, influence or pressure analysts to do so." Silberman-Robb concluded the same, finding "no evidence of political pressure to influence the Intelligence Community's prewar assessments of Iraq's weapons programs. . . . Analysts universally asserted that in no instance did political pressure cause them to skew or alter any of their analytical judgments." What the report did find is that intelligence assessments on Iraq were "riddled with errors"; "most of the fundamental errors were made and communicated to policy makers well before the now-infamous NIE of October 2002, and were not corrected in the months between the NIE and the start of the war."
Because weapons of mass destruction stockpiles weren't found, Saddam posed no threat. Howard Dean declared Iraq "was not a danger to the United States." John Murtha asserted, "There was no threat to our national security." Max Cleland put it this way: "Iraq was no threat. We now know that. There are no weapons of mass destruction, no nuclear weapons programs." Yet while we did not find stockpiles of WMD in Iraq, what we did find was enough to alarm any sober-minded individual.
Upon his return from Iraq, weapons inspector David Kay, head of the Iraq Survey Group (ISG), told the Senate: "I actually think this may be one of those cases where [Iraq under Saddam Hussein] was even more dangerous than we thought." His statement when issuing the ISG progress report said: "We have discovered dozens of WMD-related program activities" that were part of "deliberate concealment efforts" that should have been declared to the U.N. And, he concluded, "Saddam, at least as judged by those scientists and other insiders who worked in his military-industrial programs, had not given up his aspirations and intentions to continue to acquire weapons of mass destruction."
Among the key findings of the September 2004 report by Charles Duelfer, who succeeded Mr. Kay as ISG head, are that Saddam was pursuing an aggressive strategy to subvert the Oil for Food Program and to bring down U.N. sanctions through illicit finance and procurement schemes; and that Saddam intended to resume WMD efforts once U.N. sanctions were eliminated. According to Mr. Duelfer, "the guiding theme for WMD was to sustain the intellectual capacity achieved over so many years at such a great cost and to be in a position to produce again with as short a lead time as possible. . . . Virtually no senior Iraqi believed that Saddam had forsaken WMD forever. Evidence suggests that, as resources became available and the constraints of sanctions decayed, there was a direct expansion of activity that would have the effect of supporting future WMD reconstitution."
Beyond this, Saddam's regime was one of the most sadistic and aggressive in modern history. It started a war against Iran and used mustard gas and nerve gas. A decade later Iraq invaded Kuwait. Iraq was a massively destabilizing force in the Middle East; so long as Saddam was in power, rivers of blood were sure to follow.
Promoting democracy in the Middle East is a postwar rationalization. "The president now says that the war is really about the spread of democracy in the Middle East. This effort at after-the-fact justification was only made necessary because the primary rationale was so sadly lacking in fact," according to Nancy Pelosi.
In fact, President Bush argued for democracy taking root in Iraq before the war began. To take just one example, he said in a speech on Feb. 26, 2003: "A liberated Iraq can show the power of freedom to transform that vital region, by bringing hope and progress into the lives of millions. America's interests in security, and America's belief in liberty, both lead in the same direction: to a free and peaceful Iraq. . . . The world has a clear interest in the spread of democratic values, because stable and free nations do not breed the ideologies of murder. They encourage the peaceful pursuit of a better life. And there are hopeful signs of a desire for freedom in the Middle East. . . . A new regime in Iraq would serve as a dramatic and inspiring example of freedom for other nations in the region."
The following day the New York Times editorialized: "President Bush sketched an expansive vision last night of what he expects to accomplish by a war in Iraq. . . . The idea of turning Iraq into a model democracy in the Arab world is one some members of the administration have been discussing for a long time."
These, then, are the urban legends we must counter, else falsehoods become conventional wisdom. And what a strange world it is: For many antiwar critics, the president is faulted for the war, and he, not the former dictator of Iraq, inspires rage. The liberator rather than the oppressor provokes hatred. It is as if we have stepped through the political looking glass, into a world turned upside down and inside out.
Mr. Wehner is deputy assistant to the president and director of the White House's Office of Strategic Initiatives."
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
ditto the gah, i didn't read the whole thing, but i think the problem with the war has been the lack of forsight of the withdrawl from iraq, and not the invasion itself...
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Agreed. This post definitely needs a Gah option.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Revisionist History
...well that bit is correct anyway
"Iraqis can participate in three historic elections, pass the most liberal constitution in the Arab world, and form a unity government despite terrorist attacks and provocations.
well you only have to see that to give it the big GAH .
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
"gah" the intellectual equivalent of answering an argument by farting.... :laugh4:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
"Iraqis can participate in three historic elections, pass the most liberal constitution in the Arab world, and form a unity government despite terrorist attacks and provocations."
The author's intellectual equivalent of having his head in the sand...
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Goodness, Pindar! You have destroyed the backroom leftist's argument with one article.
And all of it is true.
edit:Look! All the liberals can do is insult it without providing an actual argument!!!!!
Well done, friend. Well done. :2thumbsup:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Good piece, but about 18 months late.
Despite Mr. Wehner's efforts, public opinion has already adjudged that:
There were no WMD's.
Saddam was evil, but posed no immediate threat.
The Bush administration "rushed to judgement" in launching the invasion.
These viewpoints, however erroneous (and I believe they are) will persist and cannot be altered for the forseeable future. In time, historians will revise and re-evaluate things, probably concluding that Mr. Wehner is largely correct, but that will not occur for some time.
The Bush administration needed to be fighting this perception war with a full-court press a long time ago. Wish they'd booted Mac' a lot earlier -- apparently Snow can at least see the need to do something on this front.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pindar
"debunked" article ~:rolleyes:
sorry WSJ, there is utterly no question whatsoever that the Bush Administration lied about the threat saddam posed. also, the nightmare scenario was nothing like anything the bush administration talked up.
the WSJ's thesis, is "the Bush administration did nothing funny with the intelligence, and the intelligence apparatus of the US, through no fault of it's own, dramatically overestimated saddam's buildup." whenever anyone went past the "yes/no" executive summary... they encountered the problem the CIA analysts encountered writing the NIE. the information was weak, and at the same time it said it would be ridiculous to think that saddam had rearmed, there was a small undercurrent of, "he could have super advanced weapons from the future... because we can't prove otherwise". any suggestion (from the intelligence community repudiating the intelligence the bush administration built their war claims on) otherwise fell on deaf ears. the bush administration had heard what they wanted, and tenet knew that their truth had little bearing on the zealotry displayed by cheney, and the singlemindedness of w. bush. then on the "yeah, there weren't any WMD, but he wanted them" the small problem with that, is Iran and North Korea have ACTIVE programs.
op/ed pieces are no better than blogs.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Any chance of a reader's digest version released?
Oh and GAH
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
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Originally Posted by Divinus Arma
Goodness, Pindar! You have destroyed the backroom leftist's argument with one article.
And all of it is true.
edit:Look! All the liberals can do is insult it without providing an actual argument!!!!!
Well done, friend. Well done. :2thumbsup:
Here's some itty bitty things that he forgets to mention.
The media went form ............................................. to OMG SADDAM GOT WMD AND IS READY TO USE THEM. HE ALSO TRYING TO GET NUKES AND CAN FIRE THEM ON BRITAIN IN 45 MIN
when it comes to the WMD issue. Now, compare that to Iran and North-Korea.
