Artysim Artysim

A Republican Speaks

A Republican Speaks

The following words are from a Republican Congressman in Texas-

Imagine for a moment that somewhere in the middle of Texas there was a large foreign military base, say Chinese or Russian. Imagine that thousands of armed foreign troops were constantly patrolling American streets in military vehicles. Imagine they were here under the auspices of “keeping us safe” or “promoting democracy” or “protecting their strategic interests.”

Imagine that they operated outside of US law, and that the Constitution did not apply to them. Imagine that every now and then they made mistakes or acted on bad information and accidentally killed or terrorized innocent Americans, including women and children, most of the time with little to no repercussions or consequences. Imagine that they set up check points on our soil and routinely searched and ransacked entire neighborhoods of homes. Imagine if Americans were fearful of these foreign troops, and overwhelmingly thought America would be better off without their presence.

Imagine if some Americans were so angry about them being in Texas that they actually joined together to fight them off, in defense of our soil and sovereignty, because leadership in government refused or were unable to do so. Imagine that those Americans were labeled terrorists or insurgents for their defensive actions, and routinely killed, or captured and tortured by the foreign troops on our land. Imagine that the occupiers’ attitude was that if they just killed enough Americans, the resistance would stop, but instead, for every American killed, ten more would take up arms against them, resulting in perpetual bloodshed. Imagine if most of the citizens of the foreign land also wanted these troops to return home. Imagine if they elected a leader who promised to bring them home and put an end to this horror.

Imagine if that leader changed his mind once he took office.

The reality is that our military presence on foreign soil is as offensive to the people that live there as armed Chinese troops would be if they were stationed in Texas. We would not stand for it here, but we have had a globe straddling empire and a very intrusive foreign policy for decades that incites a lot of hatred and resentment towards us.

According to our own CIA, our meddling in the Middle East was the prime motivation for the horrific attacks on 9/11. But instead of re-evaluating our foreign policy, we have simply escalated it. We had a right to go after those responsible for 9/11, to be sure, but why do so many Americans feel as if we have a right to a military presence in some 160 countries when we wouldn’t stand for even one foreign base on our soil, for any reason? These are not embassies, mind you, these are military installations. The new administration is not materially changing anything about this. Shuffling troops around and playing with semantics does not accomplish the goals of the American people, who simply want our men and women to come home. 50,000 troops left behind in Iraq is not conducive to peace any more than 50,000 Russian soldiers would be in the United States.

Shutting down military bases and ceasing to deal with other nations with threats and violence is not isolationism. It is the opposite. Opening ourselves up to friendship, honest trade and diplomacy is the foreign policy of peace and prosperity. It is the only foreign policy that will not bankrupt us in short order, as our current actions most definitely will. I share the disappointment of the American people in the foreign policy rhetoric coming from the administration. The sad thing is, our foreign policy WILL change eventually, as Rome’s did, when all budgetary and monetary tricks to fund it are exhausted.

....

I couldn't agree more-

http://www.ronpaul.com/

 

 

76,366 views 125 replies
Reply #76 Top

Now, could the 300,000 number be wrong? Absolutely it could be. Maybe it's 60,000. Maybe it's 100,000. Does that make the Shah a better or worse man?

End of quote

It doesn't matter what number people claim, none of it says anything about the Shah. It says something about his enemies though.

I think this is the part you don't get.

 

Just as Saddam was a monster who did not deserve to govern, so too was the Shah a monster that did not deserve to govern.

End of quote

The difference is that with Saddam I actually saw with my own eyes that and why he was a monster, whereas with the Shah all I hear is stories told about him, mostly by people who hated his stance on women's rights or people who have never been in Iran or have some other personal problem with the great king.

I agree that Saddam was a monster and did not deserve to govern, but I disagree that the Shah somehow falls under the same category just because he also happened to run a country in the region.

Without the Shah the Soviet-Union would have been overrun by Germany and we wouldn't be here discussing whether the Shah was an evil fascist or a hero who deserves better than to be bad-mouthed by the likes of you and the mullahs.

