Siege wrote:Again, that's not really an answer to the question I asked. I asked what intervention will positively accomplish in the long term; stating that it will eliminate the Iranian nuclear program is the immediate result of military intervention (or so you hope), not a long term effect.
What does this have to do with the issue of whether Iran should be stopped from acquiring nuclear weapons? It's like seeing a guy reach for a gun and you know that he might hurt someone with it (maybe even you). First order of business, if you think he can't be trusted with a gun, is to stop him from reaching it. You'll worry about your long term relationship later.
Siege wrote:It's impossible (or rather, national suicide) to use nuclear weapons offensively, because if you do the rest of the nuclear club will come down on you like a ton of bricks, followed shortly thereafter by the rest of the world.
Says who? Why should a third country risk its own cities to defend or rather avenge a victim of a nuclear attack? This is not something around which a nation can build its defense strategy.
Lusankya wrote:Do you have any evidence to back up your assertion that theocracies are inherently irrational (you know - something shown in their actions, rather than just their domestic propaganda rhetoric)? Or are you just banking on the fact that if you say "theocracies are irrational" and "they can't because they're a theocracy" enough times each post, people will just start believing you, just like they started believing that Iraq was responsible for 9/11 because the media used the two words together often enough?
Issuing threatening statements are also an action, don't try to make it sound as if this is not something to judge a government by. They have a responsibility for the statements they make. Saying that they plan to go to Jerusalem during their counterattack on Iraq was not rational. Also supporting terrorist groups that work inside Israel shows Iran is willing to take great risks for limited gain. Pointing out that Iranian government managed to stay in power or made some positive results doesn't somehow qualify it to possess nuclear weapons.
Lusankya wrote:This quote is hilarious, because it means that you don't believe that the US should have nuclear weapons.
I don't believe human race should have nuclear weapons in general. But no one can take nukes from US and Russia without causing the very nuclear war we're trying to avoid. Also there is a difference in whether you are supporting terrorist organization to push out your rival (like US did in Afghanistan) or terrorist groups whose final objective is the destruction of a state (Hezbollah) or terrorist groups in order to establish additional Islamic rapublics (Shia groups in Iraq).
loomer wrote:Fucking tell that to the Lebanese, asshole.
How does this change my statement that Israel, today, is about as powerful as it's going to get?
Simon_Jester wrote:Wait a minute.
This implies that the international community gets to decide whether any one nation has a "right" to a nuclear arsenal, if it feels it needs one. And that skips over a huge question... because I can't think of a single time when the international community has exercised its supposed power to make this decision.
I would not phrase it as international community deciding whether a nation has a "right" to a nuclear arsenal but international community evaluating the risk imposed on the rest of the world in the case of a country getting nuclear weapons. I don't believe anyone has the right to have nuclear weapons.
Uranium235 wrote:My question is, how is this decision enforced? Because I really don't feel like paying for another invasion.
That is the question for Americans or any country capable of stopping Iran: how much of a threat do I think Iran will be if it gets nuke and based on that assessment how much money/lives am I willing to sacrifice in order to eliminate that threat. If the answer is "zero" then Iran gets the nukes and the world just has to live with it and hope for the best.
Shroom Man 77 wrote:Why is it too much of a risk? Mutually assured destruction will "force" Iran to do the "right thing", namely the not-stupid thing like not using its nukes.
What would make Iran any more different from the nuclear powers in the past? We can't count Iran to do the right thing, but we can count on Pakistan to do the right thing, and the Soviet Union, and....?
Again: you are stating this as a fact when in actuality you don't know what will happen and neither do Iran's neighbors. I don't trust any country with nuclear weapons, nuclear weapons are too destructive to exist in large numbers.
Shroom Man 77 wrote:What's wrong with driving into Iraq? They wanted to depose a dictator, and it turns out back then Iraq DID have WMDs too! They actually had more legitimate reason to invade Iraq then than the Americans did in 2003.
What's wrong with supporting Hamas and Hezbollah freedom fighters?
Iran's nukes would actually limit American interventionism, so it's not destabilization... more like restabilization. A nuclear-armed power in the region would discourage conventional conflict, as per the example of India and Pakistan, etc.
Turning Iraq into another Islamic republic would not be a good thing first of all since it would likely be absorbed by Iran so you'd have an even bigger theocratic dictatorship. Also Hamas and Hezbollah are terrorist groups that kill people. So supporting them is bad.
Shroom Man 77 wrote:Who gives a crap about Iranian rhetoric? Does American rhetoric, with outlawings of Soviet Unions and bombings in five minutes and evil empires and actual-factual aggressive actions (like the myriad underhanded CIA shit) makes America certainly not trustworthy. Does Soviet Union rhetoric, with burying people and global revolution and Cuban missile crisises, make the USSR certainly not trustworthy and quite unstable?
These precedents show that Iran can be a workable nuclear power - because your arguments can be applied to Pakistan, can be applied to the USSR, can be applied to the US, and so on. Yet, somehow, Pakistan/USSR/US haven't done the things that you're afraid Iran will do. What makes Iran super-special?
Yes it most certainly does. Such statements cause fear because there is no way do discern "only" rhetoric from the real thing like "lebensraum" and "jews stabbing Germany in the back in WW1".
Shroom Man 77 wrote:Jesus, look at Iran's history. They haven't launched an aggressive war, AT ALL, EVER. Compare that to America Fuck Yeah, that's a fucking stark contrast.
But they did rouse up Iraq's Shia groups which was one of the reasons Iraq invaded them and they did support terrorist groups in Israel didn't they? They haven't invaded Peru, on the other hand, but is that because they're nice or because they're too weak to get there and too small to have interests there? US is 25% of world GDP and 50% of military spending. Taking that into account it hasn't stirred that much trouble although, ideally, I would take nukes from US as well.
Shroom Man 77 wrote:Why do you hate democracy and freedom?
I didn't say that they aren't allowed to their opinion merely that I doubt they actually thought it through. Especially since a large percentage of them think that Iran will use the bomb on Israel so they are naturally cheering it on.
Flagg wrote:It doesn't work like that here, dickhead. You're making the assertion, now you need to provide evidence for it.
By that logic government should prove that I'm incapable of driving before denying me a driver's license rather than me having to prove that I'm capable and responsible enough to drive. Nuclear weapons are dangerous and are not a divine right.
Flagg wrote:Israel probably has enough nukes to bomb the ever loving shit out of Iran should they launch weapons at Israel. It's called MAD. It's the reason the US and the USSR never threw down.
I've seen this assumption repeated many times. USSR and US
never went to war. In fact in the entire history US and Russian Empire didn't go to war other than US intervention on the side of white forces during the Russian civil war. What makes you think that war without nuclear weapons was inevitable during the Cold War? Without nukes there would be no Cuban missile crisis for example. Without nuclear weapons there would be no overarching atmosphere of fear stemming from the fact your country can cease to exist in a single afternoon. Even if there was a war there wold be months in which an armistice could be signed before death toll reached anything approaching the half hour nuclear exchange.
Flagg wrote:Again with the "Theocracies=Too Dangerous for Nukes" shit without any evidence to back it up. And why exactly is Israel of such special concern? They and their allies are the aggressive powers in the region, not Iran. Iran hasn't launched air-strikes on its neighbors virtually destroying their infrastructure based on the flimsiest of excuses. Iran hasn't invaded their neighbors based on lies. So again, what is so special about Iran that it shouldn't be allowed nuclear weapons? Is it just because you've a hard-on for Israel and think they should be allowed to break international law at will without the threat of any sort of repercussion and a nuclear Iran would prevent that?
Ideally no one would have nukes as I already said. Iran has actually stirred quite a bit of trouble when compared to its power and reach. Stirring shit with Shia's in Iraq blew up in its face for example. Theocracies are irrational since they draw their legitimacy from "God" and teach new generations to do the same. Israel's or US wrongdoings don't somehow change this.
Lusankya wrote:If nukes are present (assuming 100% prevention of conventional war)
Chance of nuclear war in next 50 years: 2%
Casualties in event of nuclear war: 1,000,000
Lives lost on average: 20,000
If no nukes:
Chance of conventional war in next 50 years: 25%
Casualties in event of conventional war: 100,000
Lives lost on average: 25,000
The problem is we know for a fact nuclear war would be far more devastating at least an order of magnitude. Then there is the issue of radioactivity which would make land unusable for generations. That nuclear weapons decrease the likelihood of a war by a factor of 12 or so, on the other hand, is merely an unsupported assumption.
But if the forces of evil should rise again, to cast a shadow on the heart of the city.
Call me. -Batman