Notice that this wasn't even a simple media focus from the US, this was letting Colin Powell presenting questionable (and later proven false) evidence as facts for the UN council.
Quote:
Originally Posted by the article
In fact, President Bush argued for democracy taking root in Iraq before the war began. To take just one example, he said in a speech on Feb. 26, 2003:
Quote:
Originally Posted by wiki
On February 15, 2003, as a response to the imminent invasion, the largest ever world-wide protests took place with 6-10 million people in over 60 countries around the world.
Notice the dates. At this point he had argued since October 2002 about those WMD in a way that made most of the world quite certain that Bush wanted war. Liberation of the Iraqi people was only formed as an issue when the war was emminent and then still only mostly as a positive side-effect.
Don't have time to debate this more atm, but if you want to I can go into this deeper.
Oh, I've never argued that Bush lied to the public. What I'm arguing is that Bush started the hole debacle in October 2002 with the full intention of ending the Saddam issue (aka removing Saddam) once and for all, fully aware that war was the most likely option, with a considerble margin, to accomplish that goal. As a natural consequence, all information gathered and released by the Bush administration was focused onto accomplish war. No need to step outside those boundries and lie if you don't have to.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pindar
This is from the Wall Street Journal's Editorial page: Opinion Journal
Revisionist History
Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked.
BY PETER WEHNER
Tuesday, May 23, 2006 12:01 a.m. EDT
Mr. Wehner is deputy assistant to the president and director of the White House's Office of Strategic Initiatives."
Is there any credible explanation of why British blood and treasure had to be spent to achieve this goal? If the White House wants freedom and democracy for Iraq, good on them, but why did we have to be involved? Blair certainly didn't say anything about freedom and democracy when he was justifying the war to Parliament in the vote before the invasion.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
That is a great article. I read the entire thing. :yes:
Of course it reads like it was written for the Wall Street Journal, if he wants mainstream America to believe it he would have to put it into a “People” or “Star” format with some beauty tips and Britney Spears baby references intermingled. Having George Clooney or Bono read it would also help.
Sometimes I think if you were to give a plate of food to some starving people and tell them it was from the Bush administration they would starve to death. The same starving people would say with their last dying breath that the bush administration was only trying to keep them alive to torture them, rape them, and to steal their oil.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
*sigh* Doesn't anyone remember that Saddam not only violated the Gulf War cease fire AND tried to kill a former U.S. President (via suicide bomber, aka: TERRORISM)? Just because some weak fool who was more concerned about getting his nob polished than foreign policy did nothing doesn't mean that we shouldn't hold Saddam accountable.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
So I guess Yesdachi's reply counts as another "Gah" vote.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lemur
So I guess Yesdachi's reply counts as another "Gah" vote.
I’d vote for GAH or Britney’s baby, they both make more sense than mainstream America’s inability to see past the hype.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by yesdachi
mainstream America’s inability to see past the hype.
And that was apparently the reason for all this WMD and "Saddam is linked to AQ" nonsense - to have "mainstream America" buy into the war.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
So Yesdachi, if I'm understanding your original "gah or britney's baby" post, everyone who disagrees with the Bush admin is either fixated on celebrity culture or an unthinking Bush-hater who would rather eat poison than admit Bush was right about anything. Am I getting you right, here?
I'm just not sure which camp I fall into. Besides the Gah camp, of course.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Article
"I believe that a deadly arsenal of weapons of mass destruction in his hands is a threat, and a grave threat, to our security."
Mr. Wehner is deputy assistant to the president and director of the White House's Office of Strategic Initiatives"
Just these two things from the article.
One: To actually threaten the US Saddam would have to get a clutch of ICBMs, and those things aren't exactly easy to hide, acquire or build. If you've ever seen one, those things are huge, and cost like you wouldn't believe. Plus, they are essentially more like a rocket than a missile. Now, he may be pouring a lot of his economy into the army and weapons, but nevertheless, just the infrastructure to actually threaten the US would be huge.
Two: now, now, you would't expect the deputy assistant to the president and director of the White House's Office of Strategic Initiatives to actually say something bad about his boss. He's a bearoucrat, his career depends on people above him, and telling they made a mistake would not be healthy (for his career, I mean, we're past those days when you could just kill the messanger).
Oh, and officialy, my answer is :gah:.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
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Originally Posted by Divinus Arma
Goodness, Pindar! You have destroyed the backroom leftist's argument with one article.
And all of it is true.
edit:Look! All the liberals can do is insult it without providing an actual argument!!!!!
It's obviously just well written propaganda.
"Mr. Wehner is deputy assistant to the president and director of the White House's Office of Strategic Initiatives."
What do you expect coming out of that. A bunch of former lawyers using misleading language.
It doesn't change the fact that Bush Administration lied and acted incompetently. They lied about the connection to Sept. 11, and they lied that Saddam had nukes, and soon that will cost America more lives than Sept.11 itself. It's true that Iraq is somewhat democratic now, but for how long? Once the US leaves, if it ever does, what makes you think they won't begin rigging elections again, or worse start a factional civil war that will completely destroy the place worse than it already is. And all this at what cost. All those lives for nothing. I think more than 10,000 innocent Iraqis are now dead from constant insurgency.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
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Originally Posted by Byzantine Prince
It's true that Iraq is somewhat democratic now.
As Fareed Zakaria said (I'm paraphrasing), "Iraq has a new government, but the question is how relevant it is outside the Green Zone."
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
What new does this article bring up? What new evidence it shows that would change the things Bush Government did? Maybe im loosing my skills to understand written english,becouse i dont see anything but a nicely written document to defend the Bush Administration.Words merely words.I say :gah:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pindar
Yet for some critics of the president, these are minor matters. Like swallows to Capistrano, they keep returning to the same allegations--the president misled the country in order to justify the Iraq war; his administration pressured intelligence agencies to bias their judgments; Saddam Hussein turned out to be no threat since he didn't possess weapons of mass destruction; and helping democracy take root in the Middle East was a postwar rationalization. The problem with these charges is that they are false and can be shown to be so--and yet people continue to believe, and spread, them. Let me examine each in turn:
Dear lord, you could feed all of Ghenghis Khan's cavalry for a decade on all those straw men.
Lets take just a few for starters: first, on the issue of whether the president misled the country into war:
The article cites the NIE, etc. What it neglects to mention is that the senate report on the 9/11 intelligence is only half complete. The second part, that deals with how the intelligence was used by the goverment, has not been written nor, apparently, even begun, because the Republicans who control the committee won't let it begin. You can read all about it here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senate_...igence_on_Iraq
To summarize: no independent report has ever been published on how Bush et al. used the intelligence. That's is the real charge here, strawmen notwithstanding.
One other fun note: the article actually tries to argue the following:
Quote:
In addition, no serious person would justify a war based on information he knows to be false and which would be shown to be false within months after the war concluded. It is not as if the WMD stockpile question was one that wasn't going to be answered for a century to come.
It's argument here is that Bush is a 'serious' intellect? How very persuasive.
BTW, Divinus, did you know that, whether intentionally or unintentionally, your signature is a virtual paraphrase of the theme from 'Team America: World Police'?
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
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Originally Posted by Hurin_Rules
Divinus, did you know that, whether intentionally or unintentionally, your signature is a virtual paraphrase of the theme from 'Team America: World Police'?
It's meant to be facetious and poke fun at my own political inclination, although beer and chicks are certainly worth fighting for.
I have actually never seen the movie.
