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  • #46
    The announcer was saying he could see the pictures, but could not show them.

    I am not sure yet, wth it means. I would say though, that I can guess the reaction of Americans and American forces if it is true.
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    • #47
      BTW, I'm not at all surprised by the resistance so far. It's fairly light and disorganised.

      I would have been very surprised had this played out like GW1

      Anybody short of comatose would have learned then when you fight the Americans you don't mass your troops in open desert. Plus the US wasn't willing to wait during the month of bombardment it would take to really **** up the Iraqis. And the invasion is almost entirely out of Kuwait (limited front) and up the river valleys to Baghdad.

      Now add that onto how fast they want to move and the fact that they've got half as many troops as last time and an Iraq which has decided to only defend the Baghdad-Basra axis and you see that they're going to have to stretch a little bit.

      So far the war's going well, but I want to know what happens when they hit Baghdad. Everything else is just foreplay.

      It's all well and good to talk about laying siege to the city, but if you don't actually go in then people will be eating the dead in a month's time. Whatever food's left will go to the army and **** the populace. And that's exactly the sort of thing which would really **** the US up.
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      • #48
        well, rallying around the flag goes both ways, so iraqis are rallying around their leader just like democrats rallied around bush post 9/11 and serbs rallied around milosevic during nato agression

        the only thing that surprised me about this war is the resistance given by an arab army in a conflict against superior oponent. they are pass the 7-days mark already...

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        • #49
          Originally posted by notyoueither
          That's the way CNN is angling. They are not out in full froth yet. I think they are wondering if it could be true, or just what effect it will have if it is...
          of course pentagon would say things like that. a bullet hole in the head does not mean one is executed. you really have to have a ballistic expert do an examination and let you know what happened.

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          • #50
            Originally posted by MtG
            But that didn't matter, because a lot of this, and a lot of dead on both sides, are about some ball-less right wing ideologues like Wolfowitz, Perle and Armitage.


            I thought Armitage was Powell's ally and one of the strongest proponents of a massive, Powell-doctrine style military invasion.
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            • #51
              We're going to invade you, break stuff in your country getting rid of that ******* ruler, kill some of you, but we're going to fix everything up for you. By awarding contracts to our companies and paying them with your resources. If the Iraqis have to pay for rebuilding with their oil, then let an Iraqi interim government let those contracts to whoever they want - if it's the French, Russians and Chinese, so be it, if they're paying for it.
              This proves the point of the It’s_all_for_oil people. All the we_are_doing_it_for_the _iraqi_people **** means nothing.
              My views haven’t changed at all I still think this war is a major mistake of the Bush administration.
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              • #52
                I heard that the coalition is changing the plan. Instead of heading straight for Baghdad, they are going to secure Southern Iraq first.

                It's also going to take a while for the 4th Mech Inf. division to get there with all the heavy equipment.
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                • #53
                  Originally posted by Urban Ranger


                  My take is they don't like Hussein, but they like invaders even less. That's something I said long ago, but it seems to be true.
                  Imagine that: your observations match your opinions! What are the odds of that?

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                  • #54
                    Originally posted by Drake Tungsten
                    Originally posted by MtG
                    But that didn't matter, because a lot of this, and a lot of dead on both sides, are about some ball-less right wing ideologues like Wolfowitz, Perle and Armitage.


                    I thought Armitage was Powell's ally and one of the strongest proponents of a massive, Powell-doctrine style military invasion.
                    Armitage has started to see the light, but that was later in the process, not at the beginning of the administration and prior.
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                    • #55
                      Originally posted by Sir Og


                      This proves the point of the It’s_all_for_oil people. All the we_are_doing_it_for_the _iraqi_people **** means nothing.
                      My views haven’t changed at all I still think this war is a major mistake of the Bush administration.
                      Looking at the breakdown of the Bush 30-day budget, some portion of it is for emergency repairs and humanitarian aid funded by the US, but those numbers (about 4 billion in all categories, IIRC) aren't sufficient to do much for long.

                      At least initially, the US will be paying for fixing stuff, but it's not clear at all after that.
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                      • #56
                        Earlier on, I was pro-UN-war, anti-US-war. It was the UN's Resolution 1441 that was being violated, it was up to the UN to enforce it. Plus, I believe that only the UN can set out a stable post-war government in Baghdad.

                        But now that the US has grabbed the tiger by the tail, I say we don't dare let go until the tiger is dead.

                        A pull out now would strengthen Saddam to the point where he could never be toppled, and give him carte blanche to go back to his efforts to develop nuclear weapons.

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                        • #57
                          Originally posted by Urban Ranger
                          I heard that the coalition is changing the plan. Instead of heading straight for Baghdad, they are going to secure Southern Iraq first.

                          It's also going to take a while for the 4th Mech Inf. division to get there with all the heavy equipment.
                          4 ID is the last US division to get in country. 1 AD should already be there based on their deployment orders (somebody has to be leading V Corps) although we haven't heard about them, and 1 CD should also have most of it's heavy equipment arriving.

                          There's either a lot of operational deception going on, because we're hearing nothing about those units or the 101 ABD, OR the whole rolling start nonsense is an even bigger FUBAR than it looks.

                          The US should have at least milked the UN / inspections game long enough to get all the forces in place before starting.
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                          • #58
                            Originally posted by Zkribbler
                            But now that the US has grabbed the tiger by the tail, I say we don't dare let go until the tiger is dead.

                            A pull out now would strengthen Saddam to the point where he could never be toppled, and give him carte blanche to go back to his efforts to develop nuclear weapons.
                            Not only that, but the repercussions would go so much farther globally that we really don't want to think about it. Like it or not, we've gotten ourselves into a decisive engagement. Now you know how Lee felt at Gettysburg.
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                            • #59
                              BTW, I'm not at all surprised by the resistance so far.


                              Neither am I. This was expected by me. I think people are looking at the suprising success of '91 and thinking it'd be the same thing. This is a vastly different war.
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                              • #60
                                A. Bush's actions do not seem to be rational given the evidence available to the public; Hussein may have all the nukes, smallpox and sarin on earth but if he can't deploy them, he's no threat to us. As for giving them to terrorists, that seems absurd too. Would you give a weapon powerful enough to render an entire country uninhabitable to unreliable, untrackable troops? Hussein does not seem rational, but I find it hard to believe that he has remained in power for several decades by being a fool, and if I were a totalitarian dictator I would definitely be more cautious than that.
                                B. As for ulterior motives, all the analyses I have read indicate that Bush hasn't a prayer of ending the war and stabilizing the region in time to profit from it in oil contracts within his administration. Waging an apparently irrational and unprovoked war without any benefit to the nation sounds like a sure-fire way of avoiding reelection.
                                C. Bush doesn't seem to be as sharp as, say, Clinton, but he does not seem so utterly stupid as to move this drastically without considering the consequences. At least, not to me, he doesn't. He also has access to much more information than we do.

                                Bearing all this in mind, all I will do is hope and pray that the man is working on good judgment. I'm ****ed if I can figure it out, and listening to a few news reports does not make me an expert. That's my opinion, then and now.
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