Hey, Brock! Listen up!
Remember how in
my last post directed at you I said this?
Simon_Jester wrote:Hey, Brock, listen up.
This is a formal statement that I am calling you out on your claim that the US is funding ISIL, which you made about half a dozen times in your most recent post ALONE.
People have been telling you this isn't true, and presenting many arguments for why this isn't true, for literally the whole time you've been participating in this thread.
Not ONCE have you provided any quantitative evidence for the scale of US aid supplies that were stolen by ISIL from other Syrian rebel groups. Not ONCE have you provided any evidence beyond your own conjecture that the US meant for this to happen. And yet you treat it as established fact that ISIL is the product of a deliberate US policy to sustain them, and will vanish if that policy changes.
Put up or shut up.
Under
Debating Rule #4, and Debating Rule #5, I am outright demanding that you prove this claim of yours,
quantitatively, by showing the following:
1) The value of the US-supplied goods and funds that ISIL captured from other Syrian rebels is
large, large enough to be a majority or at least a major share of their total resources.
Yes, I know you believe that- now prove it. With numbers.
2) That these supplies falling into ISIL's hands DOES reflect a deliberate policy of the US government, not just the kind of accident that routinely happens when you back the wrong side in a civil war and your proxies get their asses kicked on the battlefield by a more motivated and better organized force.
Yes, I know you believe that- now prove it. With actual evidence that real US politicians, not conspiracyland fantasy versions of those politicians, are doing this on purpose.
If you cannot support BOTH (1) and (2), then I am calling on you, as one nominally sane person to another, to STOP making this baseless and unjustified claim.
If you are unable to stop, I am going to report this thread for persistent violations of Debating Rule #4 and #5, because you are showing a textbook example of a wall-of-ignorance with your broken record tactics.
That is something we call a
threat. I am now going to decide whether to carry it out, going over all the posts you spammed to see if any of them contain what I asked for. I am going to ignore your delusions about, let's see...
-Machine guns.
-Possibly your pro-Baathism although frankly religious fanatics can sometimes make fascists look
good by comparison so that may not be a delusion.
-Your incessant strawmannery of myself and my own opinions
-Your claim that the 'COG Conspiracy' or whatever has taken over and is somehow overriding normal electoral processes (which is what you
said even if it's not what you
think)
I am ignoring all these things, because I care ONLY, right now, about getting you to PUT UP OR SHUT UP on the specific subject of how you allege that ISIL is dependent on US 'aid' to survive.
I am also going to ignore the logical concerns you have (liberally salted with delusional bullshit, but logical concerns nonetheless) about, let's see...
-The Turks being generally treacherous and letting Syrian/Iraqi Kurds get hammered by ISIL,
-About 'warmongering' being ineffective and frequently very immoral (if not always)
-The problematic nature of using 'petrodollars' as a tool of economic bullying
The reason I'm ignoring these things because while they are
quite true they are not relevant to the specific point I am now focusing on. And I'm not going to even bother engaging with you on these issues unless you actually pass the goddamn Turing Test on this ONE issue, by either supporting or withdrawing your claim.
Now, let me see what you actually did in response to this...
Here you provided lots of quantitative evidence of
other countries who are NOT the US providing arms to ISIL on a large scale. You seem to have thought that these other countries' aid constitutes "US aid," as if Saudi Arabia takes its marching orders from Washington, but that's
your problem. The practical upshot is, you have provided evidence for the aid NOT coming from the US, maybe you're using it as a baseline so you can later say "well, the Saudis gave ISIL three billion dollars in aid, but the US gave
thirty billion dollars!"
You also babbled delusionally about my "armed intervention notions." But hey, you can't help it, it's a compulsion. I get that. I get that you can't actually stop and read another person's posts and
comprehend what they think and what they're saying to you; you just have this weird random-number generator in your head that spots a few key-words in the other guy's post and spits out a reply to some imaginary strawman in your head.
So to recap, here you provided quantitative evidence... of something other than what you were supposed to be trying to prove. If anything this evidence might even
undermine what you're trying to prove, because obviously if ISIL gets lots of funding from other sources, there's no reason to assume it's reliant on supplies 'sent' to it by the screwy means of the US giving weapons to their hated enemies, who proceed to use the weapons incompetently and get them captured.
Then we go to your next post...
General Brock wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:...You're still on that?
Can you provide a count of the value of the stolen American weapons you keep harping on? Because the casual "oh, yeah, the US is a primary supporter of ISIL thing" is really sticking in my craw. You've asserted bizarre and delusional things on this point and have never shown even one sign of willingness to either prove your assertions or concede them.
I have been explaining them. You seem to just ignore the explanations.
No. That is not true. The problem is that you
explain things but you do not
prove them. You repeat the same assertions over and over, without presenting proof. You say "All these things are happening, which PROVES I'm right!" Except many of them do not prove you're right. Some of them actively contradict your arguments. Others have very obvious and logical explanations that have nothing at all to do with your arguments.
The thing about presenting evidence is that you have to provide actual logic to justify why
this particular evidence supports your position. That's the part you have failed to do. It's almost like you're saying "Hi! I linked fifty newspaper articles selected at random! I WIN!"
Simon_Jester wrote:...One, that is not an official US contribution to ISIL, it is a contribution to their hated enemies. Said enemies are not just a money-laundering front for ISIL. You have never shown any sign that you understand this.
Um, I explained it was easier to go off the U.S. amount than investigate and enumerate each Syrian rebel/DAESH contributer. America is in this case, truly the indispensable nation.
And where did you get this notion from? The voices in your head? You have yet to support that with numbers.
And without that being true, you are still fundamentally wrong about this basic point:
ISIL's enemies in Syria are not a money-laundering front for providing aid to ISIL. At most, they are groups actively fighting ISIL... but not doing very well. This is a very different thing.
That didn't make any sense at all. If one knowingly gives firearms to a gang, and some members of that gang used them to rob banks on a regular basis, and one knows this, but keeps giving them arms, one would be charged with being a straw buyer if not an accomplice, depending on the skills of the defense attorney vs the prosecutor.
If one buys weapons for the police, and the police sometimes lose gunfights to MS-13 and some of the guns get captured, no you would NOT get charged as a straw buyer for the gang.
Buying guns to kill someone with is not the same as buying guns for them to use.
Provide
quantitative evidence, however, that the flow of stolen US aid is actually a primary source of ISIL's supplies... and THEN I will change my tune.
Finally, a real rebuttal. Sort of. Seems to me Saddam's Iraq and Assad's Syria, secular republics albeit with presidents for life, would have been far more natural allies given that they are Baathist modernists. To bad they had to be destroyed for some reason and the Gulf monarchies supported without question.
Iraq and Syria under the Baathists were in fact fascist regimes with secret police forces; the only reason they now look
less bad is because people like ISIL are worse.
America has committed itself to fracking for oil. Its wasteful and destructive, but that's another debate. Suffice it to say, if America committed itself to peaceful redevelopment into an inevitable post-petrolium economy, even as it developed a comfortable level of petrolium self-sufficiency in the interim, America could guarantee its hegemony. What's being squandered right now in pointless wars to protect those who profit from the petrolium-centred monopolies, is everything the United States needs to stay ahead in the world.
With this I do not disagree. The problem is, well, that delusional claim you keep repeating. Even if you say things that ARE totally true and interesting, you're not worth anyone's time if you can't distinguish fact from fiction reliably, and if you can't recognize when one of your own claims is totally unsupported.
Now we move on to the next post, the one where you directly replied to the passage I quoted above.
Simon_Jester wrote:People have been telling you this isn't true, and presenting many arguments for why this isn't true, for literally the whole time you've been participating in this thread.
Not very convincingly, but whatever.
I submit that if, say, three to five people all try to convince you of the same thing, and they can't... well, that might actually be because of
you, not because of them. Especially when you have managed to win exactly zero converts to your "The US is backing ISIL" position on what is normally a forum very ready to condemn the US and blame them for their shady and outright evil actions in various countries.
Simon_Jester wrote:Not ONCE have you provided any quantitative evidence for the scale of US aid supplies that were stolen by ISIL from other Syrian rebel groups. Not ONCE have you provided any evidence beyond your own conjecture that the US meant for this to happen. And yet you treat it as established fact that ISIL is the product of a deliberate US policy to sustain them, and will vanish if that policy changes.
Put up or shut up.
Since the U.S. government is not going to release top secret documents explaining why they keep supporting Syrian rebels who defect anyway, and the aid policy is not going to change, you are asking for a peculiarly high level of proof.
So you can't actually prove that your claims about the US government's motives are correct? OK, then
explicitly label them as conjecture, which is what an honest man would do. Or
stop making them, which is also what an honest man might do.
Granted, you have Convictions, so it would be more in keeping with your overall character (assuming you were honest) to simply label your own statements:
"This is an unsupported conjecture, but
I think the US has to be doing this on purpose to keep ISIL going..."
This would require you to do a bit of self-reflection, but that's a good thing.
Ah, I must prove but you need not bother backing your pro-war nonsense.
I am not making
positive claims about where ISIL's money is coming from. Except, perhaps, to provide counterexamples of where it MIGHT be coming from in order to help refute your own claim.
You are making such positive claims. It is as if you had said "Boss Grubermann, the crime lord, is funding this politician." That is a positive claim that requires evidence. If you claim such a thing without proof, or at least without
reasonable grounds for the claim, it is what we call 'libel.' The contrary claim, "This politician is independent of Boss Grubermann," does not
in itself require evidence.
It may require evidence if existing evidence already makes 'Boss Grubermann owns this politician' the default hypothesis, but that doesn't apply here. 'ISIL is dependent on US help' should not be the null hypothesis when the US has never expressed any desire to see ISIL succeed and is in fact actively trying to kill them with warmongerizing explosions. In this case, the null hypothesis would be "I don't know
exactly where ISIL gets their money from, but it is most likely
not from the people trying to kill them."
Now, to recap:
I am making the claim "ISIL is not dependent on support funding that comes from the US,
including support the US allegedly funnels through proxies." You are making the claim that ISIL
is dependent on such support.
You are making the positive claim. I am not. Therefore, you have a higher burden of proof than me.
Go on, refute the null hypothesis. I dare you.
Senate Intelligence Vice Chairman
Saxby Chamblis expects some rebels to flip and doesn't know where some of the aid will end up. So, that's the kind of real politician in charge of American national intelligence.
There is a difference between "some" and "most" or "all."
If I train ten soldiers, and one of them defects to the enemy and gets two of my soldiers killed, then my actions have strengthened my side by seven soldiers (ten, minus one traitor and two dead bodies). The enemy has gained one soldier. As long as I'm not in danger of running out of resources, this is still a winning strategy, unless the enemy is in a position to inflict seven-to-one losses on me on a regular basis.
The same argument goes to bullets, antitank weapons, medical supplies, or anything else I might supply a semi-military 'rebel' force.
Some of the supplies being stolen and redirected is not the same as
all the supplies being stolen and redirected, such that the channel of supply becomes a money-laundering scheme for equipping the enemy.
Moreover, relying primarily on supplies stolen from their enemies is not a winning strategy for a guerilla movement. Not when said guerillas have large enemy forces arrayed against them that do NOT depend entirely on stolen equipment. Like the Kurds, the Syrians, and the Iraqi Army. Even if none of those groups are especially strong, they at least have one thing going for them: they don't have to fight a battle to procure ammunition for their own weapons.
Whereas you
allege that ISIL does, every single time you talk about the 'laundering'* of aid to Syrians fighting ISIL by way of ISIL capturing that aid in battle.
*My word, not yours, but descriptive in my opinion.
I have been trying to explain this to you, but you have been really goddamn obtuse about listening.
If this kind of accident routinely happens and so is a known phenomenon, why wouldn't the United States government game this to re-enter Iraq and finally establish a permanent military presence there so as to pursue the global war on terrorism, as was the
original plan?
The original plan was devised, and the 'secret plan' you link to was negotiated, by Bush the Younger. Bush the Younger's faction of the Republican Party fell from power in large part because of his handling of Iraq. You have repeatedly alleged that they are not gone, and certainly elements of their policies remain.
But this is not the same as simply
assuming that US strategic priorities are totally unchanged since 2008. Or that a man who built his political career on the grounds of NOT deploying large armies to Middle Eastern countries is issuing orders in hopes that we WILL deploy such armies to such countries.
...
What sort of
smoking gun were you expecting, a news article specifically stating the U.S. government trained ISIS personnel like the one I linked to? They exist.
According to Jordanian intelligence sources, it is reported that the program is designed to create 10,000 fighters who will exclusively be a part of the ISIS group. ISIS is now responsible for the unrest occurring in Northern Iraq, and it would be quite ironic if the United States was actually responsible for the training that is now being used to destabilize the Iraqi nation.
Okay, the opinion piece you cites uses Jordanian intelligence sources that cannot be verified, quotes sources that
do not distinguish between ISIL and other groups. He also misquotes in the underlined passage, which is based on a basic reading comprehension fail of the Reuters article he links. "To the exclusion of radical Islamists" does not mean "exclusively a part of ISIL." In fact, it means the exact opposite.
He also makes remarks about al-Douri which are at best questionably true- or at least, NOT supported by the article he cites. He claims al-Douri is
running ISIL, more or less- when in fact it looks more like al-Douri was running a guerilla organization within Iraq and decided to lay low (avoiding US attacks) until US troops left... and until such time as the rise of ISIL made it practical to ally with them.
So basically, that's not a smoking gun you have there. That's an opinion piece by a guy who either didn't link his
real sources, or misread the sources he
did link so badly that I honestly can't say he has a high school graduate's level of reading comprehension.
So do more
scholarly articles describing clandestine ops planned to destabilize the region, creating the conditions for a DAESH-like organization to arise.
That article bases its propositions on the idea that Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Kuwait are US allies, which is frankly laughable.
This is one of the negative side effects of America's attempts at world hegemon/empire/whatever. If we are the dominant force in the world,
logically the default condition must be that all countries are our friends! With no actual neutrals and only a handful of 'rogue state' enemies who are effectively rebels against the (US-dominated) international order.
Except that in a place like the Middle East this is obviously not true. There are, essentially, NO countries in the Middle East that are allied with the US. There are lots of countries that pursue their own interests to the best of their ability, and which find it convenient to take the US's money and support, and to shout to the US for help when they feel threatened. But that's not the same thing at all.
Now, this makes supporting such countries rather stupid- it sort of made sense in the Cold War in the context of trying to keep out a rival for hegemony, but it certainly doesn't make sense in a unipolar world.
However, it ALSO means that you can't say something like "Qatar did it, Qatar is a US ally, therefore the US did it!" Because that is not true; Doha doesn't take its marching orders from Washington, and routinely does whatever the hell it wants while Washington quietly fumes and pretends nothing is wrong for oil's sake.
Non-lethal aid has been pouring into
DAESH-held territory for months, helping them solidify their hold in those areas. Might not this aid have been better deployed in out-of-Syria refugee camps?
Maybe, but the alternative is, realistically, to sit back and let ISIL mismanage the civilian population
even more and cause the creation of millions
more refugees, and probably many thousands more dead bodies.
It's a dilemma, and a nasty one. Supply humanitarian aid to territory controlled by your enemy? You're a monster. Deny humanitarian aid to territory controlled by your enemy? You're
still a monster.
Of course, it was OK to let half a million Iraqi children die from
international sanctions, but maybe the U.S. and its allies learned their lesson and are determined this not happen under DAESH rule. NOT.
You don't seem to understand how science works. Direct links of cause and effect are not always immediately provable and discerned only by indirect means. For example, a planet in a distant solar system may not be physically visible but the doppler wobble of its star gives it away.
Giving non-existent moderate Syrian rebels support that ends up with DAESH on a regular reliable basis is support for DAESH. When this support continues despite knowing the phenomenon of Jihadi flip, it is support for DAESH. The U.S. government not openly admitting to supporting DAESH directly is meaningless.
You are asking me to deny the objective evidence of what actually happened and all relevantly contributing circumstances.
[/quote]Well hell, imagine that I grant my proposition (2), that the US is doing this on purpose. Which I'm still not convinced of, and which you have
still presented only inferential evidence for, but to your credit you at least
tried. And didn't completely fuck it up, in that you DID present evidence that nonmilitary aid from many countries (including the US) is pouring into ISIL's territory.
But even so, you still have a major problem with proposition (1): proving that the
magnitude of the "US aid" (i.e. aid the US gave to somebody else but that ISIL is in a position to steal)
I asked you to prove that too. And you... really just blustered your way through that part.
So, one more chance. Explain why,
taken as a math problem, you expect the US 'cutting support' to have a meaningful impact on ISIL. Why you think ISIL would be unable to survive and function without this support, even if the US doesn't do anything else to weaken ISIL.
And delineate
precisely what "cutting support" means. Does cutting support to ISIL mean, for example, stopping weapon sales to places like Saudi Arabia? If so, fine, but you should SAY that is the case, because Saudi Arabia is hundreds and hundreds of miles from ISIL's territory.