I suppose if I were liberal my sig would look like this:
Liberal Champion
Hybrids. Tofu. Marijuana. Arbor Day. Gay Pride
Parades. Tie-Dye Shirts. Grown Men Crying.
These are the values that San Francisco was built on. We left the U.S.
for a reason. They can keep their SUVs and rifles.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
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Originally Posted by Ser Clegane
And that was apparently the reason for all this WMD and "Saddam is linked to AQ" nonsense - to have "mainstream America" buy into the war.
There were AQ links to Iraq and Iraq equals Saddam. However, there have been no known links to Saddam, AQ and the 911 attacks. AQ operated freely in Iraq and that means Saddam supported them, if he didn’t he would have made an effort to remove them. There is a connection to AQ, Iraq and Saddam and to think otherwise is nonsense.
I also think there were WMD’s in Iraq and that they were moved prior to our invasion. An invasion that was known about for weeks if not months before it happened. Is it soooo out of the realm of possibility that the WMD’s were moved? Like to Syria? That could certainly explain why they were not found in Iraq. There is practically as much evidence indicating that they were moved to Syria as there was that indicated they were in Iraq in the first place but for some reason “mainstream America’s inability to see past the hype” that bush lied to us has made it impossible for the masses to believe that there could have been other options than, found WMD in Iraq = Bush told truth & didn’t find WMD in Iraq = Bush Lied, lets hate him and everything he ever does period do not cross go do not collect $200 that’s it he is the antichrist done.
Id suggest that people take off their (patent pending) “bush lied glasses” and looked at things without the jaded hatred for the man and you might see that everything the administration has done, has not been wrong or a lie.
Could anyone answer the question… Could there have been WMD’s in Iraq that were moved prior to our invasion? The answer has to be yes. Were there? We may never know, but that doesn’t make it nonsense or bush a lier.
System check: I may be ranting. ~D I have written this last half quickly, I just received a call that my grandfather has been taken to the hospital, I am on my way there now. Please wish him well.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Vladimir
*sigh* Doesn't anyone remember that Saddam not only violated the Gulf War cease fire AND tried to kill a former U.S. President (via suicide bomber, aka: TERRORISM)? Just because some weak fool who was more concerned about getting his nob polished than foreign policy did nothing doesn't mean that we shouldn't hold Saddam accountable.
Why should it matter to Britain whether or not Saddam tried to kill a US president, or if Clinton was more interested in having his knob polished than foreign policy? Is there any credible reason why Britain should have been dragged into this venture?
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
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Originally Posted by Byzantine Prince
It doesn't change the fact that Bush Administration lied and acted incompetently. They lied about the connection to Sept. 11, and they lied that Saddam had nukes, and soon that will cost America more lives than Sept.11 itself. It's true that Iraq is somewhat democratic now, but for how long? Once the US leaves, if it ever does, what makes you think they won't begin rigging elections again, or worse start a factional civil war that will completely destroy the place worse than it already is. And all this at what cost. All those lives for nothing. I think more than 10,000 innocent Iraqis are now dead from constant insurgency.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Keba
Just these two things from the article.
One: To actually threaten the US Saddam would have to get a clutch of ICBMs, and those things aren't exactly easy to hide, acquire or build. If you've ever seen one, those things are huge, and cost like you wouldn't believe. Plus, they are essentially more like a rocket than a missile. Now, he may be pouring a lot of his economy into the army and weapons, but nevertheless, just the infrastructure to actually threaten the US would be huge.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kagemusha
What new does this article bring up? What new evidence it shows that would change the things Bush Government did? Maybe im loosing my skills to understand written english,becouse i dont see anything but a nicely written document to defend the Bush Administration.Words merely words.I say :gah:
Please note that my earlier post predicted these types of response. Mr. Wehner's belated attempts will fall on deaf ears and will have little or no relevance/effect in defending the President's efforts. To spend serious effort otherwise is wasting one's time.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Why does anyone want to defend this idiot of a president? It confounds me. :dizzy2:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
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Originally Posted by Pannonian Redux
Why should it matter to the U.S. whether or not Hitler tried to bomb and invade the Islands? Is there any credible reason why the U.S. should have been dragged into this venture?
Heh.
Cause we're allies bro. Because I like the British and I would fight for their interests almost as hard as I would fight for U.S. interests. Because I believe that Britain is the moral/ethical equivalent of the U.S. in foreign policy. Because I belive that the British are a fair and noble just-minded population. Because the success and happiness of the British people matters to me as an American personally. Because the success and security of the British people matter to us as a nation as well.
:2thumbsup:
:unitedstates: :unitedkingdom:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Divinus Arma
Goodness, Pindar! You have destroyed the backroom leftist's argument with one article.
And all of it is true.
edit:Look! All the liberals can do is insult it without providing an actual argument!!!!!
Well done, friend. Well done. :2thumbsup:
I aim to please. :bow:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Seamus Fermanagh
Good piece, but about 18 months late.
Alas, too true.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Liberal Champion
Hybrids. Tofu. Marijuana. Arbor Day. Gay Pride
Parades. Tie-Dye Shirts. Grown Men Crying.
These are the values that San Francisco was built on. We left the U.S.
for a reason. They can keep their SUVs and rifles.
Conservative Champion.
Meat. Gasoline. Rifles. Harley Davidson. The U.S. Marine Corps. Beer. Chicks. The 4th of July.
These are the values that America was built on. We left Europe for a reason. They can keep their tiny cars and hairy women
This is really funny. :2thumbsup:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Divinus Arma
Heh.
Cause we're allies bro. Because I like the British and I would fight for their interests almost as hard as I would fight for U.S. interests. Because I believe that Britain is the moral/ethical equivalent of the U.S. in foreign policy. Because I belive that the British are a fair and noble just-minded population. Because the success and happiness of the British people matters to me as an American personally. Because the success and security of the British people matter to us as a nation as well.
:2thumbsup:
:unitedstates: :unitedkingdom:
I thought the US fought a war against Germany because Germany declared war on the US, or did I remember my history wrong? Did Iraq declare war on Britain before we went in?
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
I aim to please.
Well Pindar in that case make sure the rifle range is empty whenever you attend , as your attempt to justify things by posting crap is so completely off target that you are shooting uprange with your posted article .
pass the most liberal constitution in the Arab world
Errrr....the vast majority of voters in the referrendum had no access to the final draft(that was put forward) of the proposed unfinished document , the constitution is still not passed as many of the major components can not be agreed upon, some of those componentsof the constitution that have been agreed upon are about as far from liberal as Mercury is to Pluto(even in the arab world) .
and form a unity government despite terrorist attacks and provocations.
Absolute bollox , for starters a government some ofwhose rather major constituents consist of parties (elected with an almost total majority in their constituancies) which have the primary policy of breaking up the nation cannot be described as a "unity government" .
Then of course you have the legal problems about the legitimacy of this "government" , you do remember the timeframe for a new government don't you (though by the rest of the rubbish posted perhaps your memory is rather bad) ?
You know little things about a full government being formed , a full cabinet being appointed , ALL by a certain date which has now passed , the outcome of a failure to achieve this would result in a new election would it not ?
So guess what ?
If you want democracy and the rule of law then perhaps you had better celebrate because it is time for more of thosehistoric elections as the failure to appoint the cabinet posts (in three of the most important ministries in a country which is racked by strife where those ministries are of a pivotal role ) means that the "government" as such does not exist .
