The Vice President's office was aware of the fraudulent nature of the evidence as early as February 2002 - nearly a year before the President gave his State of the Union address.Perinquus wrote:Once again, Bush war relaying the fact that the British lad learned Saddam sought uranium in Africa, which is true, the Britain had learned that, and they still stand by that, even though the Niger document was found to be a forgery, because it's not the only source of information they were relying on to make that claim.BoredShirtless wrote:Can you see the difference between saying something false with intent, and without intent? The first is a lie, the second is incompetence. Because I don't know whether there was intent, I can't call Bush a liar.
However, the evidence he presented WAS a lie. Your government KNEW beforehand that the doc was a forgery, but passed it to the President anyway.
So even absent the Niger document, Bush can still truthfully report the fact that the British are reporting Saddam to have sought uranium in Africa.
Now that you know this, do you conceed your government lied?
You don't have the resources to purge or pacify every terrorist and invade every country sponsoring these terrorists, so your country better learn how to talk as well.Perinquus wrote:You can't defeat it by just talking with the terrorists either. And attempting to do so sets the unacceptably dangerous precedent that you can be coerced by anyone who has a grievance and is willing to be ruthless.BoredShirtless wrote:I worded that poorly. The point I was making is you can't defeat terrorism by force.
Clearly the destruction of Israel is a laughable demand. But why would they call for it? Ariel Sharon, Prime Minister of Israel:Perinquus wrote:One of Osama bin Laden's stated goals is the destruction of Israel, though he's focused his network more at hitting us than them.BoredShirtless wrote:So what is the goal of Al-Qaeda?
But his illustrates why we simply cannot negotiate with these people; their demands are simply not ones we can ever acceed to. Even if you do not support Israel over the Palestinians in the conflict, you simply cannot sanction the destruction of Israel. This is not a realistic or acceptable demand, but the really radical Islamic terrorists out there are not willing to back off from it. What too many people are not willing to face up to is that these people want to see the Jews made extinct as much as Hitler ever did.
"I don't know something called International Principles. I vow that
I'll burn every Palestinian child (that) will be born in this
area. The Palestinian woman and child is more dangerous than the man,
because the Palestinian childs existence infers that generations will
go on, but the man causes limited danger."
Ariel Sharon, In an interview with General Ouze Merham, 1956.
Hey thanks for being relevant. Examples with TERRORISTS in them?Perinquus wrote:The Romans pacified Gaul, have to put down more than one revolt, and eventually turned Gaul into one of the most productive and loyal parts of the Empire. Charlemagne conquered and pacified parts of his empire. They did the same thing in Britain. Later, in Britain again, the Normans pacified Saxon England by conquest, especially in the north of England where there was strong resistance to the Norman conquerors.BoredShirtless wrote: Can you please give some examples?
The Turks conquered Anatolia by force following the disastrous Byzantine defeat at Manzikert in 1071, and changed it from predominantly Christian to predominantly Muslim. The Spanish reconquered and pacified the Iberian peninsula, completing the job in 1492, turning Muslim Spain into Christian Spain. The Reconstruction South was conquered by force, and occupied for a time by Union armies.
These are just a few examples.
And whos fault was that?Perinquus wrote:Which hasn’t secured the Israelis any peace from that quarter, as it turns out. See below for details.BoredShirtless wrote:I agree, and like to add that an elimination of a grievance doesn't have to be born from force. For example Israel pulling out of Lebanon.
So? This shows the government doesn't shelter Al-Quaeda, not that Al-Quada is defeated.Perinquus wrote: There's no Taliban in Afghanistan sheltering Al Quaeda now, is there?
You cannot derive fanatical behaviour through religion alone, you need a "trigger".Perinquus wrote:BULLSHIT!BoredShirtless wrote:You're confusing religion with cause. It isn't religion which makes them fanatics, it's the behaviour of your country.
While I grant that there may be a number of legitimate grievances with the United States, if you really believe that a religious fanatic cannot be a true beliveing, dyed-in-the-wool, wild-eyed fanatic simply because of his faith in his religion you don't understand much of anything.
The "legitimate grievances" you so quickly gloss over are the multiple "triggers". You better start looking at the CAUSE of your problems and figure out how to solve them without invading countries or destroying asprin factories, or you'll probably achieve shit in the long run.
