Perinquus wrote:
And it was bloody well too late by then. They stalled and obfuscated,
Only if you've already made up your mind.
and shot at U.S. planes for 12 years,
Heaven forbid they defend the very sovereignty that's affirmed in the resolution the US claimed justification from.
then at the last minute, when it became clear they were about to get hit, tried to save things by doing an about face. They should have been fully cooperative from the start, and they weren't, which was predictable with a man like Saddam in charge.
Hardly. Your version of events is the typical mythology that's arisen about Iraq for the past 12 years. What 'cooperation' would've satisfied you? Evidence of WMD which you're obviously convinced they had despite the mountain of evidence to the contrary?
Vympel wrote:
They died so we could get Saddam out of power, which is hardly jack and shit. That statement is so stupid (not to mention trite) I'm struggling to hang on to my temper. And no power on earth has ever taken more care to keep collateral damage to a minimum than we just did. By your logic, the thousands of people who died in the liberation of Europe half a century ago died for jack and shit.
Ah yes, the inevitable trite comparison to WW2 rears its ugly head. What a high opinion you have of your self interested little jaunt into a region that despises you.
I just love it how people like you blame us for the deaths inflicted by our troops. Of course the fact that in the end we have almost certainly saved thousands more, even tens of thousands perhaps, who will not now end up in mass graves or go through Saddam's torture chambers means nothing.
I'm utterly unconvinced that any real effort will be made to give the Iraqi people a better life, just different overlords- as long as they follow orders, of course. Like previous scum the US has propped up or supported in the past. You may get your version of history from Ann Coulter, but I suffer no such delusions.
Vympel wrote:
Sneer if you like, it doesn't change the reality of the situation. Credibility is a very real concept whether you recognize it or not. When your nation lacks it, bad things happen to you. For example, on September 30, 1985 four Soviet diplomats were kidnapped in Beirut, Lebanon by Islamic Liberation Organisation, which was thought to be a front for the Iranian backed Hezbollah. One of the Russians was killed but the other three were released unharmed after a relative of the terrorist group's leaders was kidnapped and killed by the Soviet KGB. The terrorists promptly released their Russian hostages, and wanted no part of kidnapping Russians after that. The knew the KGB would deal with them ruthlessly. This one death very likely saved more Russian and perhaps even Lebanese deaths further down the line.
So you're suggesting that the United States should emulate the ruthless tactics of an authoritarian state whoose existence was based on terror because of once incident where terrorists got cold feet?
Osama Bin Laden felt secure in attacking the U.S. because he believed we had gone soft. Saddam felt safe in defying the U.S. because he felt we had gone soft.
And every country is obliged to follow your orders now? Yes, Emperor.
Sorry, but you can keep your imperial delusions, I'll only accept the legimitacy of the use of force where self defense is imperative.
As I said earlier, they saw us as the U.S. that ran out of Vietnam when it got too tough, that ran out of Lebanon when a few of our marines got killed, that ran out of Somalia when just 18 of our soldiers got killed. The U.S. with no stomach for a fight. The U.S. that had plenty of high-tech weapons and no courage. The U.S. that will fire off a few cruise missiles, but won't risk shedding precious blood. Listen to Osama Bin Laden’s rants. That's exactly how he saw us, and there's no denying it.
So attacking Iraq was the perfect placebo for such action eh? Funny, last I heard you had no evidence for showing that Al-Qaeda had anything to do with Iraq. If this was an argument about Afghanistan (you know, that shithole you've tossed to the wolves?), you might have a point.
As I said, a nations's credibility is real and important, and consequences flow from it, or the lack of it. Lives really can be lost or saved because of it, whether you recognize that fact or not. It's possible that if our reputation had not been one of weakness, the atrocity of 9/11/01 would not have taken place because Al Quaeda might have felt it was too risky to attack us.
Sure, so if you just threw your weight around and killed a few people every now and then to enforce your imperial edicts, you could guard against the potential future crimes of others through fear. I understand perfectly. Never mind that you're probably just the type of person to refuse to accept any responsibility for WHY the US is attacked. Let me guess: they just hate freedom, right?
Does the word 'vicious cycle' mean anythign to you?
Vympel wrote:
No, it would merely prevent thousands of others from sharing the same fate, but as I said earlier, I guess they don't count.
Not unless you have a guarantee that you're going to do more good than harm.
Vympel wrote:
Well see how it goes eventually. Right now it is much too soon to tell.
We'll see.
Vympel wrote:
How about not obstructing the inspectors to the point where they could no longer do their jobs at all, and left the country. So what if it was Butler who ordered them out?
Because they were exceeding their mandate and performing illegal espionage. Keep leaving that part out.
The Iraqis could acheive the same end of getting them out just by being obstructionist, and frustrating them into giving up, and not look as bad because the inspectors would go on their own. It's not technically kciking them out, but it amounts to the same thing. You can't convince me that's not exactly what the Iraqis intended. That's not cooperating.
Actually, it'd be more likely that was exactly what the US intended when it tried that moron stunt. The Iraqis had been cooperating up to 1998 (not without whining about it, obviously), and oh, I suppose it's just *coincidence* that they stop cooperating when they find out the US has seeded the team with spies eh?
Do you have ANY idea how many weapons the inspectors destroyed?
Vympel wrote:
No, there's what you know.
No, there isn't. If you don't have evidence, you don't KNOW anything. The WMD scandal has proven that QUITE well.
Similarly, there may be evidence you have, but it's classified, and you can't risk making it public, because it would allow the enemy to pinpoint the source it came from, and that source it too valuable to lose. That's just one scenario I can think of in a case like this.
The war is over. Can you explain where this 'classified' intellignece is now? Your appeal to unknowable bullshit is lame.
Vympel wrote:
That's because it's not. I want to hear a good, credible explanation how, for 12 years the Iraqis can violate no less than 17 United Nations Security Council Resolutions, and remain in material breach of disarmament obligations,
Justify your claim of material breach, since UNMOVIC never made any such claim.
and still be "cooperating". You haven't given me one.
Your 17 security council resolutions are irrelevant if they do not regard disarmament, which is what the issue of cooperation is about.
Now then, do explain where your claim of material breach comes from? Because for the life of me, I don't recall where any such declaration was made.
Vympel wrote:
Axis Kast answered that for me.
And he's yet to provide a satsifactory answer to my criticsms of his false analogies.
Vympel wrote:I
Which never would have been forthcoming, since the inspectors' success was contingent upon volunary cooperation from Saddam's regime, which they weren't getting.
Not in the opinion of the inspectors, sorry.
Vympel wrote:
Again, Axis Kast answered that one.
No, he didn't. Blix, in every report, reiterated that the teams hadn't even grown to full size yet, whereas the US supposedly has thousands of people scouring the country and unfettered access to all sites.
Vympel wrote:
If the Iraqis unconvered spies, they still don't get to stop cooperating.
Yes, they do. The inspectors had a clear mandate and the US abused it. Too bad.
That's the price of losing a war.
Funny, but where did you compel their surrender? Oh that's right, you didn't.
As Brennus the Gaul said to the Romans in 395BC “Vae Victis!” They can protest in the security council, and take the matter to the court of world opinion. Maybe that would get them a satisfactory result, and maybe not - though there are plenty of nations opposed to the US in the UN who would have helped them apply diplomatic pressure. But they don't get to defy their obligations under the cease fire.
Ah, an appeal to authority of some dead Gaul. Impressive.
Vympel wrote:
Oh come off it. I am talking about the way international politics is played in the real world. Grow up little boy.
Translation: "I have no principles, and will merely smugly decalre 'that's the way things are' no matter how unethical, and then have the audacity to claim moral high ground".
It is simply unrealistic to expect the US or any other nation not to seek to gather intelligence on an untrustworthy and tyrannical ruler such as Saddam Hussein.
Shouldn't have done it through the inspectors. Sorry. You were the ones dumb enough to get caught.
If he’s even suspected of harboring or financing terrorists that may carry out attacks on American targets, then the US government has a positive duty to obtain the best possible intelligence it can.
Irrelevant to the issue at hand, which is the background of why the inspections stopped in 1998, not your delusions of pax americana.
Vympel wrote:
12 years of violating UN resolutions and shooting at our planes does not make it necessary for us to assume anything. The Iraqis weren't cooperating.
They had every right to shoot at your planes- noone bought the no fly zone argument and even the US tacitly admitted it was bullshti because they never attempted to use it in their case for war. As for your '12 years of violating UN resolutions"- really- can the circular reasoning get any more blatant? I ask you how they weren't cooperating with disarmament (i.e. violating UN resolutions), you say they were violating UN resolutions (some of which are not even related to disarmament). That's not an answer, it's question begging. At no point was there any evidence that Iraq had rearmed. But keep on chanting "it's a big country", I'm sure it makes you sleep at night.
Vympel wrote:
Nitpick my ass. Every citizen in this country, including the president is subject to US law; its authority over every citizen is absolute. The UN does not exercise anything like that level of authority over the United States.
Which is not the point. I don't care much for your obsession with America's imperial powers to do whatever it pleases. It's a matter of principle, and you've demonstrated your warped, tainted by petty American politics partisan sense of priorities well.
Vympel wrote:
Well since the publicly provided material was sufficiently compelling to sell the war to several other nations I would hardly call it bullshit.
LOL! That's right, don't look at the evidence that's been laid out and what we know to be true, make an appeal to the non-existent authority of the paltry number of states that signed on to this exercise. How vicious the circular logic is these days! Does that mean you'll be arguing that because the US went to war, it mustn't have been bullshit?
As for the unknowable, it may be unknowable to the likes of you and me. However, every government is privy to loads of information that is classified. There can be little doubt that there is a great deal of classified information on Iraq.
I don't give a fuck if I don't see it for myself- the case against Iraq was made in public, and sources were provided- you know, democracy and freedom of information and all those other free concepts that seem to escape you the moment things get inconvenient.
Yes, I’m sure MI6 doesn’t have a shred of evidence to back up their claims. The Niger document was only a part of what they had.
So they say.
So ... where's the rest of what they had?
You really know how to cherry pick your evidence and hope to God the other party doesn't have the sense to check the dates, huh? This was made just prior to the inspector's leaving, following Iraqi noncooperation after the spies were discovered, and was under the ambit of Richard Butler, the same patsy who agreed to violate his mandate in the first place and pull his inspectors out without even asking the Security Council.
Vympel wrote:
I never asked him to prove the Iraq/Al Quaeda connection. Where are you getting this?
Wrong context. Never mind.
Vympel wrote:
Well, as you say, it’s your opinion – and one I don’t happen to share. We allow a certain extra amount of latitude in diplomacy, but when you get right down to it, you’re still dealing with people, so the same principles still apply. Come to that, when you deal with Saddam, you’re still dealing with a thug, so the same principles really apply.
Except that your actions do not apply to just one man, they apply to millions of people as well.