Then more utter ballderdash
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
:laugh4: but mistakenly relying on faulty intelligence is a world apart from lying about it.
Rubbish . Saying that you have intelligence that strongly suggests something is not lying , saying that you know something as a fact , that you know its location as a fact and that your information is bulletproof is lying .
"I think all of our governments believe that Iraq has produced weapons of mass destruction and that we have to assume that they continue to have weapons of mass destruction."
Yep they all knew that they had produced WMDs , many of them had helped them produce them , many of them had helped them use them(sorry Kurds you were backing Iran so tough #### on the gassing) , but the question was did they still have them and were they still producing them:idea2: Hmmmmmm.....oh you have a German assumption there , great , what about the German statement that the evidence put forward was extremely unreliable ? you wouldn't want to mislead now would you Pindar ?
Now then , does that "we" relate to the German government (who had already told the US that the informationwas unreliable ) or to "all" the governments ? It cannot be the latter as many had publicly stated by that time that there was no evidence to support that assumption .:book:
In addition, no serious person would justify a war based on information he knows to be false and which would be shown to be false within months after the war concluded.
Oh dear , I suppose the author forgot about McNamara then , he knew the information for the Vietnam war was false and he knew that certain members of the military and legislature knew it was false , and it was shown to be false before the war STARTED .:oops:
It is not as if the WMD stockpile question was one that wasn't going to be answered for a century to come.
Well bugger me sideways , the arms inspectors have completed the reports and the US is no longer looking for WMDs .
Its a new century and no one even noticed , happy new century everyone :balloon2:
Analysts universally asserted that in no instance did political pressure cause them to skew or alter any of their analytical judgments
Where is that friend of the Tin-man ? he must be here somewhere , can anyone see him?
Ahem ......but , but , but , oh yes I knew it was there somewhere....wasn't the point that the politicials didn't schew or alter any of the analytical judgements , it was that they didn't present any of the anylytical judgements that ran contrary to their political view:laugh4: :laugh4: :laugh4: :laugh4: :laugh4: :no: :skull: really the result is lots of:skull: :skull: :skull:
Beyond this, Saddam's regime was one of the most sadistic and aggressive in modern history. It started a war against Iran and used mustard gas and nerve gas. A decade later Iraq invaded Kuwait. Iraq was a massively destabilizing force in the Middle East; so long as Saddam was in power, rivers of blood were sure to follow.
Now lets see , It started a war against Iran with foreign backing , it used foriegn supplied WMDs with foriegn assistance and backing , It invaded Kuwait because it didn't want to repay the money that had financed its foriegn backed wars. Foriegn backing is a massivly destabilizing force in the Middle-East , with or without Saddam rivers of blood are certainly flowing .
To take just one example, he said in a speech on Feb. 26, 2003:
Xrae to post the ful speech Pindar:laugh4: :laugh4: :laugh4: :laugh4:
So full of holes and contradictions to reality it would be completely laughable if the outcome wasn't such a ballsup .:furious3:
The president misled Americans to convince them to go to war.
Wow something in the article that is true , but the author is trying to debunk the truth ??????
NO WMDs , NO links to Al-Qaida, NO links to 9-11 , NO threat to America . But hey Saddam was linked to terrorists , terrorists who many decades ago attacked America , terrorists who the US government are now trying to re open their offices and allow their fundraising in the United States , terrorists whose "intelligence" assesment of Iran the US has recently put forward :juggle2:
So Pindar , in summary , I believe that the arguement that you have put forward would be described (in strictly legalese terms) as a pile of rotten tripe .:2thumbsup:
Or alternatively......GAH
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Re : "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pindar
For many antiwar critics, the president is faulted for the war, and he, not the former dictator of Iraq, inspires rage. The liberator rather than the oppressor provokes hatred.
Sorry, but however gah the reasons for going to war may have been, the above is true. Whatever my criticisms, I will not condemn the war on moral grounds.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Beyond this, Saddam's regime was one of the most sadistic and aggressive in modern history. It started a war against Iran
. . . with US support.
The real terror has been in Sudan and Uganda. The US could have really done something positive there. Too bad those two nations don't have oil.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Scurvy
ditto the gah, i didn't read the whole thing, but i think the problem with the war has been the lack of forsight of the withdrawl from iraq, and not the invasion itself...
Not having a withdraw plan and not not revealing one to your enemies are two every different things. :book:
Quote:
Rubbish . Saying that you have intelligence that strongly suggests something is not lying , saying that you know something as a fact , that you know its location as a fact and that your information is bulletproof is lying .
:inquisitive:
That would require the knowledge that your information was never bulletproof to begin with, and would therefore constitue lying about the first part anyways. :dizzy2:
It was the CIA that made these reports. They make themselves out to be perfect (and they are the closest thing to it in this world). But does it equate to the president lying? I hardly think so.
Quote:
wasn't the point that the politicials didn't schew or alter any of the analytical judgements , it was that they didn't present any of the anylytical judgements that ran contrary to their political view :laugh4: :laugh4: :laugh4: really the result is lots of :skull: :skull:
are you taking about the Vietnam war? or the war now?
3000 dead in 4 years is a miracle. Not too many wars with so many men have had so few casualties. :book:
Quote:
Now lets see , It started a war against Iran with foreign backing , it used foriegn supplied WMDs with foriegn assistance and backing , It invaded Kuwait because it didn't want to repay the money that had financed its foriegn backed wars. Foriegn backing is a massivly destabilizing force in the Middle-East , with or without Saddam rivers of blood are certainly flowing .
There was a little something called the COLD WAR going on. Every country had foreign backing, one way or another. But blame the men that write his checks? I disagree. The man that pulls the trigger is guilty in my opinion.
Either case, the way Europe drew up the middle-east after ww2 was what really caused things to go bad. Just like they did Africa. Dividing ethnic groups over imaginary lines doesn't see to work too well. :wall:
Quote:
NO WMDs , NO links to Al-Qaida, NO links to 9-11 , NO threat to America.
Who is the US fighting right now I might ask?
Quote:
terrorists who the US government are now trying to re open their offices and allow their fundraising in the United States , terrorists whose "intelligence" assesment of Iran the US has recently put forward
and I thought you suported facts and NOT assumptions. :juggle2:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tachikaze
. . . with US support.
The real terror has been in Sudan and Uganda. The US could have really done something positive there. Too bad those two nations don't have oil.
Yeah, because Somalia and Bosnia/Kosovo had tons of oil...
oops...:idea2:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
That would require the knowledge that your information was never bulletproof to begin with, and would therefore constitue lying about the first part anyways.
Since they did not know that the evidence was bulletproof then to describe it as such is a lie .
It was the CIA that made these reports. They make themselves out to be perfect (and they are the closest thing to it in this world). But does it equate to the president lying? I hardly think so.
Did the CIA say they were facts or did the administration say they were facts ? The intelligence was estimates ,the administration presented them as facts , that is not just misleading , it is a lie .
See any difference Makkayo ....
we think he has WMDs
We Know he has WMDs
We think we might know where they are
We know where they are
4 of these 15 bunkers may contain active chemical weapons
these 4 bunkers in this compound contain active chemical weapons
we think there may be evidence that shows there may be mobile chemical laboritories
we know he has at least 7 mobile chemical weapons labs
we believe that someone who may or may not be an officer in the Iraqi army met someone who is linked to Al-Qaida
We have bulletproof evidence of links between Saddam and Al-Qaida .