For some reason the Shah's widow and his son, who both advocate democracy for Iran and would be happy with a republic simply don't seem so evil. And at no point did the Shah himself seem like the evil tyrant liberals make him out to be.

 

Going back to my earlier point, yes, Saddam was a very bad man. But the bulk of his transgressions (against the Kurds and all manner of folks inside the country) happened at a time when he was the golden boy of the U.S and other western powers.

End of quote

And that is still a lie. He never was the "golden boy" of the US and other western powers. He was always a major customer of France, China, and the Soviet-Union and their ally. In fact the US even helped Iran (as did Israel) in that war. Saddam Hussein and the mullahs deserved each other.

As for the Kurds, the oh-so-evil Shah supported them.

 

The others knew very well the balance of power, so as long as they acted in our geopolitical interests, we kept them in power while turning a blind eye to the many, many transgressions they carried out!

End of quote

Oh, please. Judging from your words, there seem to be very few crimes on earth as well known as those committed by the Shah, so this is hardly a situation of turning a blind eye.

Whether our eyes saw the truth or merely what we want to see so that we don't feel bad for abandoning Iran to the mad mullahs is another question.

Why on earth would an evil tyrant have tried to give women the right to vote?

 

 

 

Reply #77 Top

Without the Shah the Soviet-Union would have been overrun by Germany
End of quote

This does not excuse the oppression he carried out on his people later on.

And that is still a lie. He never was the "golden boy" of the US and other western powers.
End of quote

Sure he was. He practically started his career in the employ of the CIA. As long as he was useful, he was in their good graces. Invade Iran and spark a war in which over 1 million were killed? No problem man, good on you! During that war he -was- provided chemical and biological agents from the U.S and other western powers. He used these weapons on the Iranians and the Kurds, which was overlooked so long as he was acting in our interests. Once his usefulness to us ended, then it was simply a matter of waiting for an excuse, which we found in the invasion of much smaller Kuwait.

Why on earth would an evil tyrant have tried to give women the right to vote?
End of quote

Yes, and Saddam actively promoted a campaign to eradicate illiteracy and created one of the best health care systems in the middle east.... does that excuse his persecution of the Kurds and Shiia?

The difference is that with Saddam I actually saw with my own eyes that and why he was a monster, whereas with the Shah all I hear is stories told about him, mostly by people who hated his stance on women's rights or people who have never been in Iran or have some other personal problem with the great king.
End of quote

Well, I know a fellow from Iran who told me he's not too partial on the Shah. He's an engineer, married, his wife is just as progressive as they come. Now, both of them are not very partial towards the current government in Iran right now but they definitely agree the Shah needed to go. So, I too have talked to someone who's from there to get their account of things, people who are pro-women's rights and christian to boot.

Reply #78 Top

This does not excuse the oppression he [the Shah] carried out on his people later on.

End of quote

He needs no excuse for other people's lies about him. I listed his accomplishments because they make the lies less plausible, not because I suddenly decided to accept the lies as facts.

 

Sure he [Saddam] was. He practically started his career in the employ of the CIA.

End of quote

That's a lie.

Incidentally, all the tanks I saw in Iraq were Russian. Can you name any evidence for the American involvement that I might be able to spot with my own eyes? I promise I'll look the next time I'm there.

 

Yes, and Saddam actively promoted a campaign to eradicate illiteracy and created one of the best health care systems in the middle east.... does that excuse his persecution of the Kurds and Shiia?

End of quote

Again this excuse mentality of yours. If the accused has an alibi, I assume you would dismiss it because it does not "excuse" the crime.

I would indeed assume that someone who promotes campaigns to eradicate illiteracy and creates a good health system probably isn't an evil tyrant.

However, I have actually seen (that's the part you don't get) evidence for his crimes, which means the character witness doesn't help any more.

Also note that I have seen evidence for his "campaign to eradicate illiteracy" and his "health care system" in Iraq.

The campaign was an Arabization campaign which the Kurds, Turkmen, and Assyrians hated and during which millions of people were forced out of their homes and into the mountains. I have heard the stories on location. They were eager to tell me.

And about the health care system, well, that's an interesting one. My Kurdish driver actually showed me the hospital Saddam Hussein had built in Arbil. He said that Saddam built it and destroyed it a few years later. And indeed I could see the evidence for that in the building with my own eyes. Some health care system it was. Saddam also took UN funds for Iraqi hospitals in the 90s to create an artifical crisis. Contrary to what many liberals believe the UN did not really starve children in Iraq, Saddam did.

I see your illiteracy campaign and your health system and raise you one racist Arabization campaign, a hospital with bullet holes, and a million dead children in those excellent hospitals you speak of.

 

Well, I know a fellow from Iran who told me he's not too partial on the Shah. He's an engineer, married, his wife is just as progressive as they come. Now, both of them are not very partial towards the current government in Iran right now but they definitely agree the Shah needed to go.

End of quote

And he told you about the 300,000 victims? Because that would be a better source then an author who makes money with those numbers.

 

 

Reply #79 Top

That's a lie.

Incidentally, all the tanks I saw in Iraq were Russian. Can you name any evidence for the American involvement that I might be able to spot with my own eyes? I promise I'll look the next time I'm there.

End of quote

The american reverse psychology corps tricked the russians into support the people that the CIA REALLY wanted to support...

Reply #80 Top

reverse psychology corps

End of quote

"arms deals"
noun, plural
A magical way for nationalist dictators to be armed and supported by the United States and end up with Russian and French weapons. This is not considered odd.

http://citizenleauki.joeuser.com/article/81628/The_American_Liberal_Dictionary

 

Reply #81 Top

it should have some notes about time travel... like that time "the CIA put the shah in power... more than 10 years after he started ruling".

Reply #82 Top

It's in there:

"Shah"
title
The one-time CIA-supported (see "CIA") ruler of Iran who ruled since 1941 after being put into power in a CIA-initiated coup in 1953.

 

Reply #83 Top

Added this: "A committed fascist the Shah allowed the UK and US to send weapons and other provisions to the Soviet Union during World War II thereby severely hurting the German resistance (see "resistance") against allied fascism."

 

Reply #84 Top

yes but this is shah specific, I was thinking something about time travel in general. its not the only occurance of time traveling evil faschist westerners oppressing the poor freedom fighters via time travel.

Reply #85 Top

yes but this is shah specific, I was thinking something about time travel in general. its not the only occurance of time traveling evil faschist westerners oppressing the poor freedom fighters via time travel.

End of quote

Remember the Bush machine? It's a type of cloaking device used by pro-western evil tyrants to vanish bodies. It neatly explains why George Bush killed hundreds of thousands if Iraqis and how the Shah murdered 300,000 Iranians without a trace of so many bodies.

In general use of time machines is very common among liberals. The PLO was founded, in 1964, to resist the occupation of the territory taken by Israel in 1967. Arab anti-Semitism, which lead to cooperation with the Nazis in the 1930s and 1940s was caused by Israel's oppression of Arabs in the 1950s. The Shah came to power in 1942 via a CIA-sponsored coup in 1954. And, as you might have heard, Hamas' war against Israel, which caused Israel to close the borders to Gaza, was a reaction to Israel closing the borders.

 

Reply #86 Top

That's a lie.
End of quote

Why is it a lie? His career pretty much started in earnest with the overthrow of Qassim in 1963. Throughout the 60's and 70's he was seen as an anti-communist by the CIA, therefore worthy of their support.

Again, so long as he acted in what were considered our interests, we didn't give one hoot that he was a monster.

However, I have actually seen (that's the part you don't get) evidence for his crimes, which means the character witness doesn't help any more.
End of quote

And the part that you don't get, is I'm not disputing -one- -single- -iota- of Saddam's crimes! Not one.

Also note that I have seen evidence for his "campaign to eradicate illiteracy" and his "health care system" in Iraq.
End of quote

Ah, yes, indeed. The fact that you went somewhere as a tourist for two weeks, more than two decades after such programs existed clearly gives you superior knowledge on this subject!

In regards to the poor downtrodden Shah, coupled with the fact that you seem to believe personal empirical evidence is the only acceptable form, how much time have you spent in Iran?

 

Reply #87 Top

hy is it a lie? His career pretty much started in earnest with the overthrow of Qassim in 1963. Throughout the 60's and 70's he was seen as an anti-communist by the CIA, therefore worthy of their support.

Again, so long as he acted in what were considered our interests, we didn't give one hoot that he was a monster.

End of quote

Qassim overthrew the king and withdrew from the pro-western Baghdad Pact and allied Iraq with the Soviet Union.

The Baathists overthrew Qassim. Before that happened was the episode where the US backed an attempt to assasinate Qassim where Saddam was apparently involved. And he was an anti-communist.

But it would be another few years before Saddam took power and the CIA had nothing to do with that or with his later rule.

 

Ah, yes, indeed. The fact that you went somewhere as a tourist for two weeks, more than two decades after such programs existed clearly gives you superior knowledge on this subject!

End of quote

Actually, it's the talking to people that does.

It's obvious that your own knowledge if Iraq's history is severely wanting. I suppose you can get it from books and the news. But you tend to read opinion pieces rather than history books from what I have seen in the past.

You tell me about a campaign to eradicate illiteracy. People who lived through it told me what it was really about. Why should I believe you and not them?

 

In regards to the poor downtrodden Shah, coupled with the fact that you seem to believe personal empirical evidence is the only acceptable form, how much time have you spent in Iran?

End of quote

Any empirical evidence would be nice, anything but simple claims.

I have never been in Iran. My word is as good as the word of the people who claim that the Shah killed 300,000 people. But I can rely on two things: I assume that claims must be proven before they become an argument for or against something and I cannot imagine how one can vanish that many bodies so easily.

It has also been my experience that those who really did murder to so many people are usually quite proud of it and will happily confirm it when asked. The Shah and his widow never struck me as particularly bloodthirsty.

I just don't have this thing where I could look at some other human being and think that he is an evil mass murderer without any evidence for it.

 

 

Reply #88 Top

It's obvious that your own knowledge if Iraq's history is severely wanting
End of quote

Apparently. But so too is it severely wanting for the British and seemingly nonexistent for the U.S administration that went in guns blazing in 2003. Had they paid more attention to history, I doubt the British would have been so keen to repeat imperial misadventures in both Iraq and Afghanistan. (The british had large military forces in both countries over a century ago, and it eventually backfired on them) To be fair, if the U.S had played it's cards right they could have still invaded and mostly avoided the next 6 years of bloodshed. Those who do not learn from history, are doomed to repeat it!

The Baathists overthrew Qassim. Before that happened was the episode where the US backed an attempt to assasinate Qassim where Saddam was apparently involved. And he was an anti-communist.
But it would be another few years before Saddam took power and the CIA had nothing to do with that or with his later rule.
End of quote

This is what you are missing my good fellow, and you have pointed it out yourself- he was anti-communist. Therefore, in cold war terms he was an acceptable ally for us. Pinochet was "anti-communist" and so we turned a blind eye while his secret police caused thousands of folks to disapear. Remember, the height of Saddam's crimes against the Kurds were carried out in the mid to late 80's which was also the height of his good relations with the west. And just because you saw hulks of Soviet tanks doesn't mean that therefore that is the only thing given to Iraqis by foreigners. It has been well documented and is not a matter of debate in any legitimate circles, that indeed the U.S did give anthrax and chemical weapons to Iraq at the same time that they were using chemical weapons on the Kurds.

So long as he did what we wanted, we didn't give two rips about the plight of the kurds!

I cannot imagine how one can vanish that many bodies so easily.
It has also been my experience that those who really did murder to so many people are usually quite proud of it and will happily confirm it when asked. The Shah and his widow never struck me as particularly bloodthirsty
End of quote

So, what exactly has been your experience? Because history speaks to the contrary. Almost in every documented case of genocide, there is never massive bragging or publication of the fact but instead it is swept under the carpet or downplayed as much as possible by the perpetrators.

The Soviets killed millions in their purges and there was never any proud confirmation but more of a stonewalling of journalists and foreigners.

Between 1915 and 1917, (it is believed) between 1.5 and 2 million people of Armenian ethnicity perished in the desert, on a forced deportation from the Grand Vizier back when there still was an Ottoman Empire.

Today, Turkey still denies anything seriously bad happened. Where is the 'proud confirmation' you speak of?

What about the wars in the Congo? While not a concentrated campaign of genocide, it is an accepted estimate that the conflict related deaths (disease and famine which are the worst killers in most wars) have claimed over 5 million in the last decade. That clearly biased, liberal hate-mongering group, the International Red Cross, reported that in 2006 approximately 1,250 people died per day of war related causes.

And, did we hear a peep about it in the media? Not really.

Reply #89 Top

So long as he did what we wanted, we didn't give two rips about the plight of the kurds!

End of quote

When you say "did what we wanted", are you referring to the time he financed terrorism against Israel, threatened Kuwait and Saudi-Arabia, kept Iraq solidly on the side of the Soviet Union, and bought weapons from France, the Soviet Union, and China?

 

So, what exactly has been your experience? Because history speaks to the contrary. Almost in every documented case of genocide, there is never massive bragging or publication of the fact but instead it is swept under the carpet or downplayed as much as possible by the perpetrators.

End of quote

Actually, what usually happens is that the events are acknowledges but explained: the purges were necessary to get rid of western agents, those people died because of starvation caused by the Chinese nationalists, they were only Jews... there are many such explanations.

I think you are confusing the perpetrators with the people who later exhibit the phenomenom of not being proud of those actions and hence denying them.

 

The Soviets killed millions in their purges and there was never any proud confirmation but more of a stonewalling of journalists and foreigners.

End of quote

Stalin was quite open about murdering people. It was a part of his power.

 

Between 1915 and 1917, (it is believed) between 1.5 and 2 million people of Armenian ethnicity perished in the desert, on a forced deportation from the Grand Vizier back when there still was an Ottoman Empire.

Today, Turkey still denies anything seriously bad happened. Where is the 'proud confirmation' you speak of?

End of quote

Turkey does acknowledge that all those people died, just not that it was a genocide.

Incidentally, that was not the "Grand Vizier", it was the Young Turks (who replaced the Ottoman Empire for a few years). But they are not in power any more and the modern Turkish state, whatever other reasons it might have to deny that that was a genocide, is not the perpetrator any more than the Federal Republic of Germany committed the Shoah.

 

What about the wars in the Congo? While not a concentrated campaign of genocide, it is an accepted estimate that the conflict related deaths (disease and famine which are the worst killers in most wars) have claimed over 5 million in the last decade. That clearly biased, liberal hate-mongering group, the International Red Cross, reported that in 2006 approximately 1,250 people died per day of war related causes.

And, did we hear a peep about it in the media? Not really.

End of quote

Did I ever say that the media care about these things? Have you found nothing to add to the discussion and hence decided to make up points of view for me so you can argue against those???

 

Reply #90 Top

This is what you are missing my good fellow, and you have pointed it out yourself- he was anti-communist. Therefore, in cold war terms he was an acceptable ally for us. Pinochet was "anti-communist" and so we turned a blind eye while his secret police caused thousands of folks to disapear. Remember, the height of Saddam's crimes against the Kurds were carried out in the mid to late 80's which was also the height of his good relations with the west.

End of quote

You again talk of "good relations with the west". When exactly did Saddam have "good relations with the west"?

And as for the blind eye we turned regarding Pinochet, I don't think Fidel Castro's crimes are as well reported and openly discussed in the west as Pinochet's.

 

And just because you saw hulks of Soviet tanks doesn't mean that therefore that is the only thing given to Iraqis by foreigners.

End of quote

No, but it is difficult to believe you when all the visible evidence suggests that you are wrong.

You see, if you told me that Saddam was America's ally and I went there and saw lots of US weapons left by him, I would believe you. But instead you need lots of elaborate explanations for how Saddam was America's good friend and somehow ended up with nothing to show for it, all of it just because you insist that they must have been good friends.

You know, there is a difference between seeing evidence for X and concluding X and claiming Y and explaining why there is no visible evidence for Y.

 

It has been well documented and is not a matter of debate in any legitimate circles, that indeed the U.S did give anthrax and chemical weapons to Iraq at the same time that they were using chemical weapons on the Kurds.

End of quote

And that has been "well documented" by whom, exactly?

(And what the heck would Anthrax be good for? I am not an expert on biological weapons, but I assume it could be fairly difficult to release Anthrax onto a larger population, especially since a vaccine is easily available.)

 

Reply #91 Top

No, but it is difficult to believe you when all the visible evidence suggests that you are wrong.

You see, if you told me that Saddam was America's ally and I went there and saw lots of US weapons left by him, I would believe you. But instead you need lots of elaborate explanations for how Saddam was America's good friend and somehow ended up with nothing to show for it, all of it just because you insist that they must have been good friends.

You know, there is a difference between seeing evidence for X and concluding X and claiming Y and explaining why there is no visible evidence for Y.
End of quote

Leauki your not seeing the humor in this!

It's funny, a liberal says "Where are the WND's, we don't see them". But when asked to produce unseen US weapons, "They were there a minute ago". How delightfully hypocritical. You cannot argue or enlighten people that think this way. It has to be genetic.

I guess you could say if the US supplied Iraq with coke bottles, it would be true that we provided the means for them to make Molotov cocktails. Most of their chemical programs came from dual-use technology and information that has been available for over 50 years.

Reply #92 Top
Leauki your not seeing the humor in this!
End of quote

Believe me, I do. I totally see the humour in the idea that CIA conspiracies need only not be disproven to be true whereas plain evidence is quite visible for the alternative theory.

 

It's funny, a liberal says "Where are the WMD's, we don't see them". But when asked to produce unseen US weapons, "They were there a minute ago". How delightfully hypocritical. You cannot argue or enlighten people that think this way. It has to be genetic.

End of quote

Judging from the liberals' conviction that Saddam Hussein was a staunch US ally and the facts on the ground that show no US goods and no US support whatsoever for the man, I guess the best description is that the US supported Saddam Hussein in every possible way short of actual help.

 

I guess you could say if the US supplied Iraq with coke bottles, it would be true that we provided the means for them to make Molotov cocktails. Most of their chemical programs came from dual-use technology and information that has been available for over 50 years.

End of quote

I think liberals count as staunch US allies everyone they think is evil. But even that doesn't stop them from speaking up and defending those people when the US finally want to take them out.

This is a strawman, I know, but I did once find a list on the Internet of "fascist dictators supported by the US". It counted as "fascists" among others the King of Morocco (who refused to participate in the Shoah and protected Moroccan Jews from the Nazis) and the Shah of Iran (whose participation in World War 2 allowed for American goods and munitions to reach Russia, saved the Soviet Union, and ultimately won the war against Hitler).

Oddly enough "chairman" Arafat, the nephew of Hitler's Muslim friend Al-Husaini was not an official "fascist", probably because he was not supported by the US and because he was ideologically to close to the Nazis to be a fascist from the point of view of the global left.

It was classic propaganda material used by the left to move the US into the fascist camp together with some of the most famous anti-fascists who refused to be lefties and instead remained conservative and religious.

 

 

Reply #93 Top

When you say "did what we wanted", are you referring to the time he financed terrorism against Israel, threatened Kuwait and Saudi-Arabia, kept Iraq solidly on the side of the Soviet Union, and bought weapons from France, the Soviet Union, and China?
End of quote

No, we didn't give two rips about that either. What I'm talking about is the real reason why most wars are fought- economics. There was a point, during the early to mid 80's, in which it looked like Saddam was going to open up his economy in the same way that Saudi did in the 60's.

This would mean that our engineering firms would land contracts to build entire cities and infrastructure just like was done in Saudi, and in the same fashion all of this work would be essentially traded in oil to us.

So, we would land a huge amount of long term economic growth -and- secure Iraq's oil.

Once it became clear that Saddam was -not- going to do this, THEN we turned him into a real bad guy!

And what the heck would Anthrax be good for? I am not an expert on biological weapons
End of quote

No, clearly you are not!

And that has been "well documented" by whom, exactly?
End of quote

Well, a nice quick look-up can be found here-

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._support_for_Iraq_during_the_Iran-Iraq_war

For all your talk of Soviet support, the Soviets largely pulled the plug once the Iran war began. Saddam openly opposed the Soviet campaign in Afghanistan and allowed the CIA to open an office in Baghdad.

Oh, one other thing. I do believe that in 1986 the UN was going to come down on Iraq for it's use of chemical weapons, but guess who stopped the resolution?

You got it, the U.S vetoed it!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Reply #94 Top

It's funny, a liberal says "Where are the WND's, we don't see them". But when asked to produce unseen US weapons, "They were there a minute ago". How delightfully hypocritical. You cannot argue or enlighten people that think this way. It has to be genetic.
End of quote

Nitro, I never said that Iraq -never- had any WMD's.

I believed the lies we were fed and was pro-invasion.

It turns out that Iraq really did get rid of almost all of their non-conventional weapons, with absolutely NOTHING resembling a wmd by the time the 2003 invasion kicked off

Reply #95 Top

Judging from the liberals' conviction that Saddam Hussein was a staunch US ally
End of quote

No, no, and no. Again, show me where I've said he was a "staunch" ally? You keep missing the point, as long as his actions were convenient to us, we turned a blind eye to his indiscretions. The moment that convenience and the benefits it provides dry up, then we launch a crusade of the good guy swooping in to take out the bad guy!

Reply #96 Top

WMD: nuclear, biological, or chemical weapons.

Iraq had sarin gas, lots of it was found... most of it was degraded sarin inside delivery warheads. but sarin degrades in WEEKS, and they had the raw chemicals and the chemists (who testified it was their job) to mix more as needed.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarin

Iraq had dabbled in biological warfare, specifically an enhanced anthrax virus.

Iraq had LOTS and LOTS of partially enriched uranium, it was not weapons grade, but it was enriched beyond powerplant grade (just not enough)... the UN was formally complaining about the us removing tons (literally) of the stuff out of iraq.

So in reality Iraq was involved with ALL THREE types of weapons of mass destruction.

Reply #97 Top

So in reality Iraq was involved with ALL THREE types of weapons of mass destruction.
End of quote

Yes taltamir, you're absolutely right. Iraq did pursue all three types of WMD's. This, I have never, ever disputed. In fact the Center for Disease control and State Dept. of the U.S authorized anthrax and other goodies to be sent to Iraq.

However, Iraq gave up the last efforts to pursue any of these in the mid to late 90's.

By the time of the invasion in 2003, all that remained were a few dozen artillery shells with expired gas and a handful of obsolete rockets. Hardly an 'arsenal' by any contemporary standard!

Reply #98 Top

got any evidence to backup that "fact" that the us provided iraq with biological weapons?

And as i said, the gas expires in TWO WEEKS, unless its very pure at which case it will last at most 6 weeks. And we DID catch ice cream tructs converted to sarin production labs and chemists whose job was to produce it on demand (up the point at which WE took down sadam). Those facilities could not produce very pure sarin (6 weeks shelf life), but the less pure 2 week shelf life one is JUST AS DEADLY to humans.

The late 90s was merely the last time (out of many) that saddam actually USED the chemical weapons. the assumption that after 30 years of using chemical weapons every now and then, he dismantled all production facilities and all plans for further use right after the last time he used them is ludecrous.

Reply #99 Top

By the time of the invasion in 2003, all that remained were a few dozen artillery shells with expired gas and a handful of obsolete rockets. Hardly an 'arsenal' by any contemporary standard!

End of quote

It's difficult enough to deal with a world in which people who have never been in a country and know little of its people or its history always know best about what the current government secretly does.

But it's even worse, I guess, that for some reason those in power never listen to people like you but keep pretending like having had a real chance to see actual evidence is somehow supposed to be part of being an expert and giving advice.

(The gas expires within two weeks.)

 

Reply #100 Top

(The gas expires within two weeks.)
End of quote

The same could be said about this article......two weeks ago :grin: