If you took the trouble to read your own damn source you would have already found that your reading of history is sadly misguidedSancheztheWhaler wrote:Plekhanov wrote:Complete red herring the barbary pirates weren't “Muslim pirates” but pirates who happened to be muslims, they attacked shipping not because they hated freedom (wouldn't have mattered if they did as most of their victims didn't come from “free” societies anyway) or for any other political reason but because the liked money (there's kind of a clue about this in the fact that we call them Pirates) their violence was of a totally different nature to that of the current Jihadis.If you can prove otherwise, please do so, but in a quick search I found dozens of web sites which all essentially restated the above in different manners. The Barbary Corsairs attacked Christian shipping throughout the Mediterranean. Your simple statement to the contrary is not sufficient to contradict accepted history.some site wrote:The Barbary corsairs were privateers of the Ottoman Empire rather than pirates. While their exploits sometimes bordered on piracy and some naval captains and admirals had once been pirates, the objective of their raids altered from one of pure plundering and enslavement to a holy war waged against Rome and Christianity. The leading corsairs were Saracens or renegadoes--Christians who converted to Islam, either to legally plunder Mediterranean ships or to gain their freedom from slavery. Christendom deemed the Barbary corsairs pirates and terrorists, and treated them accordingly. In 1584 Venetians captured a galley bound for Tripoli. They killed everyone aboard--fifty Moors, seventy-five Turks, 174 renegadoes, and forty-five women."
http://www.cindyvallar.com/barbarycorsairs.html
Your location is given as Seattle so I assume you're American odd then that you see fit to lecture others about history but don't know that one of the reasons Jefferson chose to build your countries navy and go to war with the pirates was because he calculated that it would be cheaper than paying them tribute.your own frickin source wrote:After 1581 the Barbary corsairs no longer participated in massive naval operations at the behest of the sultan. It marked an end of an era for them, for rather than waging war they simply raided and robbed merchant ships.
Comparisons are often made between the Barbary corsairs and the Buccaneers (Caribbean pirates of the mid-seventeenth century), but there are more differences than similarities between these two groups. The corsairs preyed in packs whereas Buccaneers preferred to hunt alone. While both groups attacked targets at sea and on land, Buccaneers favored stealth and surprise. The corsairs wanted everyone to see and know what they did. They openly operated out of major seaports like Tunis and Algiers, but Buccaneers sheltered only in safe havens where laws didn’t exist or their piracy was ignored. The corsairs sold their treasure in marketplaces, but the Buccaneers had to rely on intermediaries to unload their ill-gotten gain. The Ottoman Empire backed the Barbary corsairs and incorporated them into its navy. The Buccaneers received no state support, and were hunted and hanged for their nefarious deeds.
To the Shores of Tripoli
In exchange for letting Europeans trade in peace throughout the Mediterranean, the rulers of the Barbary States negotiated a peace treaty whereby each European nation paid them a ransom, an annual tribute, or a combination of both to insure their ships traveled in safety. How long the treaty lasted was never set in stone. If the ruler decided he needed additional monies or tribute, he sent messengers to chop down the flagpole outside a particular embassy, and thus declared war on that country, thereby necessitating a reopening of negotiations to reestablish free trade. This warned those countries still at peace that their turn would soon follow. Sometimes, the European powers--especially England, France, and the Netherlands--influenced the negotiations of lesser nations through rumors and misinformation so their enemy failed to achieve what they wanted or were forced to pay a more severe tribute.
Until the United States won its independence from Britain, the country was covered under the British treaties with the Barbary rulers. After 1783, however, America no longer had that safety net. They either had to pay like everyone else, cease trading in the Mediterranean, or run the risk of falling prey to corsairs. Americans, particularly Thomas Jefferson, came up with an alternative--build a navy and fight! By the time Jefferson became President, the United States had paid two million dollars in tribute--money the treasury didn’t really have. To Jefferson how to deal with the Barbary States became a matter of honor and justice, for if Americans didn’t or wouldn’t defend their economy and themselves, then how would any other nation take the new country seriously?
It's an odd kind of holy warrior who only fights those who fail to pay protection money isn't it? The reason the pirates did so is because they weren't “holy warriors” but PIRATES who were in it for the money, sure they killed Christians but they did so for MONEY not for political reasons or for Allah.
So please explain to me again what the fuck the Barbary pirates of 1800 (the date you originally cited) have to do with the Iraqi resistance?
“The Iraqi insurgents explicitly stated” no such thing all a quote in an article on Fox News citing some web site or other does not an explicit statement of position make. What even makes you think that there is a such a thing as an “insurgent opinion on democracy” anyway since when was the resistance to occupation a unified movement with unified clearly set out positions?In any case, the point of this thread has been lost long ago. The Iraqi insurgents explicitly stated their opposition to democracy,