Originally posted by Ghost
Yes, there is fallout and whatnot with nuclear weapons. I'm not sure whether the US should have them or not, myself - I'm just saying that I don't like for one second that hostile countries are developing nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons. They have no regard for the costs that come with using them, whereas we do, although we keep ours. Like I said, I don't know whether I think the US should have them or not. I certainly agree with the decision to drop them on Japan, but that's ancient history.
That's the sort of hypocracy i mean; that other nations are savages without the judgement to use nuclear weapons 'responsibly'. That attitude towards them just encourages their insularity - remember, the US is a hostile nation to them, and one which poses a far greater threat than they do to the US.
Yeah, NK in particular is a bit of a nutcase state and I don't trust them one bit. But, the inevitable consequence of all this sabre rattling will be to encourage nations to arm themselves with WMD - these nations
know the consequence of launching a WMD attack on a Us ally will be similar, massive retaliation - it's not an offensive option for them, and everyone knows it. So why would the US be so concerned, unless it was worried about them having a credible defensive option? That's their viewpoint, and why stuff like the war on Iraq will drive these nations towards more rearmament and WMD programmes, not less.
No nation can be trusted with nuclear weapons. As long as they even exist, they're a threat. The thought that the US - or the UK, or France, or Pakistan, or India, etc - can be 'trusted' with these weapons in perpetuity is blind arrogance.
Originally posted by Ghost
Also, are you saying that you think Iraq doesn't have biological/chemical weapons? I mean, they sure as hell aren't going to, but we have discovered active weapons of that particular type there. The media just doesn't say it much, because it might make it seem like Bush was justified(heaven forbid!). Look it up; read accounts of the soldiers and Marines who have found them.
You'd be more advised to read the statements of the men hired, by the US Army, to actually find biological weapons. Because they've said there are none; the original head of the Iraq Survey Group quit in 2004 saying there were no weapons to find, and the final report from the ISG concluded Iraq had no deployable weapons in 2003, and no production since 1991 - no proof of biological weapons existing since 1991.
These are the people, hired by the US, to find weapons. That's not 'liberal media bias', or any similar pish used to avoid the simple facts. That's official confirmation there have not been any weapons found, nor are believed to be any.