The administration lied , no two ways about it .
3000 dead in 4 years is a miracle. Not too many wars with so many men have had so few casualties.
Oh sorry I didn't realise that the natives don't count as casualties , silly me:dizzy2: Then again , perhaps you can explain to those Brits here on this forum about the findings that link the London bombings to the Iraq invasion , I suppose they must have just been misleading eh , but I suppose they don't count as only servicemen count as casualties , not some poor bugger sitting on a bus .
There was a little something called the COLD WAR going on. Every country had foreign backing, one way or another. But blame the men that write his checks? I disagree. The man that pulls the trigger is guilty in my opinion.
Try that in a court of law , the man that pays the man to pull the trigger is also guilty .
Either case, the way Europe drew up the middle-east after ww2 was what really caused things to go bad. ????????????
Europe drew up the middle east after WW2?????yeah right :dizzy2:
and I thought you suported facts and NOT assumptions.
Hmmmmmm....facts, would you like to see the motions put forward to allow the MEK to re-open its US offices , to unfreeze its assets , to resume fundraising ?
Though I must admit that it did have me a bit stumped when I initially read the intelligence assessment that was put out , the "political"wing of the terrorist organisation has changed its name to get around the proscribed terrorist organisation blacklist :laugh4: :laugh4: :laugh4:
Who is the US fighting right now I might ask?
Well thats a hard one , there are so many groups out there now fighting in Iraq that it is really quite hard to see who is who , but I suppose that is what happens when some muppet invites every nutter in the world to "bring it on":oops:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
3000 dead in 4 years is a miracle. Not too many wars with so many men have had so few casualties.
Check your numbers. There have been about 2,472 dead in four years, plus 17774 wounded. That adds up to 20246 casualties in four years.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Seamus Fermanagh
Please note that my earlier post predicted these types of response. Mr. Wehner's belated attempts will fall on deaf ears and will have little or no relevance/effect in defending the President's efforts. To spend serious effort otherwise is wasting one's time.
I came to the conclusion awhile ago that the views on the run up to war have pretty much totally crystalized on both sides and that debating it with the usual suspects amounts to little more than shouting into the wind.
However, I did think it was a pretty well-written article, but unfortunately it was pretty much just preaching to the choir- as the only consideration it seems to have gotten from the other side thus far is a cacophony of 'gah's.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Xiahou
cacophony of 'gah's.
'Gah' is euphonic...
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by yesdachi
There were AQ links to Iraq and Iraq equals Saddam. However, there have been no known links to Saddam, AQ and the 911 attacks. AQ operated freely in Iraq and that means Saddam supported them, if he didn’t he would have made an effort to remove them. There is a connection to AQ, Iraq and Saddam and to think otherwise is nonsense.
Really? I thought the only known group with AQ contacts operated in the north of Iraq, among the Kurds and in the No-Fly Zone. That would be a place Saddam had little to no control over after the 1991 war. Besides, a dictator who doesn't practice his religion and even keeps a christian in his government is certainly not a first pick for AQ support. :oops:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Xiahou
However, I did think it was a pretty well-written article, but unfortunately it was pretty much just preaching to the choir- as the only consideration it seems to have gotten from the other side thus far is a cacophony of 'gah's.
And the choir loves to hear it, clearly. You write "cacophony of gahs" as though it were a bad thing. Pindar made his bed on the Gah issue, and I'm sure he'd be the first to say that we should all accept the consequences of our actions. He's doomed to quite a few more Gahs before this plays out.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
I came to the conclusion awhile ago that the views on the run up to war have pretty much totally crystalized
And until such time as evidence emerges that the reasons given for going to war were true then they shall remain crystalised .
However, I did think it was a pretty well-written article
I agree , a wonderful piece of writing , sadly it is counter factual ,so a well written piece of rubbish .
unfortunately it was pretty much just preaching to the choir
Yep preaching to the choir who either don't understand that they have been sold the wrong song book , or who have convinced themselves that it is the right songbook they have and it is the orchestra who are playing the wrong tune despite repeated reminders from the conductor that it is the choir getting it wrong .
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
as the only consideration it seems to have gotten from the other side thus far is a cacophony of 'gah's.
Agreed.
Quote:
Did the CIA say they were facts or did the administration say they were facts ? The intelligence was estimates ,the administration presented them as facts , that is not just misleading , it is a lie .
Nothing is absolutly rock-solid in the intelligence area, but all things considered, that's the best they can offer. The only way they can have rock-solid evidence for the administation is to actually show these WMD's to the president. (exagerating.... but my point is made)
So assuming that absolutly perfect evidence is rarer than dimonds, does it mean that it amounts to nothing? Should you never use it if it's only 99% certain?
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
:inquisitive: For a thread of this title and this claim it sure carries a lot of myth. :dizzy2:
...man. Look at all the Partisans. Cheney must be proud. :shame:
Whatever. I'm just a passer-by. Y'all, please continue.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
My Thoughts:
Q: Did Bush lie?
A: Well, yes and no. He presented reasonable possabilities as facts, which could have been true and then would have been seen as facts. The fact that the slime got it wrong is their fault, they should have worked harder to convince the administration he didn't have weapons if that was what they thought. Added to all this I would point out there is a lot of desert out there and we bombed a lot of places. It was generally though before this that he did have some form of WMD. I would also point out that incerting agents into Arab countries is natoriously difficult so this would have been a question of analysis, and by the way, other countries do have their own Intelligence services and no one presented contrary evidence that I remember.
Q: Was it wrong to go to war to rmove Saddam?
A: No, it was wrong to wait ten years.
Q: Has reconstruction been handled badly?
A: Yes, and that fault lies with the Americans, I'm sorry guys but you suck at policing. The disbanding of the Army, the Guard and the Police virtually ensured that the country would fall apart. Added to which the general heavyhandedness of American troops contributed greatly to the escalation in violence. Remember those Iraqies that got shot in that school in 2003? It looked bad on my TV screen in Devon, it looked worse on the ground.
Q: Are we still at war?
A: No, this is a Police Action, and until the Administrations treat it as such it is going to drag on.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
My short comment.
I did and do support the war in Iraq and Polish involvement in the affair despite some obvious crappy mistakes with handling the situation after the fall of Saddam.
I think we will fully realise how important it was in around 10 years from now and I expect it will be seen as Reagan policy against the SU - remember anti-war protesters in the 80s in Europe especially in France and Germany ?
I don't care about WMDs - true that everyone thought there is some including all the government of the opposing countries and that the whole stuff about Saddam beeing able to attack the UK and so on. Simply the decision has to be made and I only regret it wasn't 10 years earlier.
Let me now describe a situation from the past.
Country A reacts to the agressive policy of its neigbour state B by enlarging garrison in the enclave it has according to an international treaty - partly to test the world's public opinion reactions.
The regime from the country B attacks this move by calling it irresponsible behaviour putting at risk its peaceful policy. The media from the USA, France and the UK atack country A calling it warmonger. Country B is known as an opressive dictatorship ruled by an extremist party yet public opinion calls country A the danger to the world's peaceful existence.
In secret country A proposes one of the most democratic countries of the world state C to launch a pre-emptive strike at country B to remove its extremist government, but state C refuses.
After that country A signs a non-agression pact with country B.
In 1939 country B - Germany - attacks country A - Poland - and while state C ( France) does nothing it overruns it with the help of the Soviet Union...
