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  • #16
    Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
    What's so wrong with killing *******s like Hussein and his thugs?
    It's not that I care about him or his thugs. I care about the whole world. As long as the US is able to go where it wants, how it wants, when it wants, the world is not safe. Hussein is a regional danger, we are a global one. Hussein is the lesser of two evils.

    In a perfect world, we could do away with both sides.
    Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree...

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    • #17
      Originally posted by chegitz guevara
      The US always said that even if nothing was found, even if Iraq had been completely forthcoming, we'd still go to war because that would just prove that Iraq was lying.
      Che: There were several Iraqi scientists who defected in 1998 an provided detailed accounts of Iraq's WoMD programs as well as methods & tactics which the Iraqis had been using to hide their weapons and confuse the inspectors. In his declaration to the U.N. after the passage of 1441 Saddam says all WoMD were destroyed in 1991 but this is not possible since we have evidience proving he had them in 1998. There for it can be proven the declaration was obviously false and in violation of 1441 (and several other resolutions).

      Also 1441 was very clear that the burden of proof was on the Iraqis; that they must show inspectors where any WoMD are or they must provide proof that the weapons have been destroyed. The Iraqis have done neither. They continue to insist that all WoMD were destroyed in 1991, but, again we know of an estimated 30k lbs of Anthrax and VX gas that existed as of 1998. They are obviously lieing.
      Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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      • #18
        Actually, we do not have evidence he had them. We have statements from interested parties that he had them. Their statements have not been verified. This doesn't mean they were lying, but as yet, they have not been proven to be true.

        In any event, your statement, even were everything true (and I'm not saying it's not, just that it isn't verified), doesn't change the fact that this war has nothing to do with Hussein having or not having WoMD. It's about US power and vulgar Republican electoral politics.
        Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree...

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        • #19
          Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
          What's so wrong with killing *******s like Hussein and his thugs?
          Nothing. When are the invasions of Burma and Zimbabwe scheduled for?
          'Arguing with anonymous strangers on the internet is a sucker's game because they almost always turn out to be - or to be indistinguishable from - self-righteous sixteen year olds possessing infinite amounts of free time.'
          - Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon

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          • #20
            Here's a little more --



            The Blix Report: Anthrax, missiles and nerve gas... all missing
            28 January 2003


            The following is an edited transcript of the report by Professor Hans Blix to the UN:

            Iraq has on the whole cooperated rather well so far with UNMOVIC in this field. The most important point to make is access has been provided to all sites we have wanted to inspect and with one exception it has been prompt. ...

            I am obliged to note some recent disturbing incidents and harassment. For instance, for some time far-fetched allegations have been made publicly that questions posed by inspectors were of intelligence character. Iraq knows they do not serve intelligence purposes and Iraq should not say so.

            Paragraph 9 of resolution 1441 (2002) states that this cooperation shall be "active". It is not enough to open doors. Inspection is not a game of "catch as catch can". ...

            Chemical weapons

            The nerve agent VX is one of the most toxic ever developed. Iraq has declared that it only produced VX on a pilot scale, just a few tonnes and that the quality was poor and the product unstable. Consequently, it was said, the agent was never weaponised.

            UNMOVIC, however, has information that conflicts with this account. There are indications that Iraq had worked on the problem of purity and stabilisation and that more had been achieved than has been declared. ...

            I would now like to turn to the so-called "Air Force document" that I have discussed with the Council before.

            This document was originally found by an UNSCOM inspector in a safe in Iraqi Air Force Headquarters in 1998 and taken from her by Iraqi minders. It gives an account of the expenditure of bombs, including chemical bombs, by Iraq in the Iraq-Iran War.

            I am encouraged by the fact that Iraq has now provided this document to UNMOVIC. The document indicates that 13,000 chemical bombs were dropped by the Iraqi Air Force between 1983 and 1988, while Iraq has declared that 19,500 bombs were consumed during this period. Thus there is a discrepancy of 6,500 bombs.

            The amount of chemical agent in these bombs would be in the order of about 1,000 tonnes. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, we must assume these quantities are now unaccounted for.

            The discovery of a number of 122mm chemical rocket warheads in a bunker at a storage depot 170km south-west of Baghdad was much publicised. This was a relatively new bunker and therefore the rockets must have been moved there in the past few years, at a time when Iraq should not have had such munitions. ...

            The finding of the rockets shows that Iraq needs to make more effort to ensure that its declaration is currently accurate. During my recent discussions in Baghdad, Iraq declared that it would make new efforts in this regard and had set up a committee of investigation. Since then it has reported that it has found a further four chemical rockets at a storage depot in Al Taji.

            Biological weapons

            Iraq has declared that it produced about 8,500 litres of (anthrax), which it states it unilaterally destroyed in the summer of 1991. Iraq has provided little evidence for this production and no convincing evidence for its destruction.

            There are strong indications that Iraq produced more anthrax than it declared, and that at least some of this was retained after the declared destruction date. ...

            As I reported to the Council on 19 December last year, Iraq did not declare a significant quantity, some 650kg, of bacterial growth media, which was acknowledged as imported in Iraq's submission to the Amorim panel in February 1999.

            As part of its 7 December 2002 declaration, Iraq resubmitted the Amorim panel document, but the table showing this particular import of media was not included. The absence of this table would appear to be deliberate as the pages of the resubmitted document were renumbered. ... I note that the quantity of media involved would suffice to produce, for example, about 5,000 litres of concentrated anthrax.

            Missiles

            There has been a range of developments in the missile field during the past four years presented by Iraq as non-proscribed activities. Two projects in particular stand out. They are the development of a liquid-fuelled missile named the Al Samoud 2, and a solid propellant missile called the Al Fatah.

            Both missiles have been tested to a range in excess of the permitted range of 150km ... The Al Samoud's diameter was increased from an earlier version to the present 760mm. This modification was made despite a 1994 letter from the executive chairman of UNSCOM directing Iraq to limit its missile diameters to less than 600mm. ...

            During my recent meeting in Baghdad, we were briefed on these two programmes. We were told the final range for both systems would be less than the permitted maximum range of 150km. These missiles might well represent prima facie cases of proscribed systems. In the meantime, we have asked Iraq to cease flight tests of both missiles. ...

            Also associated with these missiles and related developments is the import, which has been taking place during the last few years, of a number of items despite the sanctions, including as late as December 2002. Foremost amongst these is the import of 380 rocket engines which may be used for the Al Samoud 2. What is clear is that they were illegally brought into Iraq, that is, Iraq or some company in Iraq circumvented the restrictions imposed by various resolutions.

            Mr President, I have touched upon some of the disarmament issues that remain open and need to be answered if dossiers are to be closed and confidence to arise. Which are the means at the disposal of Iraq to answer these questions?

            Our Iraqi counterparts are fond of saying there are no proscribed items and if no evidence is presented to the contrary they should have the benefit of the doubt and be presumed innocent. UNMOVIC, for its part, is not presuming that there are proscribed items and activities in Iraq, but nor is it – or I think anyone else after the inspections between 1991 and 1998 – presuming the opposite, that no such items and activities exist in Iraq. Presumptions do not solve the problem. Evidence and full transparency may help. Let me be specific.

            Find the items and activities

            So far we have reported on the recent find of a small number of empty 122mm warheads for chemical weapons. Iraq declared that it appointed a commission of inquiry to look for more. Fine. Why not extend the search to other items? Declare what may be found and destroy it under our supervision?

            Find documents

            When we have urged our Iraqi counterparts to present more evidence, we have all too often met the response that there are no more documents. ... However, Iraq has all the archives of the Government and its various departments, institutions and mechanisms. It should have budgetary documents, requests for funds and reports on how they have been used. ...

            In response to a recent UNMOVIC request for a number of specific documents, the only new documents Iraq provided was a ledger of 193 pages which Iraq stated included all imports from 1983 to 1990 by the Technical and Scientific Importation Division, the importing authority for the biological weapons programme. Potentially, it might help to clear some open issues.