Wrong. Guided by their "legitimate grievences" with your country. BTW, what are these grievences you keep mentioning as if a passing thought, but never discuss?Perinquus wrote:You haven't paid much attention to what people like Osama bin Laden and his followers have been saying have you. There is a radical islamist movement calling for holy war - Jihad - against infidels worldwide. Guided by a deviated interpretation of Islam,BoredShirtless wrote:Which terrorist organisations want this?Perinquus wrote: These are people who want to impose the Sharia, Islamic law, on the rest of the world.
The leader of the Western world, a war mongering country who LIES to invade a country and supports the brutal suppression of the Palestinians, and they conclude this? I'm shocked.Perinquus wrote: the Radical Islamists believe that they will rule the world because of their conviction in the superiority of their religion.
What's your source for all of this?Perinquus wrote: Their propaganda mirrors such beliefs as in the Middle East, where they call for the takeover of secular governments in Muslim countries, the destruction of Israel, and the elimination of Christians in Lebanon and South Sudan. In Africa, they call for the conversion to Islam of Black Africa. In Russia, they call for the violent secession of Chechnya, and Dagestan. In Pakistan, they promote Jihad to sever the multi-ethnic province of Kashmir from India. In China, they call for the creation of an Islamic state in Xinjiang. In South East Asia, they support the elimination of East Timor, the destruction of Christian and Chinese minorities in Indonesia, the establishment of a Radical Islamist state in the South Philippines. In Europe, they encourage Radical Islamist separatism in Bosnia and Kosovo, and now in Macedonia. In America and Europe, they have taken over the leadership of the growing Muslim communities to radicalize them and pave the way for Radical Islamist political action in the service of a global Jihad. In every instance, their message is carefully tuned to promote the legitimization of Jihad movements by the international community. To accelerate that goal the Radical Islamists of today are planning, and implementing a Jihad to re-establish the universal Caliphate.
Fortunately, the Radical Islamists are a fringe group of fanatics, though the mainstream Muslim world hasn’t said or done nearly enough to disown them.
Your years of military and political intervention in the Middle East is completely unacceptable. You know what a vicous circle is right? The more times you solve your problems or expand your national interests through FORCE, the more hate you generate and the more fanatics you turn out. So yeah, everyone is at fault here, but it ain't equal. You carry the burden of the fault, simply cause you're the one meddling in their countries, until 9/11 of course.Perinquus wrote:I hope your not lapsing into a case of moral relativism "everybody's equally at fault" etc. etc.BoredShirtless wrote:Funny. The perception from their POV is it's a holy war for you too.Perinquus wrote: It's a holy war for them.
Was that before or after Israel murdered the Accords? From:http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2002/2 ... mrdrd.htmlPerinquus wrote:Seems to me like they were making a big step toward that at Oslo. Then Arafat decided to relaunch the terror campaign. Don't listen to what he says in English, listen to tranlation of his speeched in Arabic - he's still calling for the destruction of Israel.BoredShirtless wrote:Perinquus wrote: What demands are they making that you could possibly concede to?
- Stop taking sides in the Israel/Palestinian conflict. This is one grievance EVERY Muslim has. It's the backbone of every Muslim terrorists hatred. If you remove that by supervising the creation of a Palestinian state, you'll go a long way to eliminating the reason for them to be terrorists.
Who Murdered the Oslo Accords?
by Muriel Mirak-Weissbach
While Israeli tanks and bulldozers were rolling into, and Israeli planes were bombarding Palestinian towns and cities, including refugee camps, President George W. Bush proclaimed that the situation in which Palestinian Authority (P.A.) President Yasser Arafat found himself—imprisoned in a room of his Ramallah headquarters—was "largely of his own making." Bush claimed that Arafat had "broken every promise made at Oslo," and that that had led to the crisis.
The argument retailed by Israeli spokesmen elaborates on the theme: Arafat had a chance for peace, but he opted for terrorism instead. Such propagandists assert, Arafat was made the offer of a lifetime in July 2000, at Camp David, by President Bill Clinton and Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak, an offer for a sovereign Palestinian state, but he wanted more. After rejecting the peace plan, he returned to Ramallah and unleashed the Intifada, which escalated to the point that Israel had no choice but to reoccupy the Palestinian territories and "eliminate the terrorist infrastructure."
The point is often made that, in war, the first casualty is the truth. In this case, it has been the systematic suppression of the truth and distortion of facts, which has paved the way for the current war.
It is time the truth were reasserted.
The truth is, the Oslo peace accord of September 1993 failed, because powerful Israeli interests and their U.S.-based allies caused it to fail. In an interview that September, U.S. Presidential pre-candidate Lyndon LaRouche forecast prophetically, that, unless immediate progress were made on the economic aspects of the peace agreements, "enemies of progress and enemies of the human race, such as Henry Kissinger and his friends, will be successful, through people like Ariel Sharon's buddies, in intervening to drown this agreement in chaos and blood."
That is, in short, what happened. By handing control over economic development programs appended to the Oslo treaty to the World Bank, Kissinger's friends ensured that no large-scale infrastructure would be built. Instead of enjoying a peace dividend in terms of better living conditions, the Palestinians would experience a deterioration of their already disastrous conditions. This would generate demoralization, and rage—the primary ingredients for radicalization—particularly among youth, rendering them vulnerable to recruitment into extremist organizations, such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad, which are opposed to peace.
The assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin on Nov. 4, 1995, by right-wing Israeli extremist networks, was the political inflection point, intersecting the economic crisis. Rabin's Foreign Minister, a terrified Shimon Peres then threw the 1996 elections to Likudnik Benjamin Netanyahu, who reversed whatever implementation of Oslo there had been, and embarked on a confrontation course, by expanding illegal Israeli settlements and launching provocations. His successor, Barak, continued to dismantle Oslo, which culminated in the "offer" at Camp David, that Israel should maintain sovereignty over Jerusalem, including the sites sacred to Islam—an offer that no Arab leader, no Muslim, could accept. Following the fruitless Camp David talks, the religious passions associated with Jerusalem were consciously ignited by Sharon on Sept. 28, 2000, who demonstratively took a stroll, escorted by 1,000 Israeli police, by the holiest Islamic shrine in Jerusalem, the al-Haram al-Sharif. That act, which showed just how sensitive the Jerusalem issue is (and should have clarified why Arafat could not have accepted the Camp David offer), triggered the Intifada. This act by Sharon, is omitted from any U.S. or Israeli chronologies. Sharon's provocation was also the opening salvo to his election campaign. Once elected prime minister, by an electorate panicked by the violence that his provocation had produced, Sharon proceeded post-haste to finish off what little remained of the peace process.
What Oslo Said
The Oslo Accord signed on Sept. 13, 1993, was a political and economic program for peace. It called for establishment of a Palestinian interim self-governing authority, for the West Bank and Gaza, for a five-year period, leading to a final settlement, based on UN Resolutions 242 and 338. These call for the "withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from territories occupied" in the 1967 war, secure and recognized borders, and a "just settlement of the refugee problem" regarding those Palestinians driven off their land in the wars since 1948, estimated to add up to 5 million today. The final status talks, which were to begin "not later than the third year" of the interim period, would deal with "Jerusalem, refugees, settlements, security arrangements, borders, relations, and cooperation among neighbors, etc." The P.A. was designated to establish a "strong police force," while Israel would guarantee security against external threats. The civil administration would be withdrawn, the Israeli troops would withdraw from Jericho and Gaza, while "redeploying" in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, outside populated areas.
In 1995, the Israeli-Palestinian interim Agreement on the West Bank and Gaza, dubbed Oslo II, stipulated the second phase of self-rule, including provisions of elections of the Palestinian National Authority, a gradual withdrawal of Israeli military and handing over power to the Palestinians in the occupied territories, and the "prohibition of any change in the status of the West Bank and Gaza pending the outcome of final status negotiations." The West Bank was to be divided up into Areas A, B, and C, under P.A. control, joint control, and Israeli control, respectively.
The most important aspect of the Oslo Accords, dealt with economic policy. It was explicitly recognized that no peace could endure, unless there were cooperation among the former adversaries around economic development, for mutual benefit. Various Palestinian institutions were foreseen, to regulate water, energy, transportation, finances, etc. Two annexes to the accords were drawn up, protocols on joint cooperation for economic and regional development, which specifically identified a number of great projects: the Gaza Sea Port, the "Mediterranean-Dead Sea canal," "regional desalination and other water development projects," agriculture, energy, and industrial development.
How Oslo Was Wrecked
The most effective means by which the Oslo Accords were sabotaged, was through economic policy. No sooner had the ink dried, than the World Bank issued a report on "development," whose parameters were simple: High priority would go to labor-intensive projects, and the lowest priority for basic infrastructure, like the canals, ports, energy, and transportation mentioned in the annexes. The World Bank report was an operative doctrine, which governed the way in which funds from donor nations were allocated. Thus, a gambling casino was considered a good investment, as was "repair of existing infrastructure" in Gaza—a cruel joke, since no infrastructure existed. It was only through European Union efforts, that any major infrastructure projects were built: the Gaza airport and sea port, for example, as well as water treatment plants and the Palestinian radio and television center. All these major projects were defined as military targets and systematically destroyed by Sharon's rampage in 2002.
The World Bank's ban on great projects was complemented by the closure policy introduced by Netanyahu, whereby, following any episodes of Palestinian violence, entire cities would be blockaded. Palestinians who travelled daily into Israel for work, were prevented from doing so, and the economic consequences were devastating. In 1993 and 1994, due to closures, unemployment went up to 10% and 15%; by the end of 1995 and early 1996, it reached 20%, and in March and April during closures, it hit 50%. In 1999, only 600 Palestinians were allowed to enter and exit the West Bank and Gaza, while the remaining 2 million were confined. Following Sharon's provocation at al-Haram al-Sharif in September 2000, violence broke out, and the Israeli regime responded with further closures. According to a UN report, in the weeks thereafter, P.A. GDP was cut in half. The number of Palestinian workers allowed into Israel for their jobs, was reduced by 53%. The effects on living standards were catastrophic, as 1998 reports on poverty in the P.A.—the first of their kind—documented. Palestinians were living in crowded quarters, school facilities were lacking water, electricity, and toilets, and food supplies were inadequate. In the rapidly growing Palestinian population—2.89 million in 1997—47% were under the age of 15. In Jenin, the site of the most intransigent Palestinian resistance, the water shortage was rendered severe due to the Israeli siege.
Nor was the suffering only economic in nature. Parallel to the closure policy, the Israelis, beginning with the Netanyahu government in 1996, accelerated their violations of the political clauses of the Oslo Accords.
Most important were the Israeli settlements on Palestinian territory. It was explicitly stated in those accords, that they prohibit "any change in the status of the West Bank, etc." Instead, every Israeli government since Oslo has continued the policy of expanding settlements. Since Barak took office in July 1999, tenders for the construction of at least 3,499 settlement housing units were issued in the occupied territories, and construction began on 2,270 units. Twenty-seven new settlement outposts (habitations not contiguous with settlements) were built since the signing of the Wye Plantation agreements in 1996—11 after March 1999. Fifteen new settlement outposts were approved for construction following the inauguration of Sharon in March 2001.
The settlements are connected one to the other, and to Israel, by bypass roads, which have created a new phenomenon in transportation geography, whereby all Israeli settlements are linked up, but Palestinian villages and cities are isolated, like so many apartheid-era bantustans. The Palestinians are not allowed to use these roads. The road connections between the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, promised in the Oslo Accords, have not been built. Crazy schemes for an elevated highway to connect the two, without touching "Israeli land," have been floated. All this is in blatant violation of the Oslo Accords, which promised links between the Palestinian West Bank and Gaza, considered an inseparable unit!
The Israeli military withdrawal and redeployment (even before Sharon's reoccupation began), has also been a farce. Area A, where the P.A. is supposed to have complete control over security and civil administration, accounts for 18% of the total area of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Area B accounts for 24%, and Area C, where Israel has total control, is 59%. Israel controls all borders to the Palestinian territories, and therefore the passage of persons and goods. Israel controls all roads in East Jerusalem, the West Bank, and Gaza, except for those in Area A. Israel controls 80% of the water resources, and all of Gaza's territorial waters.
Thus, if one wants to talk about violation of the Oslo Accords, one has to recognize, they have been made on the Israeli side, under a succession of governments: economic cooperation denied, infrastructure development blocked, transport communications sabotaged, economic life stifled, and political autonomy denied.
The Anti-Terrorism Fraud
Especially since Sept. 11, Israeli authorities have justified their increasing aggressions against the P.A., as part of the "war against terrorism." Their mantra has been, that Arafat "violated" the Oslo Accords, in that he did not use his extraordinary powers to annihilate terrorist organizations. The entire argument championed by Bush, that Arafat has "not done enough" to rein in terrorism, etc., is also a fallacy of composition.
The Oslo Accords mandated the P.A. to build a police force to maintain law and order, which it did. The acts of violence that erupted, especially under the Netanyahu regime, were organized by the militant Palestinian organization Hamas and the Islamic Jihad. Both have been, since their founding, sworn enemies of Arafat's P.A. Hamas was in fact created and nurtured by Israeli intelligence networks—officially—as a counterweight to Arafat's Palestine Liberation Organization in the 1980s (see Dean Andromidas, "Israeli Roots of Hamas Are Being Exposed," EIR, Jan. 18, 2002). Sharon personally was involved in promoting Hamas in its early activities.
When the recent crisis escalated, with suicide bombings claimed by Hamas or Islamic Jihad, Sharon's response was not to pursue these elements, but rather, to launch all-out warfare against the P.A., emphatically targetting the P.A.'s police force—that institution which had been shaped, according to Oslo, as the force to establish law and order, and root out terrorism. By killing large numbers of P.A. police and security, the Israelis have made it impossible for them to act effectively against terror. The entire offensive launched by Sharon recently has targetted the P.A., the P.A. police, P.A. security, and Arafat's personal security. It has not at all targetted Hamas or Islamic Jihad. As noted by Russian strategic analyst Pavel Felgengauer, it is as if Sharon and the Hamas are working together. In fact, although Sharon invaded every major Palestinian village and city in the West Bank, he strangely left Gaza, the stronghold of Hamas, untouched. He has been systematically killing P.A. police and security, but not the terrorists themselves.
Bush would surely brush all these facts aside, and repeat, "It's the terrorism—Arafat won't bring the suicide bombers and other terrorists under control. That's the problem." At this point, one should ask Bush to review the history as it unfolded: Who was, in fact, the first suicide bomber to ignite violence in the region? Was it some Hamas activist? Or was it not one Baruch Goldstein, a fanatical Israeli settler of the Kach movement, who opened fire on a group of praying Muslims, killing 50, in a Hebron mosque, on Feb. 25, 1994? Was not this what triggered the beginning of the Palestinian suicide bombings, two months later? And who was it, who assassinated Rabin, the Israeli military professional who had opted for peace? Was it a Palestinian terrorist, or was it a right-wing Israeli extremist, acting in complicity with elements of Israeli security?
But you're not letting the Iraqi's run their own country. This will, if it hasn't already, become very unacceptable to terrorists over there.Perinquus wrote:We are not planning to keep a permanent presence in Iraq.BoredShirtless wrote: [*]After supervising the establishment of a democratically elected government, pull out of Iraq. If what your government says is true and the people of Iraq are glad Saddam is gone, they will stop of their own volition any attempts by Saddam loyalists to reform the Baath Party.
This is your self-inflicted nightmare.Perinquus wrote:We have national interests to protect, and allies to support. This makes this demand an unrealistic one. Both the US and world economies depend to a great extent on Middle Eastern oil, and a lot of that oil was drilled after US money was invested and skilled American workers sent to the region to drill it out of the ground. If you expect the US to leave such a vital interest completely unsecured you are kidding yourself. That is not going to happen. This is not a demand to which the US could ever accede.BoredShirtless wrote: [*]Completely pull out of the Middle East every single bit of military equipment and personnel. Your military has no business being in the Middle East, and vice-versa.[/list]
Oh, PLEASE tell me you're fucking kidding!!! UNPROVOKED???Perinquus wrote:Sure can. On, 21 January, 2003, at approximately 3:00 pm (local time), Hezbollah terrorists fired anti-tank rockets and mortar shells at positions on the Israeli side of the Blue Line in the Mount Dov area. The unprovoked cross-border attack lasted about 30 minutes during which time approximately 25 missiles and shells were fired. Hezbollah interrupted programming on its satellite telvision station, Al Manar, to claim responsibility for the attack.BoredShirtless wrote: That depends. Can you show how Israels concession to HAMAS [Israel's pullout from Lebanon] hurt Israel?
Nice red herring, and I love the way you yeild the U.N. only when it suits your argument. You personally don't give a shit about the UN when it involves the US, but Lebanon is bad cause it's violating so and so. Fuckng priceless. Anyhoo, it's time for my own red herring. Since you've brought up U.N. resolutions, we will take a little trip through the archives at the U.N. to see what resoultions Israel violates:Perinquus wrote: This attack is merely the latest in a long series of cross-border attacks perpetrated by Hezbollah since Israel’s complete withdrawal from Lebanon in May 2000, in full and confirmed compliance with Security Council resolution 425. That resolution further required the Government of Lebanon to establish its effective authority in the area and restore international peace and security. These obligations have been affirmed repeatedly in subsequent Security Council resolutions.
To date, Lebanon has not taken any significant measures to fulfill its obligations nor has it acted to bring its policies into accord with the global campaign against terrorism. Consequently, Lebanon stands in breach of international law and Security Council resolutions 425 (1978), 426 (1978), 1310 (2000), 1337 (2001), 1365 (2001), 1391 (2002) and 1428 (2002), which call for the restoration of international peace and security and the return of effective Lebanese authority in the area. The Government of Lebanon is also in violation of Security Council resolution 1373 (2001) and established principles of international law, which call upon all States to refrain from providing any support, whether active or passive, to all persons or entities involved in terrorist acts, and to ensure that their territory is not used as a base for cross-border attacks.Negotiation and compromise with terrorists doesn’t usually end with the peace you hope to attain. Many, if not most of these radical Islamic terrorists are simply not willing to negotiate in good faith.
Impressive. 68 resolutions. Naughty Israel.UN wrote: UN Resolutions pertaining to Israel: (68)
UNSCR 42 (1948) of 5 March 1948 [Adopted at 263rd meeting (8-0-3) (3 abstentions were Argentina, Syria, United Kingdom)]
UNSCR 43 (1948) of 1 April 1948 [Adopted at 277th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 44 (1948) of 1 April 1948 [Adopted at 277th meeting (9-0-2) (2 abstentions were Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, U.S.S.R.)]
UNSCR 46 (1948) of 17 April 1948 [Adopted at 283rd meeting (9-0-2) (2 abstentions were Ukrainian S.S.R., U.S.S.R.)]
UNSCR 48 (1948) of 23 April 1948 [Adopted at 287th meeting (8-0-3) (3 abstentions were Colombia, Ukrainian S.S.R., U.S.S.R.)]
UNSCR 49 (1948) of 22 May 1948 [Adopted at 302nd meeting (8-0-3) (3 abstentions were Syria, Ukrainian S.S.R., U.S.S.R.)]
UNSCR 50 (1948) of 29 May 1948 [Adopted at 310th meeting (Draft was voted on in parts, no vote taken on text as a whole.)]
UNSCR 53 (1948) of 7 July 1948 [Adopted at 331st meeting (8-0-3) (3 >abstentions were Syria, Ukrainian S.S.R., U.S.S.R.)]
UNSCR 54 (1948) of 15 July 1948 [Adopted at 338th meeting (7-1-3) (1 against was Syria, 3 abstentions were Argentina, Ukrainian S.S.R., U.S.S.R.)]
UNSCR 56 (1948) of 19 August 1948 [Adopted at 354th meeting (Draft was voted on in parts, no vote taken on the text as a whole.)]
UNSCR 57 (1948) of 18 September 1948 [Adopted at 358th meeting-unanimously]
UNSCR 59 (1948) of 19 October 1948 [Adopted at 367th meeting -unanimously]
UNSCR 60 (1948) of 29 October 1948 [Adopted at 375th meeting (without a vote)]
UNSCR 61 (1948) of 4 November 1948 [Adopted at 377th meeting (9-1-1) (1 against was Ukrainian S.S.R.; 1 abstention was U.S.S.R.)]
UNSCR 62 (1948) of 16 November 1948 [Adopted at 381st meeting (Draft was voted on in parts, no vote taken on the text as a whole.)]
UNSCR 66 (1948) of 29 December 1948 [Adopted at 396th meeting (8-0-3) (3 abstentions were Ukrainian S.S.R., U.S.S.R., U.S.)]
UNSCR 69 (1949) of 4 March 1949 [Adopted at 414th meeting (9-1-1) (1 against was Egypt, 1 abstention was U.K.)]
UNSCR 72 (1949) of 11 August 1949 [Adopted at 437th meeting (without vote)]
UNSCR 73 (1949) of 11 August 1949 [Adopted at 437th meeting (9-0-2) (2 abstentions were Ukrainian S.S.R., U.S.S.R.)]
UNSCR 101 (1953) of 24 November 1953 [Adopted at 642nd meeting (9-0-2) (2 abstentions were Lebanon, U.S.S.R.)]
UNSCR 89 (1950) of 17 November 1950 [Adopted at 524th meeting (10-0-2) (2 abstentions were Egypt, U.S.S.R.)]
UNSCR 119 (1956) of 31 October 1956 [Adopted at 751st meeting (7-2-2) (2 against were France, U.K., 2 abstentions were Australia, Belgium)]
UNSCR 127 (1958) of 22 January 1958 [Adopted at 810th meeting – unanimously]
UNSCR 162 (1961) of 11 April 1961 [Adopted at 949th meeting (8-0-3) (3 abstentions were Ceylon, U.S.S.R., United Arab Republic)
UNSCR 228 (1966) of 25 November 1966 [Adopted at 1328th meeting (14-01) (1 abstention was New Zealand)]
UNSCR 233 (1967) of 6 June 1967 [Adopted at 1348th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 234 (1967) of 7 June 1967 [Adopted at 1350th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 237 (1967) of 14 June 1967 [Adopted at 1361st meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 242 (1967) of 22 November 1967 [Adopted 1382nd meeting -unanimously]
UNSCR 248 (1968) of 24 March 1968 [Adopted at 1407th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 250 (1968) of 27 April 1968 [Adopted at 1417th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR No. 251 (1968) of 2 May 1968 [Adopted at 1420th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR No. 252 (1968) of 21 May 1968 [Adopted at 1426th meeting (13-0-2) (2 abstentions were Canada, U.S.)]
UNSCR 259 (1968) of 27 September 1968 [Adopted at 1454th meeting (12-0-3) (3 abstentions were Canada, Denmark, U.S.)]
UNSCR 267 (1969) of 3 July 1969 [Adopted at 1485th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 271 (1969) of 15 September 1969 [Adopted at 1512th meeting (11-0-4) (4 abstentions were Colombia, Finland, Paraguay, U.S.)]
UNSCR 298 (1971) of 25 September 1971 [Adopted at 1582nd meeting (14-0-1)(1 abstention was Syria)]
UNSCR 331 (1973) of 20 April 1973 [Adopted at 1710th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 338 (1973) of 22 October 1973 [Adopted at 1747th meeting-unanimously]
UNSCR 339 (1973) of 23 October 1973 [Adopted at 1748th meeting (14-0-0) (China did not vote)]
UNSCR 344 (1973) of 15 December 1973 [Adopted at 1760th meeting (10-0-4) (4 abstentions were France, U.S.S.R., U.K., U.S.)]
UNSCR 381 (1975) of 30 November 1975 [Adopted at 1856th meeting (13-0-0) (China and Iraq did not vote)]
UNSCR 425 (1978) of 19 March 1978 [Adopted at 2074th meeting (12-0-2) (2 abstentions were Czechoslovakia and U.S.S.R., China did not participate in the voting)]
UNSCR 446 (1979) of 22 March 1979 [Adopted at 2134th meeting (12-0-3) (3 abstentions were Norway, U.K., U.S.)]
UNSCR 452 (1979) of 20 July 1979 [Adopted at 2159th meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 465 (1980) of 1 March 1980 [Adopted at 2203rd meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 468 (1980) of 8 May 1980 [Adopted at 2221st meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 469 (1980) of 20 May 1980 [Adopted at 2223rd meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 471 (1980) of 5 June 1980 [Adopted at 2226th meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 476 (1980) of 30 June 1980 [Adopted at 2242nd meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 478 (1980) of 20 August 1980 [Adopted at 2245th meeting (14-0-1) (1 >abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 484 (1980) of 19 December 1980 [Adopted 2260th meeting-unanimously]
UNSCR 500 (1982) of 28 January 1982 [Adopted at 2330th meeting (13-0-2) (2 abstentions were U.K., U.S.)] UNSCR 508 (1982) of 5 June 1982 [Adopted at 2374th meeting –unanimously]
UNSCR 509 (1982) of 6 June 1982 [Adopted at 2375th meeting – unanimously]
UNSCR 512 (1982) of 19 June 1982 [Adopted at 2380th meeting – unanimously]
UNSCR 513 (1982) of 4 July 1982 [Adopted at 2382nd meeting – unanimously]
UNSCR 515 (1982) of 29 July 1982 [Adopted at 2385th meeting (14-0-0) (U.S. did not vote)
UNSCR 516 (1982) of 1 August 1982 [Adopted at 2386th meeting – unanimously]
UNSCR 517 (1982) of 4 August 1982 [Adopted at 2389th meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 518 (1982) of 12 August 1982 [Adopted at 2392nd meeting – unanimously]
UNSCR 520 (1982) of 17 September 1982 [Adopted at 2395th meeting – >unanimously]
UNSCR 521 (1982) of 19 September 1982 [Adopted 2396th meeting-unanimously]
UNSCR 573 (1985) of 4 October 1985 [Adopted at 2615th meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)
UNSCR 592 (1986) of 8 December 1986 [Adopted at 2727th meeting (14-0-1) (1 >abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 605 (1987) of 22 December 1987 [Adopted at 2777th meeting (14-0-1) >(1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 607 (1988) of 5 January 1988 [Adopted at 2780th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 608 (1988) of 14 January 1988 [Adopted at 2781st meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 611 (1988) of 25 April 1988 [Adopted at 2810th meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 636 (1989) of 6 July 1989 [Adopted at 2870th meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 641 (1989) of 30 August 1989 [Adopted at 2883rd meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 672 (1990) of 12 October 1990 [Adopted at 2948th meeting-unanimously]
UNSCR 673 (1990) of 24 October 1990 [Adopted at 2949th meeting-unanimously]
UNSCR 681 (1990) of 20 December 1990 [Adopted at 2970th meeting -unanimously]
UNSCR 694 (1991) of 24 May 1991 [Adopted at 2989th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 726 (1992) of 6 January 1992 [Adopted at 3026th meeting - unanimously]
UNSCR 799 (1992) of 18 December 1992 [Adopted at 3151st meeting-unanimously]
UNSCR 904 (1994) of 18 March 1994 [Adopted at 3351st meeting – unanimously (Draft was voted on in parts, with the U.S. abstaining on two preambular paragraphs. No vote was taken on the text as a whole.)]
UNSCR 1073 (1996) of 28 September 1996 [Adopted at 3698th meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 1322 (2000) of 7 October 2000 Adopted at 4205th meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was U.S.)]
UNSCR 1397 (2002) of 12 March 2002 [Adopted at 4304th meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was the Syrian Arab Republic)]
UNSCR 1402 (2002) of 30 March 2002 [Adopted at 4503 rd meeting (14-0-1) (1 abstention was the Syrian Arab Republic)]
UNSCR 1403 (2002) of 4 April 2002 [Adopted at 4506 th meeting-unanimously]
UNSCR 1405 (2002) of 19 April 2002 [Adopted at 4516th meeting-unanimously]
You spread your culture through force. THATS why they hate you. You're in a vicious circle now. But maybe Bush's parallel approach of killing terrorists while starting up peace efforts between Israel and the Palestinians will work. I hope so.Perinquus wrote:You have a really firm grip on unreality. In the first place, you are in a state of denial regarding the terrorists and their motives. Not all of them are the rabid fanatics, but if you think that type is not prominent in these organizations you are simply kidding yourself. These are people who really, truly, deeply believe that dying a martyr’s death will send them straight to heaven. It will grant them everlasting happiness in paradise, and great glory among their friends, family and admirers that they leave behind here. For these true believers, there can be no great glory. They want this.BoredShirtless wrote:Terrorists/freedom fighters have wants and needs just like you and me, they have families and friends. They don't want to die, but are willing. The terrorists/freedom fighters of the Middle East just want a fair go. If the United States stopped playing sides over Israel/Palestine, you'd not only make friends, but make your country safer.
People who don’t want to die, but are willing, do not strap on semtex belts and spread their own guts all over the street in order to take a few Israelis with them. They don’t climb into planes and crash them into skyscrapers. These are people who want a martyr’s death. They want to become heroes for the cause – the most admired kind of hero; the kind who willingly makes the ultimate sacrifice for the cause. They want this. If you don’t see it, you are kidding yourself.
As I say, not every single one of the terrorists is this sort of fanatic, but terrorist organizations attract this kind of person because that’s the place where they can fulfill their sick dreams of martyrdom,
We could become as isolationist as we were in the 1930s and that would still not be enough. I grant you it would probably placate some in the Middle East, but the real diehard fanatics like the 9/11 hijackers would still hate us. They don’t just hate us because we support Israel and send soldiers to the Middle East. They also hate us because we are decadent, licentious, corrupt, godless, infidels, and we keep spreading our culture. They see the material prosperity of the West, they see McDonalds going up in Middle Eastern cities, and see their kids watching Hollywood movies, and listening to American music, and adopting decadent Western customs and they hate us for this. This is why they call us the Great Satan. And to Muslims, Satan is not the awesome and powerful Prince of Darkness of Christian theology, the Muslim Shaitan is the tempter, the deceiver, the one who leads the faithful astray. This is precidely how they see American culture today. These people see the influence Western culture in general and American culture in particular exert, and they hate and fear us because they feel their way of life is threatened by it.
This is not the complete explanation. As I said, I realize Middle Easterners do have some grievances, and the US probably can do things to improve relations with them. But if you think what I have just described above is not a factor you are kidding yourself. Just because you don’t share this worldview, do not make the mistake of thinking nobody else does either.