What is the lesson - pacifists can easily be used by totalitarian regimes so be careful with anti-war protesters they can be blind fools because noone likes to fight but sometimes it is necessary.:book:
Regards Cegorach
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wigferth Ironwall
My Thoughts:
Q: Did Bush lie?
A: Well, yes and no. He presented reasonable possabilities as facts, which could have been true and then would have been seen as facts. The fact that the slime got it wrong is their fault, they should have worked harder to convince the administration he didn't have weapons if that was what they thought. Added to all this I would point out there is a lot of desert out there and we bombed a lot of places. It was generally though before this that he did have some form of WMD. I would also point out that incerting agents into Arab countries is natoriously difficult so this would have been a question of analysis, and by the way, other countries do have their own Intelligence services and no one presented contrary evidence that I remember.
Q: Was it wrong to go to war to rmove Saddam?
A: No, it was wrong to wait ten years.
Q: Has reconstruction been handled badly?
A: Yes, and that fault lies with the Americans, I'm sorry guys but you suck at policing. The disbanding of the Army, the Guard and the Police virtually ensured that the country would fall apart. Added to which the general heavyhandedness of American troops contributed greatly to the escalation in violence. Remember those Iraqies that got shot in that school in 2003? It looked bad on my TV screen in Devon, it looked worse on the ground.
Q: Are we still at war?
A: No, this is a Police Action, and until the Administrations treat it as such it is going to drag on.
my thoughts exactly :2thumbsup: :2thumbsup: :2thumbsup: :2thumbsup:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Xiahou
I came to the conclusion awhile ago that the views on the run up to war have pretty much totally crystalized on both sides and that debating it with the usual suspects amounts to little more than shouting into the wind.
However, I did think it was a pretty well-written article, but unfortunately it was pretty much just preaching to the choir- as the only consideration it seems to have gotten from the other side thus far is a cacophony of 'gah's.
When persuasion is no longer an issue the rhetorical thrust is meant to demonstrate the opposition's loyalty to position over substance, invective above argument and poor fashion sense. The bulk of the response has been illustrative.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lemur
And the choir loves to hear it, clearly. You write "cacophony of gahs" as though it were a bad thing. Pindar made his bed on the Gah issue, and I'm sure he'd be the first to say that we should all accept the consequences of our actions. He's doomed to quite a few more Gahs before this plays out.
The gaggle is its own refutation.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pindar
When persuasion is no longer an issue the rhetorical thrust is meant to demonstrate the opposition's loyalty to position over substance, invective above argument and poor fashion sense. The bulk of the response has been illustrative.
So do you have an explanation of why Britain needed to be involved in the Iraq war? British interests weren't being threatened, the Iraqi army wasn't going outside its borders, none of Britain's allies were being attacked or threatened with attack. If you want to spend American blood and money to bring "freedom and democracy" to Iraq that's your prerogative, but what has it to do with us?
Before you drag up the WW2 comparisons, I seem to remember the US did not enter the war against Germany until Germany declared war on the US. Did Iraq declare war on Britain while I wasn't looking?
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by cegorach1
What is the lesson - pacifists can easily be used by totalitarian regimes so be careful with anti-war protesters they can be blind fools because noone likes to fight but sometimes it is necessary.:book:
What really annoys me about this war is, firstly it has been pushed forward in a way that makes you certain that the war wasn't for humanitarian issues and then use humanitarian issues as an issue on why you should support it. It's been about WMD, war on terror etc.
If he had given a statement that felt honest then it would have been different.
Secondly, this "well you didn't support the war, but now we're here so support it now" attitude. While it does have some merit, it still gives the feeling that someone starts something tough and troublesome against your will, then handles it so poorly that you'll need to help before everything goes to hell. Then the person in question will babble about your help being a proof of how right they were and if things goes well, they will take all the credit. After all it was they who had this "brilliant" idea.
I mean sure I'll help but only after I've tied him up up-side down, naked on the top of a flagpost with a big flag waving thanking him for his efforts and brilliant ideas.
BTW, I will make a great effort trying to fix the Iraqi mess if I can publically "thank" Bush for his efforts and brilliant ideas. :2thumbsup:
It might require some impopular ideas to be suggested to the senate and the US people, but I'll do my very best to fix that mess. :book:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hurin Rules
One other fun note: the article actually tries to argue the following:
Quote:
Originally Posted by the Article
In addition, no serious person would justify a war based on information he knows to be false and which would be shown to be false within months after the war concluded. It is not as if the WMD stockpile question was one that wasn't going to be answered for a century to come.
It's argument here is that Bush is a 'serious' intellect? How very persuasive.
Well, he can't argue that Bush (and his administration) is a brilliant intellect as then this intellect might have predicted that the current situation would occur. :laugh4:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pannonian
So do you have an explanation of why Britain needed to be involved in the Iraq war? British interests weren't being threatened, the Iraqi army wasn't going outside its borders, none of Britain's allies were being attacked or threatened with attack. If you want to spend American blood and money to bring "freedom and democracy" to Iraq that's your prerogative, but what has it to do with us?
That is a question for Mr. Blair the PM of Britian not for a citizen of the United States. It seems someone is attempting to blame the United States for the actions of their own government. As it has been demonstrated some become so entrenched in their idealogue postion that the actual events become clouded in the rhetoric.
Quote:
Before you drag up the WW2 comparisons, I seem to remember the US did not enter the war against Germany until Germany declared war on the US. Did Iraq declare war on Britain while I wasn't looking?
It seems the comparision has alreadly been made. Shall we discuss lend lease and the aspects of help that the United States provided to Britian before the United States declared war on Germany?
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Nothing is absolutly rock-solid in the intelligence area, but all things considered, that's the best they can offer. The only way they can have rock-solid evidence for the administation is to actually show these WMD's to the president. (exagerating.... but my point is made)
Yes your point is made makkayo , nothing is rock solid in intelligence , but when it is presented as rock solid by politicains when it is not rock solid it amounts to a lie
Oh sorry the point you were trying to make is not the point that you made ...try again:no:
When persuasion is no longer an issue the rhetorical thrust is meant to demonstrate the opposition's loyalty to position over substance, invective above argument and poor fashion sense. The bulk of the response has been illustrative.
Since your position Pindar , is entirely lacking in substance and your response has been very illustrative of your postion as someone who was sold a lemon as a pinapple and still insists that it is indeed a pineapple .despite the wealth of contradictory evidence calls into question your level of intelligence and your degree in stubborn refusal to face reality
Face it Pindar your false belief that your government (amongst others) did not mislead or downright lie to you over this conflict just does not float .
You do understand the meaning of the words "myth" and "debunked" don't you ?
Perhaps not :no:
Oh yeah , I almost forgot ....GAH:2thumbsup:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tribesman
Since your position Pindar , is entirely lacking in substance and your response has been very illustrative of your postion as someone who was sold a lemon as a pinapple and still insists that it is indeed a pineapple .despite the wealth of contradictory evidence calls into question your level of intelligence and your degree in stubborn refusal to face reality
Face it Pindar your false belief that your government (amongst others) did not mislead or downright lie to you over this conflict just does not float .:
Wait, let me fix that for you....