            The recent inspection find in the private home of a scientist of some 3,000 pages of documents relating to laser enrichment of uranium support a concern that has long existed that documents might be distributed to the homes of private individuals. This interpretation is refuted by the Iraqi side, which claims research staff sometimes may bring home papers from their workplaces.

            On our side, we cannot help but think the case might not be isolated and such placements of documents are deliberate. Any further sign of the concealment of documents would be serious. ...

            Find persons to give credible information

            When Iraq claims tangible evidence in the form of documents is not available, it ought at least to find individuals, engineers, scientists and managers to testify about their experience.

            UNMOVIC asked for a list of such persons, in accordance with resolution 1441. Some 400 names for all biological and chemical weapons programmes as well as their missile programmes were pro- vided by the Iraqi side. This can be compared to over 3,500 names of people associated with those past weapons programmes that UNSCOM interviewed in the 1990s or knew from documents and other sources.

            At my recent meeting in Baghdad, the Iraqi side committed itself to supplementing the list and some 80 additional names have been provided.

            Allow information through credible interviews

            In the past, much valuable information came from interviews. There were also cases in which the interviewee was clearly intimidated by the presence of Iraqi officials. This was the background of resolution 1441's provision for a right for UNMOVIC and the IAEA to hold private interviews "in the mode or location" of our choice, in Baghdad or even abroad.

            To date, 11 individuals were asked for interviews in Baghdad by us. The replies have invariably been that the individual will only speak at Iraq's monitoring directorate or in the presence of an Iraqi official. At our recent talks in Baghdad, the Iraqi side committed itself to encourage persons to accept interviews "in private", that is to say alone with us. Despite this, the pattern has not changed.

            UNMOVIC's capability

            Mr President, I must not conclude this update without some notes on the growing capability of UNMOVIC.

            In the past two months, UNMOVIC has built up its capabilities in Iraq from nothing to 260 staff members from 60 countries. All serve the United Nations and report to no one else. In the past two months, we have conducted about 300 inspections on more than 230 different sites.

            Mr President, we have now an inspection apparatus that permits us to send multiple inspection teams all over Iraq, by road or air. Let me end by simply noting that that capability, built up in a short time and now operating, is at the disposal of the Security Council.
            No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.

            Comment


            • #21
              Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
              What's so wrong with killing *******s like Hussein and his thugs?
              Nothing, it's just that the country will be further damaged and a lot of civilians will be killed.

              I always find it ironic that the US didn't regard Saddam as a thug before he got the gall to invade Kuwait.

              Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat
              That part doesn't bug me near so much as the apparent lack of concern about having a real plan for what comes after.
              We can see that by looking at Afghanistan.
              (\__/) 07/07/1937 - Never forget
              (='.'=) "Claims demand evidence; extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence." -- Carl Sagan
              (")_(") "Starting the fire from within."

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              • #22
                I always find it ironic that the US didn't regard Saddam as a thug before he got the gall to invade Kuwait.


                We didn't consider the Chinese to be thugs before Tiananmen Square either. What can I say; we're bad judges of character...
                KH FOR OWNER!
                ASHER FOR CEO!!
                GUYNEMER FOR OT MOD!!!

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                • #23
                  And we didn't consider US to be thugs before Vietnam, and Grenada, and Nicaragua and.... oh US doesn't have a dicatator, well maybe we should install one

                  Point being this is the world of the powerfull who kill for money, and their own interests, the difference is that US says that it is doing it for "humanitarian causes" like WOMD prevention or that Saddam is a dictator who is "evil" They throw a just cause in your face and than do what they intended to do hoping that we - the brainwashed citizens- will take it as the truth. That is the democratic way. (Well surely better than the dictatorial) But it doesn't make it right anyway, and our leaders can do better. Or better to say we should be capable of electing better ones.
                  Socrates: "Good is That at which all things aim, If one knows what the good is, one will always do what is good." Brian: "Romanes eunt domus"
                  GW 2013: "and juistin bieber is gay with me and we have 10 kids we live in u.s.a in the white house with obama"

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                  • #24
                    It seems to me that the US is the most aggresive country in the world right now. And they have lots of Weapons of Mass Destruction - in fact, they have been hording them up since the 40s!!

                    When are we going to see a UN resolution to force the US to destroy its WoMD? And we had better make sure they comply by sending a UN inspection team, otherwise Bush and his thugs will just hide them away and claim they were destroyed.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Originally posted by chegitz guevara


                      As long as the US is able to go where it wants, how it wants, when it wants, the world is not safe.
                      The precedent problem.

                      But iraq is not a precedent, Iraq is in a unique position under international law. Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990. Kuwait invoked its right of collective self defense, recognized under the UN charter, but predating the charter. The US foought against Iraq. The US signed a cease-fire with Iraq, CONDITIONAL on several things, among them the disarmament of Iraq. (again ratified by UNSC resolutions, but existing independent of said resolutions) Should Iraq fail to disarm, then ceasefire is no longer in effect and the US is within its rights in continuing the Gulf war.

                      This situation does not apply to India or Pakistan or Israel or Iran or North Korea or anywhere else. It is unique to Iraq.

                      We may disagree on whether Iraq has in fact disarmed (Guevara, you saw my iraqi civil service post, but did not reply directly) but the claim that this establishes an unlimited precedent for US intervention is false.
                      "A person cannot approach the divine by reaching beyond the human. To become human, is what this individual person, has been created for.” Martin Buber

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                      • #26
                        Originally posted by lord of the mark
                        Should Iraq fail to disarm, then ceasefire is no longer in effect and the US is within its rights in continuing the Gulf war.
                        I'm sorry, but this is just silly. When it comes to war, there is no such thing as 'rights'. There is only the will of the stronger imposed on the weaker. I am not necessarily saying that that is wrong per se, but to say that the US has a 'right' to attack Iraq is just bull****.

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Originally posted by Rogan Josh


                          I'm sorry, but this is just silly. When it comes to war, there is no such thing as 'rights'. There is only the will of the stronger imposed on the weaker. I am not necessarily saying that that is wrong per se, but to say that the US has a 'right' to attack Iraq is just bull****.
                          But no one is absolutely strong - the US to achieve its ends needs support from as many states as possible. Those states must judge whether supporting the US re Iraq grants a precedent that strengthens the US too much - in that context the US "justification" for war is very important.
                          "A person cannot approach the divine by reaching beyond the human. To become human, is what this individual person, has been created for.” Martin Buber

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                          • #28
                            What he has been saying is that War against Iraq was already authorized by the U.N. in 1990 & 1991 and has never been formally ended. There was a temporary cease fire signed upon the condition that Iraq agreed to do certain things. Since they have failed to do those certain things the cease fire has ended and war can be resumed.

                            A very similiar situation exists in Korea today with an offical U.N. sectioned war continueing but with a temporary cease fire.
                            Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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                            • #29
                              Originally posted by Urban Ranger


                              Nothing, it's just that the country will be further damaged and a lot of civilians will be killed.

                              I always find it ironic that the US didn't regard Saddam as a thug before he got the gall to invade Kuwait.



                              We can see that by looking at Afghanistan.
                              WE were attacdked on 9/11. We were certainly not going to wait to respond until we had a post-war plan for afghanistan ready. So we had to do it on the fly.

                              It would help if the Europeans would follow through on their aid commitments, though.
                              "A person cannot approach the divine by reaching beyond the human. To become human, is what this individual person, has been created for.” Martin Buber

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Originally posted by lord of the mark
                                Should Iraq fail to disarm, then ceasefire is no longer in effect and the US is within its rights in continuing the Gulf war.
                                Except for one little detail. The US was not authorized to invade Iraq, replace the regime, nor disarm the country. It was authorized to liberate Kuwait. If the US wants to return to war under the '90 state of hostilities, it must limit itself to the liberation of Kuwait. Once Kuwait is liberated, then the war ends. As Kuwait is already liberated, the war is over already.
                                Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree...

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