Originally posted by mikhael
Funny though, that you say "american hot dog mustard". We knew about the chemical and biological weapons in 1988. We didn't have to do inspections to know about them back then. All we needed to do was CHECK THE DAMN RECIEPTS. It was Americans (the Reagan/Bush administration) that sold him all those weapons and trained his people to use them.
Really? Huh - then perhaps Bush was trying to right a wrong? Then again, was it all sold to Saddam, or to a different regime? I recall there being a number of uphevals...
Originally posted by mikhael
Allow me to paraphrase something I read the other day: they're freedom fighters when we like them, terrorists when we don't and guerillas when we're not sure.
No offense, but that's bull****, without even having anything to do with Israel or the Palestinians.
Freedom fighters and guerillas
don't target civilians - their fight is a clear-cut one against oppresive ruling powers and/or against opponents larger, stronger, and more powerful than they are.
Terrorists have similar agendas, but their means is different - they also target civilians, to garner (amazingly enough)
terror in the general populace.
Originally posted by mikhael
We have to take your government's word that they are targetting the right people, that those people are guilty, and that the evidence them is so overwhelming that apprehension and trial are unnecessary. Somehow, we have to trust that the Israeli government makes mistakes and that every last one of those assassinations are justified. Forgive me for being a bit sceptical, especially considering the overall situation with Israel and Palestine.
Quite true, and your skepticism is completely understandable. I'd go into looking at the track records of different parties as a way of judging their trustability, but I don't feel like getting into that area at the moment.
Originally posted by mikhael
You mean opressing ethnically separate civilians, shooting at them with gunships, flattening buildings with bulldozers and flying jets into Syria ISN'T enough to roll tanks? Unproven suspicion of the existence of nuclear weapons is enough, but the actual oppression of a populace and actual assassinations AREN'T? Talk about a double standard.
Let's look at history for a moment... were they "oppressed" at any time when there wasn't a heavy spate of violence? No... the "opression" comes as part and parcel of the ever-increasing security measures Israel's been forced to take.
Targeting the civilians with gunships? Again, never happened. Targets were terrorists. You think we'd waste flight fuel and expensive weaponry just so that we could target any old civilian? We can do that at any old checkpoint with any old M16.

Flattening buildings... now this one I like. According to world media, of course, Israel flattens random buildings as they please, right? Again, what's the point? Why not just blow a building up from a distance instead of risking the life of a tractor operator and support units? No, the buildings that have been razed are demolished as deterrent to suicide bombers - all that reward money for the "sacrifice" the families make of giving their son/father/brother/uncle/sister/daughter/mother/aunt as a suicide bomber go into making the hose a luxury mansion. Demolishing said buildings removes that reasoning from the potential suicide bomber's equation.
And the attack on the Hezbollah training camp inside Syria was definitely a violation of their territory, I agree. It was a bold, gutsy move. I'm surprised Syria took it so quietly.
Of course, nobody talks about the breach of national borders when a suicide bomber crosses over into Israel and kills 15 people on a bus. Which happens multiple times a year.
Originally posted by mikhael
I honestly don't know what is enough. The Soviet Union parked nukes on our doorsteps in Cuba and we didn't go to war. I'd consider that a far more credible threat than the foolishness with Hussein. Again, I challenge you to provide a shred of credible proof that Hussein had NBC weapons in 2003. Without even a shred of credible proof, you can't consider it a credible threat. Its a supposition, a suspicion. If all you've got is supposition and suspicion you don't commit lives to war. You're not being too cautious, you're being cautious enough.
Purely hypothetical question here... assume that they DO find evidence of an Iraqi nuclear weapons program. Assume that it is even the UN who makes the discovery, to rule out "made-up" evidence "planted" there by Bush and friends. If above is hypothetically true, will that have been enough provocation to attack and invade for you?
Back to reality, I doubt open nuclear warfare will ever happen, and I'm willing to bet that the leaders of the US and USSR knew it back then, too. A nuclear ICBM launch will clearly bring about like retaliation, thus basically ending life as we know it in the affected countries. Nobody in power is stupid enough to do that. No, nukes are far more threatening in suitcase form, a surprise attack that nobody could see coming, where you don't know who it was that attacked you.
Imagine an Iraqi suitcase nuke attack on San Fransisco. Tens of thousands killed, etc. But the USA doesn't know whodunnit for a couple of weeks. 5 weeks later, they get proof that it was Iraq. Do you think that they'd then launch a nuclear attack on Iraq in retaliation? Not a chance. They'd invade, and basically do what the US just did. But that opens things up for all sorts of defamations and decries of "falsified evidence" and crap like that. Which gives our example nation of Iraq a free nuke hit against the US, with the chance of not even getting hit back. Sounds like quite the deal.
Originally posted by mikhael
Actually, what you call a "delaying action", I call "following international law", or "multinational cooperation", or "allowing the UN to perform its mandate". More sanctions, more inspections, more friends, more allies, more real members of the eventual coalition. What coalition? well lets move on...
"More sanctions, more inspections, more friends, more allies, more real members of the eventual coalition." - For how long? Don't you think that they gave Iraq more than enough time to comply?
That's what I saw in the American action - they were sick and tired of watching the UN and EU play along with Saddam's delaying game, and decided to draw the line.
Originally posted by mikhael
...aggressively push inspections, aggressively push sanctions and aggressively push blockade busting...

As opposed to the regular pushing of said actions? When is enough finally enough? When the suitcase nuke made in the 10-by-12 laboratory in the middle of nowhere that was never discovered is en route to the US by cargo container?
Originally posted by mikhael
One thing you brought up Sandwich, is that there are things the government knows that the public does not. I was in the military and worked with the intelligence community. I understand how true this is. I also know that intelligence is shared among friendly governments. If would couldn't convince our staunchest allies, perhaps our intelligence wasn't as good as we thought.
IIRC, Blair was supportive of military action against Iraq. Perhaps he knew what the US knew, and the US simply didn't share that info with anyone else. Perhaps wisely, even, depending on if those reports of the French govt. sharing info with Iraq are true or not.