Quote:
Since your position Tribesman , is entirely lacking in substance and your response has been very illustrative of your postion as someone who was sold a lemon as a pinapple and still insists that it is indeed a pineapple .despite the wealth of contradictory evidence calls into question your level of intelligence and your degree in stubborn refusal to face reality
Face it Tribesman your false belief that our government (amongst others) did not mislead or downright lie to you over this conflict just does not float .:
Much better. :dizzy2:
Nice use of a personal attack though. :no:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pannonian
So do you have an explanation of why Britain needed to be involved in the Iraq war? British interests weren't being threatened, the Iraqi army wasn't going outside its borders, none of Britain's allies were being attacked or threatened with attack. If you want to spend American blood and money to bring "freedom and democracy" to Iraq that's your prerogative, but what has it to do with us?
Before you drag up the WW2 comparisons, I seem to remember the US did not enter the war against Germany until Germany declared war on the US. Did Iraq declare war on Britain while I wasn't looking?
Hello,
Need? Each nation is amenable for its own decisions. Whatever need Britain opted for, and its attending rationale, is up to the British to decide. Ultimately, it is a question of values and interests. Such must be determined by each state alone.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Redleg
That is a question for Mr. Blair the PM of Britian not for a citizen of the United States. It seems someone is attempting to blame the United States for the actions of their own government. As it has been demonstrated some become so entrenched in their idealogue postion that the actual events become clouded in the rhetoric.
It means that the points in Pindar's OP have nothing to do with the war. We do not care about how things are going in Iraq. We expect to go to war to defend ourselves (Falklands), defend our interests, or defend our allies (Afghanistan). We will also go to war in service of the UN (Kuwait), or to prevent genocide (Kosovo). None of these reasons apply to Iraq, so don't use the OP as an argument to support the Iraq affair - they're irrelevant. Why the hell are we in Iraq in the first place?
Quote:
It seems the comparision has alreadly been made. Shall we discuss lend lease and the aspects of help that the United States provided to Britian before the United States declared war on Germany?
Didn't we pay for that? I seem to remember Churchill, Eden, Keynes and whoever else was involved going nuts over the price demanded, with Churchill accusing Roosevelt to his face (as recounted by Elliott Roosevelt) of dismantling the British empire as the price of American aid. According to Elliott, that was precisely FDR's aim.
BTW, do you want to discuss the exchanges of technology during WW2, with particular reference to Tube Alloys and the McMahon Act? Most estimates of the technology "exchanges" (which only ever went west across the Atlantic, never east) value them at at least several times the total Lend Lease and Marshall Aid combined.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
An interesting response Xiahou , entirely lacking in substance , no surprise really as the position which you take has absolutely nothing to back it up .
But hey I am sure you are really enjoying sucking on that lemon , it is not bitter at all is it ?
If you really close you mind I am sure it could almost seem like a real genuine juicy pineapple .
But its still a lemon .:stupido:
BTW if you want to change peoples statements then do it properly , you might want to alter that last line:oops: Face it Tribesman your false belief that our government (amongst others) did not mislead or downright lie to you over this conflict just does not float .: :laugh4: :laugh4: :laugh4: :2thumbsup:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by the Good Guys
When persuasion is no longer an issue the rhetorical thrust is meant to demonstrate the opposition's loyalty to position over substance, invective above argument and poor fashion sense. The bulk of the response has been illustrative.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tribesman
Since your position Pindar , is entirely lacking in substance and your response has been very illustrative of your postion as someone who was sold a lemon as a pinapple and still insists that it is indeed a pineapple .despite the wealth of contradictory evidence calls into question your level of intelligence and your degree in stubborn refusal to face reality
Face it Pindar your false belief that your government (amongst others) did not mislead or downright lie to you over this conflict just does not float .
You do understand the meaning of the words "myth" and "debunked" don't you ?
Perhaps not
Oh yeah , I almost forgot ....GAH
This is not an argument. It does illustrate my point nicely however. Well done.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
This is not an argument. It does illustrate my point nicely however. Well done.
Pindar , you have no point and no arguements , facts speak for themselves .
You appear to be very delusional with your refusal to accept reality .
Its rather sad really .
Oh yeah ...... GAH
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Tribesman, don't even bother: you're just feeding the trolls.
It's not even worth a GAH!
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pannonian
It means that the points in Pindar's OP have nothing to do with the war. We do not care about how things are going in Iraq. We expect to go to war to defend ourselves (Falklands), defend our interests, or defend our allies (Afghanistan). We will also go to war in service of the UN (Kuwait), or to prevent genocide (Kosovo). None of these reasons apply to Iraq, so don't use the OP as an argument to support the Iraq affair - they're irrelevant. Why the hell are we in Iraq in the first place?
Different subjects there is not a correlation between what you initially stated and this position. You stated this So do you have an explanation of why Britain needed to be involved in the Iraq war? British interests weren't being threatened, the Iraqi army wasn't going outside its borders, none of Britain's allies were being attacked or threatened with attack. If you want to spend American blood and money to bring "freedom and democracy" to Iraq that's your prerogative, but what has it to do with us? That question is best addressed by a British citizen to the leadership of that nation.
You continue to miss the boat. An American citizen nor the American President can answer the question. The answer must come from your own government.
Quote:
Didn't we pay for that? I seem to remember Churchill, Eden, Keynes and whoever else was involved going nuts over the price demanded, with Churchill accusing Roosevelt to his face (as recounted by Elliott Roosevelt) of dismantling the British empire as the price of American aid. According to Elliott, that was precisely FDR's aim.
BTW, do you want to discuss the exchanges of technology during WW2, with particular reference to Tube Alloys and the McMahon Act? Most estimates of the technology "exchanges" (which only ever went west across the Atlantic, never east) value them at at least several times the total Lend Lease and Marshall Aid combined.
Lets see your point was not to compare with WW2, however I do see that you have fallen into the trap that you have laid for others.
There is no comparing WW2 to Iraq.
Unless one is willing to address appeasement and dictorships. Other then that all other comparisions are rather mote.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pindar
Hello,
Need? Each nation is amenable for its own decisions. Whatever need Britain opted for, and its attending rationale, is up to the British to decide. Ultimately, it is a question of values and interests. Such must be determined by each state alone.
So it's our fault we got conned into a war which was none of our business. Thanks for making it plain.
To further the parallel with WW2, perhaps Blair should send the bill for our soldiers to Washington, perhaps demand that New York State should be handed over in return for our deployment thus far.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
I always get a laugh out of the accusations of President Bush lied. Its rather humorous in a sad pathic way. Politicans by their very nature use colorful words to sell their agenda and their ideas.
However for those who think President Bush flat out lied - care to explain this report.
http://www.cia.gov/cia/reports/iraq_...y_Findings.pdf
Otherwise know as the Duefler Report...
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
It's not even worth a GAH!
I disagree Hurin , this "myth debunking" is worth loads of GAHGAHGAH or perhaps even GAH
Any time baseless bullexcrement is posted denying indisputable facts it is always worth a reply .~:cheers:
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Redleg
Different subjects there is not a correlation between what you initially stated and this position. You stated this So do you have an explanation of why Britain needed to be involved in the Iraq war? British interests weren't being threatened, the Iraqi army wasn't going outside its borders, none of Britain's allies were being attacked or threatened with attack. If you want to spend American blood and money to bring "freedom and democracy" to Iraq that's your prerogative, but what has it to do with us? That question is best addressed by a British citizen to the leadership of that nation.
You continue to miss the boat. An American citizen nor the American President can answer the question. The answer must come from your own government.
In which case Pindar's OP doesn't address the anti-war side in general, but only the US side. If his arguments suffice to demolish the American anti-Iraq war cause, it certainly does not do so for the British anti-war cause. Why the hell are we in Iraq? I don't mind sending troops when our allies are attacked or threatened, as with Afghanistan, but who was Iraq threatening?
Quote:
Lets see your point was not to compare with WW2, however I do see that you have fallen into the trap that you have laid for others.
There is no comparing WW2 to Iraq.
Unless one is willing to address appeasement and dictorships. Other then that all other comparisions are rather mote.
Appeasement of what? What was Iraq demanding that we were willing to appease? How is it possible to appease without there being any demands to appease?
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by The Good Guys
This is not an argument. It does illustrate my point nicely however. Well done.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tribesmen
Pindar , you have no point and no arguements , facts speak for themselves .
You appear to be very delusional with your refusal to accept reality .
Its rather sad really .
Oh yeah ...... GAH
This is not an argument either.
Actually, I did and do have a point. It was explained and you have illustrated it quite nicely. The arguments are found in the initial piece.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
However for those who think President Bush flat out lied - care to explain this report.
Hey Redleg , want to play a game ?
Take Georges speech from march 18 '03 and see haw many flat out lies you can spot~;)
Its a spreech about Iraq in case you didn't guess .
Have fun .:juggle2:
But of course , you know politicians lie don't you , its part of the job .
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Oh boy, it's happening again...:rolleyes:
And once again, nothing new is brought to the table.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pindar
The gaggle is its own refutation.
To which I wish you a hearty Gah. You may love your gaggle metaphor, but if you've ever tangled with an angry goose, you'll know how dangerous it can be. Prepare for prolonged pecking, lawyer.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Pannonian
So it's our fault we got conned into a war which was none of our business. Thanks for making it plain.
Thus does the sword of Damocles hang. Insofar as Britain is its own, then the burden of decision making is there.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
“The disbanding of the Army, the Guard and the Police virtually ensured that the country would fall apart.” Especially when they keep their weapons… Not it would have made a difference, because all at least the male population had and still have weapons in Iraq…
“Police Action”. That were the words of the French Government from 1954 to 1963 during the Algerian War for Independence. If it is a police action, put Police Officer in charge…:sweatdrop:
“remember anti-war protesters in the 80s in Europe especially in France and Germany”: Not true, President Mitterrand declared: “The Pacifists are in the West, but the SS20 (nuclear Tactical Missiles) are in the East”. Hardly against the deployment of the Pershing, was it?:laugh4:
“In 1939 country B - Germany - attacks country A - Poland - and while state C ( France) does nothing it overruns it with the help of the Soviet Union...”
Sorry I don’t understand. Is it a style exercise or you really thing it was what happened?
The reality was: In 1939 country B –Germany-, having signed a secret Pact with country D –Soviet Union- attack country A-Poland-. Against its own immediate interests, country C -France-, fulfilling its Treaty, in full agreement with country E –UK- declared war to Country B and paid 4 years of occupation because doing it.
“I always get a laugh out of the accusations of President Bush lied. Its rather humorous in a sad pathic way. Politicans by their very nature use colorful words to sell their agenda and their ideas.”
Yeap, and it is called politic. It was used before, and it will be. Is it moral? No. Do you lead a country, even a small one with morality? No. And I am sorry to say it, but to choose to follow a man knowing he lied is worst than the man who just achieved his goals, whatever they were/are…
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Some more thoughts from me.
1. Niether hardline position is entirely correct, there is an arguement on both sides, I suggest you all accept this, or else you are just trolling.
2. Bush is smarter than you think, what was the #1 complaint about Kerry?
3. The issue revolves around there being no weapons found. Let me ask you this: What if weapons had been found? Then the boot would be on the other foot, wouldn't it?
4. As I said before no one was able to provide intelligence that suggested Iraq didn't have weapons, in fact pretty much everyone thought he was hiding something, and he was. He was hiding the fact that he was only holding a pair of 2s. In 2002 the arguement wasn't about whether the weapons were there, it was only ever about what to do with them. As I said, the CIA is not the only slime in the world.
5. Personal attaks demonstate a lack of sound arguement, regardless of whether there is one or not, as do offensive smilies.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
“As I said before no one was able to provide intelligence that suggested Iraq didn't have weapons” It is difficult to prove I don’t have money. I can’t show the absence, the lack of. That is NOT a valid argument.
“Let me ask you this: What if weapons had been found?” Well, that is the bulk of the problem isn’t it? NO weapons has been found, therefore...
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tribesman
However for those who think President Bush flat out lied - care to explain this report.
Hey Redleg , want to play a game ?
Take Georges speech from march 18 '03 and see haw many flat out lies you can spot~;)
Its a spreech about Iraq in case you didn't guess .
Have fun .:juggle2:
But of course , you know politicians lie don't you , its part of the job .
You first. However provide supporting evidence on what the lie consists of and here is the kicker prove that the statement was a known lie before it was stated. Colorful adjectives used by the different adminstration folks can be indications that misleading information was included in the statement, but - only if one can prove that the overall statement was known to be false at the time that it was stated.
This is why there has been no serious call for impeachment - no clear cut lie can be proven given the information that is availiable. So all one has with calling many of the statements lies is thier own opinion and idealogue stance.
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Re: "Antiwar myths about Iraq, debunked"
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wigferth Ironwall
2. Bush is smarter than you think
For Hurin or Tribesman, evidence that anything aside from Bush's medula works would confirm this statement...and surprise them. They want him out of office only slightly less than they want Cheney in.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wigferth Ironwall
3. The issue revolves around there being no weapons found. Let me ask you this: What if weapons had been found? Then the boot would be on the other foot, wouldn't it?
Not at all. Critics of the Iraq invasion have always argued that: a) Iraq had no practical means of delivering such weapons even if they had existed, b) no way whatsoever to directly attack any of the partners in the 'coalition of the willing," aside from Kuwait and c) that the UN inspections teams would have found any significant WMD efforts and put the kabosh on them if given time to let the process work. Had weapons been found, therefore, Bush would not have been attacked as a liar, but would have been attacked as a fearmonger and imperialist. The presence of refined nuclear materials and/or nuclear weapons, and this threat alone, would have silenced criticism.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wigferth Ironwall
4. As I said before no one was able to provide intelligence that suggested Iraq didn't have weapons, in fact pretty much everyone thought he was hiding something, and he was. He was hiding the fact that he was only holding a pair of 2s. In 2002 the arguement wasn't about whether the weapons were there, it was only ever about what to do with them. As I said, the CIA is not the only slime in the world.
Iran critics have argued that much of the intelligence data was mixed prior to the attack. Specific reports of WMD's and programs to develop same were noted -- but generally by defectors whose own "value" would be enhanced if they claimed information about something really scary. Other reports were unconfirmed, contradictory, or innaccurate. According to critics, the Neo-cons heard what they wanted to hear, rushed to judgement, and then lied about and/or ignored contradictory evidence that came through the pipeline later in the process. I doubt such critics would argue that the CIA is particularly evil, though they would probably point out that the USA was the only country to seek to invade Iraq based on this evidence.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wigferth Ironwall
5. Personal attaks demonstate a lack of sound arguement, regardless of whether there is one or not, as do offensive smilies.
Ah, but they are so hard to resist, no? After all, anyone who does not share your opinion of an issue must be of lesser intelligence -- poor devil.:laugh4: