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Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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How strange. Btw, I don't recall any UN resolution authorizing the Afghanistan campaign. (Nor the Ivory Coast, but I digress.) |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
OK, samurai, I'm sorry I blew up in response to your statement (which could have been worded better, as you point out.)
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First, there were all kinds of nationalities in the WTC, including plenty of fellow Brits. Second, the US has been all too keen to make the 9/11 attacks an international threat when it suits them. To suddenly shut out the rest of the world because it happened on US soil is pretty poor, imho. Third, we have been putting up with terrorist attacks for a long long time. Ever heard of the IRA? France and Spain have their Basque seperatists... terrorism isn't new you know, and US doesn't have a monopoly on it. Quote:
However I am still opposed to war because I think that it is being waged for the wrong reasons. Someone made a point earlier about choosing the lesser of two evils. In my opinion a maniacal corporate warmonger in control of history's largest ever military force is far scarier than a mustachioed monster at the head of a bankrupted dictatorship. Oh, and South Korea is not a threat. Sure, they have a huge army, but who doesn't these days? (Apart from Iraq, I mean) It was only when they heard that George had them on the hit list that all that stuff with the nuclear power stations started happening. With all this talk defending nuclear deterrents in this thread, can you really blame them for building nukes? |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
The UN is a joke. When you have a ruling class member from Lybia running the Human Rights commision you gotta shake your head. And the UN is very, very anti-sematic. The Un puts the League of Nations to shame. But unfortantly it is the best thing we have for world police.
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Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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How strange. Btw, I don't recall any UN resolution authorizing the Afghanistan campaign. (Nor the Ivory Coast, but I digress.)</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">The Ivory Coast is very bad example because the govt of IC invited the French in. Afghanistan is a bad example because we were attacked first. There is no resolution authorizing the use of force. Your the perfect example of the gallup poll's number mentioned in a previous post. Of those who want war. |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
Well, we found out that Al-Qaida were in Afghanistan, and we waged war on them and the Taliban. This is where it gets to be a grey area. If they nuked us, but they are a pathetic pushover in conventional warfare (like the taliban), do we have the right to nuke them back? Similarly, if Saddam uses Chem or Bio weapons in war, do we have justification to level Baghdad and put in a parking lot? In my opinion, it is yes on both counts. Firstly, once ANYONE escalates to the nuclear level, retaliation is all but guaranteed. If NYC was hit with a nuke instead of two planes, perhaps there would not be much of Afghanistan left, other than radioactive cinders. Again, with the chemical or biological weapons used in combat, we would be justified in using nukes in retaliation, because any WMB counts, even if the WMB used does little or no damage (US forces are very well prepared to fight in a WMB environment, and such an attack would be well nigh useless). During the Gulf War, the threat of massive US retaliation kept Saddam from using chemical weapons.
As for "faceless terrorist Groups": name one. Really. We knew it was Osama and gang pretty quickly after 9/11. [ February 26, 2003, 18:34: Message edited by: Instar ] |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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And even if you did, the damage its already done. I don't even wanna think how a post nuked US will be. I can easily see Democracy and individual freedoms being buried under 6 feet of military concrete. Or worst.</font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">It would be quiet easy to track the device to the source. All fissionable materials carry a signature that can be linked to their source of manufacture. So based on byproduct yield, we would know the source in less than a day. At that point, it would just be a case of tracking it to the end user. If any large city was to be nuked by terrorists, then the gloves will come off in the war on terrorism. |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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While carriers allow a country to readily project force in to the far flung regions of the world, the task of protecting them can actually be greater than what they cost to deploy. England came to this conclusion before the Falklands war. Then when the miniscule Argentinean Air force was able to repeatedly strike major blows against the British fleet, it was decided that the carriers were not able to operate when relying on fleet units for air cover. The result is that the British will close the book on Fleet Air Operations. The French will also come to this conclusion. A carrier force that can not operate as a blue water navy is of little use, and will be a very expensive symbol of national pride. Does anyone have a link to the makeup of the French carrier air wing? With only 40 aircraft, they would be rather limited in what they could do. I would think that they would need 2 airborne radars, at least 2 COD’s. And 4 rotary wings would be the minimum needed for ASW duties. That leaves 32 of which teeth to tanker would be 3 to 1 at best. So they would be able to put up a strike force of about 10 aircraft with a CAP of four fighters. That would leave 2 fighters over the carrier and 4 on deck alert, with 6 tankers and 4 in the hanger for repairs. If the tankers are DP and the fighters have a strike capability, then they might put 20 aircraft on target if the mechanical crews are really on the ball. In the real world, I think it would be more like 10 to 15. |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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All you guys sound so Naive I just read today that we will keep a couple of HUNDRED thousand troops in Iraq for at least two YEARS if not more. All you gamers out there think about - I know (if I were playing a war game and some of those games are based on reality) I would want a huge protection force on top of MY most precious commodity. Fortunately for us Iraq gives us an excuse to just move them there. |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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[ February 26, 2003, 19:51: Message edited by: DavidG ] |
Re: [OT] Another heated discussion about the Iraq siutation, war and politics.
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I don't like Bush's corporative gang, but I would support them for the only motive of opousing those bastards in Europe. |
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