Isreal has cost US 1.6 TRILLION so far....

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Vympel
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Axis Kast wrote:So now it?s selective assistance? I think not. Your argument is ? and has been ? that they?ve provided us with no meaningful assistance throughout the whole time of their incorporation.
Excuse me? Don't tell me what my argument was. I never said anything of the sort.
The United States was ever lumped with the British, themselves much reviled throughout the region. As has already been made clear, the Soviets supported the creation of Israel themselves; it didn?t exactly tarnish their image irreparably. The realm problem lies in that Washington, London, and Paris left a huge Western footprint on the Middle East even before the Cold War, which gave Moscow a perfect handful of potential partners ready and willing to listen to dissenting voices.
Supporting the creation of Israel and materially assisting Israel to the tune of billions of dollars per year irrespective of what Israel did/didn't do and even now when it's under no threat and offers the US nothing but continual embarassment is a totally different thing.
Oh, but as you so enjoy pointing out, such people can be very wrong. The figures of $1.6 trillion is arbitrary at best ? especially considering that this particular critic took it upon himself to determine the potential gain of what might have been. Has he also calculated the exchange in defense technologies from the United States to Israel, on payment?
Oh yes, because there's been such huge exchanges in those areas :roll:
Or the value of Israeli intelligence passed to Washington over the years?
One that you couldn't even substantiate when asked to? Please.
How about the IT-sector jobs in the United States at times supported by cooperation on Israeli programs?
Yes I'm sure they're worth hundreds of billions of dollars.
It?s a new front with more complications than another American base would carry.
Bullshit. Israel attacks USSR, Israel no longer exists. End of story. There are no complications.
It?s also much closer.
Irrelevant.

And yet we both spent years jockeying so as to be able to do so with one another. :roll:
Where the fuck do you get off claiming that the USSR wanted to nuke Israel, you moron? Evidence? You think the USSR's efforts in the nuclear realm were aimed at fucking Israel? I'm speechless. In your fantasy land, you think the Soviets "jockeyed" so as to be able to hit Israel? News bulletin: hitting Israel required no special effort, including "jockeying", on the Soviets part whatsoever.

Israeli missiles are closer.
Completely irrelevant.
You?ve just reiterated the argument. ?Because Saddam sought weapons after Osirak, the destruction of that site must have been what set him off.? Bullshit.
And let's just conveniently edit out the "Israeli and U.S. intelligence deluded themselves into thinking that the threat of Iraqi bomb making was over."
The man sought chemical and biological arms as well. I ask again: is it that you believe Osirak?s destruction specifically ? and singularly - drove Saddam to develop atomic weapons?
No, you illiterate. As I have said twice now, the bombing of Osirak did nothing, practically speaking, irrespective of Saddam's debatable intentions, which are a tangent.
The U.S. wanted the Iraqis to obtain experience with nuclear technologies?
You're the one who points to Iraq's chemical and biological arms, which the US provided aid on, as proof of Saddam's nuclear intentions (to which I don't give two shits about, but which I'm sure you'll continually harp on even though it has nothing to do with how valuable the bombing of Osirak was, which was not fucking much). You made your bed, lie in it.
It?s called the ?domino theory,? and it played out after Vietnam in countries such as Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and much of the older British and Dutch possessions outside Singapore and India in that part of the world.
Oh rigggggghttt, so without Israel, all of the Middle East would've become Communist. :roll:

And btw, Domino Theory was bullshit. Laos had been dominated by North Vietnam for years, it wasn't the magical fall of the DRV in 1975 that made it so, and the Khmer Rouge were the enemies of the Vietnamese. There's no pattern, as much as you'd like there to be one. Furthermore, the doomsaying about the position Thailand and the rest of the countries in South East Asia would be in if Vietnam fell also turned out to be bullshit. Domino Theory was bankrupt simplistic fearmongering bullshit, based on a totally erroneous view of the Communist Bloc.
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Post by Axis Kast »

Excuse me? Don't tell me what my argument was. I never said anything of the sort.
You certainly did. You qualified a timeframe in which American assistance was, in your opinion, unnecessary. This runs contrary to your earlier argument, which was that we’ve wasted our time – and money – with Israel completely.

And about that telling other people what their arguments are? Pot. Kettle. Black.
Supporting the creation of Israel and materially assisting Israel to the tune of billions of dollars per year irrespective of what Israel did/didn't do and even now when it's under no threat and offers the US nothing but continual embarassment is a totally different thing.
Yet the Arabs first began engaging the Soviet Union for assistance around the time of 1948. The relationship began before Washington’s relationship to Israel got very far off the ground.

Oh yes, because there's been such huge exchanges in those areas
Israel has devoted at least two hundred million dollars to the purchase of American military equipment over the past half-century – and that’s an extremely conservative estimate, considering all of the modern combat aircraft they acquired during the 1970s. See below for more about why this particular assessment is so very flawed.
One that you couldn't even substantiate when asked to? Please.
SeaSkimmer and I both pointed to examples of Israeli cooperation with the United States in the intelligence field. His was historical, mine was contemporary.
Yes I'm sure they're worth hundreds of billions of dollars.
Again, this figure of $1.6 billion is predicated on the grounds of rather ridiculous estimations.

The economist in question argues that too much money has been spent by Jewish charities in the name of Israel. But how about Christian organizations, whose sheer size and similar drive to fund relief for targets worldwide could not be exceed that of the pro-Israeli crowd here in the United States. Shall we now restrict all donations abroad save those made by our government itself?

Israel’s been offered loans, yes. So was Europe. It was called the Marshall Plan. But now I suppose you’re going to explain to us why it was a terrible idea, hm?

Israel buys discounted American equipment? Europe did so on a large scale for years as well. Ever heard of the M113?

Israel discouraged arms sales to Saudi Arabia. We have done so with other countries as well. I’m also curious to know how Saudi Arabia’s failure to purchase F-15s cost the government $40 billion.

A Strategic Oil Reserve is a benefit regardless; the circumstances may have been thankless – even unfortunate -, but I wouldn’t call that a “losing situation” in the long-term for America.
Bullshit. Israel attacks USSR, Israel no longer exists. End of story. There are no complications.
It forces the Soviets to retarget arms once meant for the United States – and opens the door to having to take action against the Arab world in general if they retaliate over fallout.
Irrelevant.
Time to strike.
Where the fuck do you get off claiming that the USSR wanted to nuke Israel, you moron? Evidence? You think the USSR's efforts in the nuclear realm were aimed at fucking Israel? I'm speechless. In your fantasy land, you think the Soviets "jockeyed" so as to be able to hit Israel? News bulletin: hitting Israel required no special effort, including "jockeying", on the Soviets part whatsoever.
See your first post. You know; the one about not making people’s arguments for them.

In any case, the point is that the USSR then had to prepare to target Israel with nuclear weapons of its own, was compelled to devote more resources to determine the extent of Israel’s potential, and was forced to consider the residual outcomes on its allies.
And let's just conveniently edit out the "Israeli and U.S. intelligence deluded themselves into thinking that the threat of Iraqi bomb making was over."
Arguing that the Israelis shouldn’t have bombed Osirak because it might make them complacent down the road is like arguing that Britain and France should have let Germany win in 1918 because victory had the same ultimate results in their case.
No, you illiterate. As I have said twice now, the bombing of Osirak did nothing, practically speaking, irrespective of Saddam's debatable intentions, which are a tangent.


Quote:

Except for Spitfire’s argument … Nuclear weaponization has occurred despite originating with light-water reactors.
You're the one who points to Iraq's chemical and biological arms, which the US provided aid on, as proof of Saddam's nuclear intentions (to which I don't give two shits about, but which I'm sure you'll continually harp on even though it has nothing to do with how valuable the bombing of Osirak was, which was not fucking much). You made your bed, lie in it.
Nuclear. Nuclear. Nuclear. The question referred to NUCLEAR arms.

And just because Saddam pursued them all in one boat doesn’t mean we meant him to have atomic weapons in the first place, genius.
Oh rigggggghttt, so without Israel, all of the Middle East would've become Communist.

And btw, Domino Theory was bullshit. Laos had been dominated by North Vietnam for years, it wasn't the magical fall of the DRV in 1975 that made it so, and the Khmer Rouge were the enemies of the Vietnamese. There's no pattern, as much as you'd like there to be one. Furthermore, the doomsaying about the position Thailand and the rest of the countries in South East Asia would be in if Vietnam fell also turned out to be bullshit. Domino Theory was bankrupt simplistic fearmongering bullshit, based on a totally erroneous view of the Communist Bloc.
It was a strong possibility that they’d have fallen under the strong influence of Communism. Remember the origins of the Tanker War?

The domino theory was correct: communist regimes spread across Southeast Asia when unchecked by a government committed to containment. Socialist thought has intruded upon Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia.
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Axis Kast wrote: You certainly did. You qualified a timeframe in which American assistance was, in your opinion, unnecessary. This runs contrary to your earlier argument, which was that we?ve wasted our time ? and money ? with Israel completely.
Quote me or shut up.
And about that telling other people what their arguments are? Pot. Kettle. Black.
As you wish ...
Yet the Arabs first began engaging the Soviet Union for assistance around the time of 1948. The relationship began before Washington?s relationship to Israel got very far off the ground
Evidence please.
Israel has devoted at least two hundred million dollars to the purchase of American military equipment over the past half-century ? and that?s an extremely conservative estimate, considering all of the modern combat aircraft they acquired during the 1970s. See below for more about why this particular assessment is so very flawed.
And you think if you tally up the aid Israel recieves every year they actually paid for them?
SeaSkimmer and I both pointed to examples of Israeli cooperation with the United States in the intelligence field. His was historical, mine was contemporary.
No, you didn't provide any evidence at all.
Again, this figure of $1.6 billion is predicated on the grounds of rather ridiculous estimations.
Actually it was trillion; regardless, even the figure for official aid is quite substantial (hundreds of billions). And Israel just made another request for aid to defray the costs of the Palestinian insurgency. Why should the US pay?
The economist in question argues that too much money has been spent by Jewish charities in the name of Israel. But how about Christian organizations, whose sheer size and similar drive to fund relief for targets worldwide could not be exceed that of the pro-Israeli crowd here in the United States. Shall we now restrict all donations abroad save those made by our government itself?
Red herring.
Israel?s been offered loans, yes. So was Europe. It was called the Marshall Plan. But now I suppose you?re going to explain to us why it was a terrible idea, hm?
False analogy.
Israel buys discounted American equipment? Europe did so on a large scale for years as well. Ever heard of the M113?
Red herring.
Israel discouraged arms sales to Saudi Arabia. We have done so with other countries as well. I?m also curious to know how Saudi Arabia?s failure to purchase F-15s cost the government $40 billion.
Purchase price combined with after market support most likely.
It forces the Soviets to retarget arms once meant for the United States ? and opens the door to having to take action against the Arab world in general if they retaliate over fallout.
LOL. Yeah, the Arab World is going to retaliate against the USSR for fallout if the USSR destroys there number one enemy that attacked the USSR in the first place. Not only is your why stupid, you haven't even thought up a how. Nice delusion you have there ... jesus

Time to strike.
Matter of minutes either way. Means absolutely zero.
See your first post. You know; the one about not making people?s arguments for them.
Your inability to enunciate a proper argument is not my problem.
In any case, the point is that the USSR then had to prepare to target Israel with nuclear weapons of its own, was compelled to devote more resources to determine the extent of Israel?s potential, and was forced to consider the residual outcomes on its allies.
Concession Accepted. You claimed that they USSR 'jockeyed for years' to be able to hit Israel, a fundamentally idiotic assertion on its face, undoubtedly brought about by rank ignorance of the nuclear forces of the USSR and their capabilties. Furthermore, if Israel was ever determined a threat (which you have not established, save for fanciful interpretations of Israel's capabiltiies and intentions without evidence), retargeting several MIRVd missiles, or detailing a BEAR-H ALCM strike, would've been sufficient retaliation for Israel's stupidity. Furthermore, your useless handwaving about "devote resources to determine the extent of Israel's potential and it's being "forced to consider the residual outcomes on its allies" is nothing but nonsense, bereft of substance or any real benefit whatsoever.
Arguing that the Israelis shouldn?t have bombed Osirak because it might make them complacent down the road is like arguing that Britain and France should have let Germany win in 1918 because victory had the same ultimate results in their case.
How does one respond to such a transparently massive false analogy COMBINED with a strawman? Really, the depths you will go to ...


1. The bombing of Osirak:
a: had no effect on Iraq's nuclear program save to possibly accelerate it
b: Osirak was not suitable for nuclear weapons
c: Made Israel and the US complacent

All three of these combined make the bombing of Osirak quite different from the "happy event" with which you originally describe. That you attempt to somehow liken this to letting your enemy defeat you in military conflict because later on they will anyay is the height of fucking idiocy; the problem with bombing Osirak, you bint, was that it offered no advantages and several DISadvantages. If you need the DISadvantages of losing a war to Germany explained to you ... well .... what hope is there.
Except for Spitfire?s argument ? Nuclear weaponization has occurred despite originating with light-water reactors.
What?
Nuclear. Nuclear. Nuclear. The question referred to NUCLEAR arms.
And as I said, you were the one who conflated all three to pursue your irrelevant tangent. Lie in it.
And just because Saddam pursued them all in one boat doesn?t mean we meant him to have atomic weapons in the first place, genius.
Sorry dumbass you can't have it both ways. Either the US accepted your moronic 'all WMD is the same therefore Iraq wanted nukes irrespective of the fact that the fast track only started after the bombing of Osirak' "logic" and happily supplied them BC items, thereby offering tacit approval to a nuclear program, or you abandon that so-called 'reasoning' and lose another point. Beautiful isn't it?
It was a strong possibility that they?d have fallen under the strong influence of Communism. Remember the origins of the Tanker War?
Explain.
The domino theory was correct: communist regimes spread across Southeast Asia when unchecked by a government committed to containment. Socialist thought has intruded upon Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia.
The Domino Theory wasn't worried about "socialist thought" intruding on anyone, it predicted the collapse (hence "domino") of the entire 'free' region of South East Asia if Vietnam was allowed to fall. It was based on a ridiculous 'monolithic' view of the Communist Bloc that doesn't correspond with reality.
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Post by Aeolus »

AniThyng wrote:
Leaving Israel would not stop suicide bombings against American targets.
without american military bases in the MidEast and overt and covert military and economic aid and tacit support for isreali policies, the groundswell of ordinary support for terror groups will diminish to the hard-core fanatics, at the moment you can barely summon any sincere support for america even amoung the western educated upper classes of the arab world. and considering the rank hypocrisy and lies your administration used to launch that Iraq war, i can't blame them.
We would need a military presense in the middle east weather Isreal was there or not.
For I dipt into the future, far as human eye could see,
Saw the Vision of the world, and all the wonder that would be;
Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic sails,
Pilots of the purple twilight dropping down with costly bales;
Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rain'd a ghastly dew
From the nations' airy navies grappling in the central blue;
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Post by Aeolus »

Aeolus wrote:
AniThyng wrote:
Leaving Israel would not stop suicide bombings against American targets.
without american military bases in the MidEast and overt and covert military and economic aid and tacit support for isreali policies, the groundswell of ordinary support for terror groups will diminish to the hard-core fanatics, at the moment you can barely summon any sincere support for america even amoung the western educated upper classes of the arab world. and considering the rank hypocrisy and lies your administration used to launch that Iraq war, i can't blame them.
We would need a military presense in the middle east weather Isreal was there or not.
God my spelling gets worse by the day
For I dipt into the future, far as human eye could see,
Saw the Vision of the world, and all the wonder that would be;
Saw the heavens fill with commerce, argosies of magic sails,
Pilots of the purple twilight dropping down with costly bales;
Heard the heavens fill with shouting, and there rain'd a ghastly dew
From the nations' airy navies grappling in the central blue;
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Post by Axis Kast »

Evidence please.
In 1948, there was no strong relationship between Israel and the United States of America with more than fifty years under their respective belts. Yet between Israel’s creation and the Suez Canal Crisis, the Soviet Union grew to become the principle ally of nations opposed to the State of Israel.
And you think if you tally up the aid Israel recieves every year they actually paid for them?
Some of the money – a substantial amount in terms of the purchase of armaments and other technologies or investment – is nevertheless returned to American coffers.
No, you didn't provide any evidence at all.
Is that so? Missed this, didn’t we? :roll:
Anyway, now that I’ve had time to look into it …

“… intertwined relationships in military, intelligence, bureaucracy … “

http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/1999/israel ... israel.us/

A Clinton-era initiative of the type I discussed:

http://www-tech.mit.edu/V116/N12/clinton.12w.html
Actually it was trillion; regardless, even the figure for official aid is quite substantial (hundreds of billions). And Israel just made another request for aid to defray the costs of the Palestinian insurgency. Why should the US pay?
… perhaps because losing Israel would mean losing a valuable proxy whose intelligence services, technical collaboration, and strategic position are rather useful?
Red herring.
Explain. The critic in question maligned donations to Israel as evidence of money leaving the American economy unnecessarily. But one could make an even more potent argument against Christian charities in the United States. Why should we accept private aid to Israel as a potential “opportunity cost” to government? This opens the door to just about any ridiculous assertion that the critic himself wishes to make. Any money he considered improperly spent can be lumped into that “lost opportunity” figure. It’s quite a bunch of malarkey.
False analogy.
Why? Are you really going to try and convince me that to deny Belgium or the Netherlands such aid as we footed during the Cold War would have doomed Europe to Communism?
Red herring.
Oh, not at all. We provided Europe with plenty of loans for years.
Purchase price combined with after market support most likely.
The purchase price of two hundred (200) aircraft at the cost of $17 million dollars per individual plane would have amounted to some $3.4 billion dollars. Considering that the planes in question would probably not have been available before 1970 and even assuming that maintenance and support costs were a half billion dollars per year for the total pool of combat aircraft, we still have a grand total of $18.4 billion dollars. That’s a far cry below $40 billion – and I’m being generous in my figures as well.
LOL. Yeah, the Arab World is going to retaliate against the USSR for fallout if the USSR destroys there number one enemy that attacked the USSR in the first place. Not only is your why stupid, you haven't even thought up a how. Nice delusion you have there ... jesus
There might very well be military repercussions over the long term. Certainly the Soviet Union would have to deploy additional troops to safeguard its Central Asian borders. We might even see forms of terrorism. Your argument rests on “opportunity costs”. We’ll call these “liability costs”.
Matter of minutes either way. Means absolutely zero.
The difference between missiles traveling to the USSR from the USA and missiles traveling to the USSR from Israel is a matter of minutes?
Concession Accepted. You claimed that they USSR 'jockeyed for years' to be able to hit Israel, a fundamentally idiotic assertion on its face, undoubtedly brought about by rank ignorance of the nuclear forces of the USSR and their capabilties.
Or your own inability to comprehend what you read. I used the word “we” – as in the US and USSR, each of whom jockeyed to reach a point at which they could launch a first-strike that would incapacitate the enemy before they could inflict similar damage in return.
Furthermore, if Israel was ever determined a threat (which you have not established, save for fanciful interpretations of Israel's capabiltiies and intentions without evidence), retargeting several MIRVd missiles, or detailing a BEAR-H ALCM strike, would've been sufficient retaliation for Israel's stupidity. Furthermore, your useless handwaving about "devote resources to determine the extent of Israel's potential and it's being "forced to consider the residual outcomes on its allies" is nothing but nonsense, bereft of substance or any real benefit whatsoever.
Israel’s possession of a nuclear arsenal would have attracted a commitment of Soviet resources to regional analysis and threat containment. That covers the redeployment of missiles from American or European targets to Israeli targets. It also covers preparation for “damage control” if Arab nations become less friendly – or even confrontational – after such an exchange. In many cases, the costs of preparation exceeded the costs of action itself.

[/quote] How does one respond to such a transparently massive false analogy COMBINED with a strawman? Really, the depths you will go to ...


1. The bombing of Osirak:
a: had no effect on Iraq's nuclear program save to possibly accelerate it
b: Osirak was not suitable for nuclear weapons
c: Made Israel and the US complacent

All three of these combined make the bombing of Osirak quite different from the "happy event" with which you originally describe. That you attempt to somehow liken this to letting your enemy defeat you in military conflict because later on they will anyay is the height of fucking idiocy; the problem with bombing Osirak, you bint, was that it offered no advantages and several DISadvantages. If you need the DISadvantages of losing a war to Germany explained to you ... well .... what hope is there.

[/quote]

The bombing of Osirak deprived Iraqi scientists of a site at which they could gain valuable experience dealing with nuclear technologies.

Osirak was unsuitable because of its lack of hard-water, although North Korea made progress in its own weaponization program despite a similar lack of that resource.

Are you honestly arguing that Israel shouldn’t have launched the attack on Osirak because it later drew them to dumb down assessments of Iraqi capability?

As to your closing argument, the disadvantages have now been proven false. Other nations had made progress in the same shoes; Saddam’s men would still have gained significant lessons dealing with their own reactor.
What?
Er, SeaSkimmer.

And as I said, you were the one who conflated all three to pursue your irrelevant tangent. Lie in it.
I argued that the first two signal a probable desire for dealings in the third sphere; you’re the one insisting – without evidence – that the U.S. wanted Iraq to develop nuclear weapons.
Sorry dumbass you can't have it both ways. Either the US accepted your moronic 'all WMD is the same therefore Iraq wanted nukes irrespective of the fact that the fast track only started after the bombing of Osirak' "logic" and happily supplied them BC items, thereby offering tacit approval to a nuclear program, or you abandon that so-called 'reasoning' and lose another point. Beautiful isn't it?
This is predicated on the argument that the “fast track” only developed because of rather than despite or unrelated to Osirak. It’s an unfounded assertion.

Possession of biological and chemical weapons usually signals a desire for nuclear arms – it is by no means tacit acceptance as to their being sought however.

Explain.
The Kuwaitis engaged the Soviets to protect their oil tankers during the Iran-Iraq War; it was at that point that Americans stepped in. Clearly, the Arabs were willing to engage the Soviets for their own protection much as Israel tried to do the same with the U.S.

The Domino Theory wasn't worried about "socialist thought" intruding on anyone, it predicted the collapse (hence "domino") of the entire 'free' region of South East Asia if Vietnam was allowed to fall. It was based on a ridiculous 'monolithic' view of the Communist Bloc that doesn't correspond with reality.
It also has to do with the Red tide – that is, the spread of Communism from one successful nest outward from that point if left unimpeded. It’s what happened.
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Axis Kast wrote: In 1948, there was no strong relationship between Israel and the United States of America with more than fifty years under their respective belts. Yet between Israel's creation and the Suez Canal Crisis, the Soviet Union grew to become the principle ally of nations opposed to the State of Israel.
You originally claimed that the Arabs wanted assistance from the Soviet Union in 1948. They didn't get it. Egypt Syria and the rest certainly hadn't completely fallen out with the West yet. Not that this is an actual answer in anwyway to the original point: "Supporting the creation of Israel and materially assisting Israel to the tune of billions of dollars per year irrespective of what Israel did/didn't do and even now when it's under no threat and offers the US nothing but continual embarassment is a totally different thing". I must be more careful with spotting red herrings, it seems, as you toss them around so liberally.
Some of the money, a substantial amount in terms of the purchase of armaments and other technologies or investment, is nevertheless returned to American coffers.
No math.

Is that so? Missed this, didn't we? :roll:

"intertwined relationships in military, intelligence, bureaucracy"
That's evidence? Fascinating!
Where's the benefit from this $100 million down the toilet, hmmm? As usual, you have a lot of trouble reading your own damn links.
perhaps because losing Israel would mean losing a valuable proxy whose intelligence services, technical collaboration, and strategic position are rather useful?
You have not shown any of these three to be 'rather useful', sorry. Your claims of technical collaboration are especially pathetic in light of the evidence.
Explain. The critic in question maligned donations to Israel as evidence of money leaving the American economy unnecessarily. But one could make an even more potent argument against Christian charities in the United States. Why should we accept private aid to Israel as a potential "opportunity cost" to government? This opens the door to just about any ridiculous assertion that the critic himself wishes to make. Any money he considered improperly spent can be lumped into that "lost opportunity" figure. It's quite a bunch of malarkey.
Christian charities, Israeli charities- who gives a fuck? Red herring. I didn't set out to defend an article tallying up ALL the costs, in case you didn't notice.
Why? Are you really going to try and convince me that to deny Belgium or the Netherlands such aid as we footed during the Cold War would have doomed Europe to Communism?
No, I'm saying the issue of post war reconstruction of Europe is entirely seperate from offering aid to Israel, and the two situations are not remotely comparable, which is what 'false analogy' means.

Oh, not at all. We provided Europe with plenty of loans for years.
In entirely different circumstances for entirely different reasons. As usual, elementary facts escape you.
The purchase price of two hundred (200) aircraft at the cost of $17 million dollars per individual plane would have amounted to some $3.4 billion dollars. Considering that the planes in question would probably not have been available before 1970 and even assuming that maintenance and support costs were a half billion dollars per year for the total pool of combat aircraft, we still have a grand total of $18.4 billion dollars. That's a far cry below $40 billion and I'm being generous in my figures as well.
Your $17 million claim is complete bullshit, for starters. A first generation F-15 costs $29 million, and the economist is probably referring to the downgraded F-15E model, the F-15S (S=Saudi)- which costs even more.
There might very well be military repercussions over the long term. Certainly the Soviet Union would have to deploy additional troops to safeguard its Central Asian borders.
From WHO?! Are you insane?
We might even see forms of terrorism. Your argument rests on "opportunity costs". We?ll call these "liability costs".
Yes, acts of terrorism against the only ally willing to arm you sure is smart :roll: Furthermore, I would stop telling me what my argument rests on, since you clearly don't have an inkling.
The difference between missiles traveling to the USSR from the USA and missiles traveling to the USSR from Israel is a matter of minutes?
*sigh* ... YES. What'd you think it was? Hours? Furthermore, you seriously think anyone but you buys this inane idea that Israel is going to turn itself into radioactive rubble if the USSR ever decided to go for broke on NATO? Are you nuts?
Or your own inability to comprehend what you read. I used the word "we" as in the US and USSR, each of whom jockeyed to reach a point at which they could launch a first-strike that would incapacitate the enemy before they could inflict similar damage in return.
And what the FUCK does that have to do with Israel, you stupid dumbass? Jesus Christ ... you do realize that what the topic is, and that if you really intended to bring up the US and USSR then you must've had some sort of brain fart, because as you can see here:

" Moscow would have precisely zero interest in a pre-emptive strike against Israel in the first place. "

To which you replied:

"And yet we both spent years jockeying so as to be able to do so with one another. "

Now then ... to reiterate what the FUCK does what the USA and USSR did in relaiton to each other have to do with Moscow's interest in destroying Israel, exactly?

You're either an extremely poor liar, or just so dumb you don't know how to rebut something (or, more appropriately, when to concede).
Israel's possession of a nuclear arsenal would have attracted a commitment of Soviet resources to regional analysis and threat containment.
Oh yeah, like the Soviets never examined the Israeli 'threat' (which, AGAIN, you have not even attempted to prove) before :roll:
That covers the redeployment of missiles from American or European targets to Israeli targets. It also covers preparation for damage control. if Arab nations become less friendly, or even confrontational after such an exchange. In many cases, the costs of preparation exceeded the costs of action itself.
Complete unsubstantiated nonsense bereft of evidence, reasoning, or common sense (your continued laughable notion that the Arab nations would become confrotnational for nuking their enemy is beneath contempt ...)
The bombing of Osirak deprived Iraqi scientists of a site at which they could gain valuable experience dealing with nuclear technologies.

Osirak was unsuitable because of its lack of hard-water, although North Korea made progress in its own weaponization program despite a similar lack of that resource.
That's *heavy* water, not hard. Yongbyon is a graphite-moderated reactor (Calder Hall design, requires no heavy water), not light water, and it is Yongbyon which is the threat from which NK can be provided with suitable nuclear material, not the old IRT-2000 research reactor (to which Skimmer erroneously refers) that was built back in the 50s and entered operation in 67. They managed to get a mere 300mg of plutonium out of that reactor in 1975, and admitted as such to the IAEA. That is a completely insignficant amount, nowhere NEAR enough to making a nuclear weapon, and still requiring enrichment.

Furthermore, as the link below indicates, Osirak was specifically designed by the French to be unsuitable for nuclear weapons, and this fact is backed up by both Dr Wilson, and Dr Khadduri, once part of the Iraqi Atomic Energy Commission, now living in Canada (and valuable in debunking the nonsense claims of that fraud, Hamza). Incidentally, Dr Khadduri also backs up Dr Wilson's contention that it was only after June 81 that Iraq began it's push.

Link

Specifically:
During 1975 France provided Iraq with a light water reactor, OSIRAK, which, he stated, "was specifically designed to be unsuitable for the production of plutonium for a bomb." OSIRAK was routinely inspected by the IAEA, in accordance with international norms. Dr Khadduri's assessment of OSIRAK's capabilities was seconded by Dr Richard Wilson, Mallinckrodt Research Professor of Physics at Harvard University, who said in an article published on January 1, 2003, "To collect enough plutonium using OSIRAK would have taken decades not years."

While there was nothing doing on the weapons front at OSIRAK, Dr Khadduri said Iraqi scientists had been "dabbling with rudimentary research on fission bombs." The turning point came when Israel bombed OSIRAK in June 1981.

This prompted Iraq to take the "solid decision to go full steam ahead with weaponisation," Dr Khadduri stated.
It seems that irrelevant comparisons to North Korea are quite your a habit for you.
Are you honestly arguing that Israel shouldn't have launched the attack on Osirak because it later drew them to dumb down assessments of Iraqi capability?
What's so hard to understand? I'm arguing that it offered no advantages, and several disadvantages. When you destroy something that wasn't a threat, and actually cause them to accelerate their efforts, and then you simultaneously get complacent, you are a *drumroll* IDIOT.
As to your closing argument, the disadvantages have now been proven false. Other nations had made progress in the same shoes;
Again: bullshit.
Saddam's men would still have gained significant lessons dealing with their own reactor.
Stop talking out of your arse. You have consistently demonstrated that you don't know a damn thing about anything to do with chemical, biological, nuclear, or conventional weapons, and your airy-fairy fart arse no nothing hand waving about "oooh, they would've gained 'signficant lessons' with that reactor" is not a substitute for an actual argument. Osirak was not a suitable reactor for an Iraqi nuclear weapons program, end of story. This makes the Israeli destruction of it quite useless, and your appeal to that historical non-event (no doubt in the hope that noone would question this common little historical falsehood) quite moot.

Er, SeaSkimmer.
And he's quite wrong, considering the facts at hand.

I argued that the first two signal a probable desire for dealings in the third sphere; you're the one insisting 'without evidence' that the U.S. wanted Iraq to develop nuclear weapons.
No actually, I'm just using your own reasoning against you to show up the flaws in your 'argument'.

This is predicated on the argument that the 'fast track' only developed because of rather than despite or unrelated to Osirak. It?s an unfounded assertion.
Bzzzzt. As usual, you go over the debatable tangent and ignore the rest of it. I'll remove the tangent from the quote so you get it: Either the US accepted your 'all WMD is the same therefore Iraq wanted nukes "logic" and happily supplied them BC items, thereby offering tacit approval to a nuclear program, or you abandon that so-called 'reasoning' and lose another point.
Possession of biological and chemical weapons usually signals a desire for nuclear arms, it is by no means tacit acceptance as to their being sought however.
The US supplied Iraq with WMD components. Your claim that the US didn't want Iraq to get WMD, which you conflate into one big category in the first place, is thus false. I would further point out the US supplied Iraq with the "Atoms for Peace" Library, which initiated Iraq's nuclear program in the first place. Israel's bombing of an insignificant, unsuitable for weapons, light water research reactor was as such both firmly against the facts of what Iraq was capable of doing with it (not fucking much) and against US interests in supplying Iraq with that libary. Ouch.

The Kuwaitis engaged the Soviets to protect their oil tankers during the Iran-Iraq War; it was at that point that Americans stepped in. Clearly, the Arabs were willing to engage the Soviets for their own protection much as Israel tried to do the same with the U.S.
Ah, and of course asking for protection= in danger from domino "theory" (though it is an insult to refer to that piece of debunked paranoia as such).

It also has to do with the Red tide, that is, the spread of Communism from one successful nest outward from that point if left unimpeded. It's what happened.
In case you didn't notice, Indochina did jack shit for the 'Red Tide'. The Vietnamese and Cambodians hated each other's guts, the Chinese hated the Vietnamese, and Laos was a non factor. They had no effect outside their own little shallow region, and the Domino theory was totally incorrect in its predicitons. It is not enough to prove this 'theory' to say that "well, these three countries were communist". You must show a causal connection like that espoused by the theory. One that does not exist. Hence, the theory is less than worthless.
Last edited by Vympel on 2003-11-04 04:30am, edited 2 times in total.
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Post by Ace Pace »

Xenophobe3691 wrote: My bad, my grasp on Israeli politics is a bit tenuous, I was just trying to point out that the Histadrut do have quite a bit of their own say in the Political process.
Actully right now they are striking (Yay no school !) , which costs Israel's economy, and the state's purse, millions per day, which is why I personnaly hate the Histadrut cause they claim they are against economic damage, yet they ruin the economy, the kids are the only ones who win something.
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You originally claimed that the Arabs wanted assistance from the Soviet Union in 1948. They didn't get it. Egypt Syria and the rest certainly hadn't completely fallen out with the West yet. Not that this is an actual answer in anwyway to the original point: "Supporting the creation of Israel and materially assisting Israel to the tune of billions of dollars per year irrespective of what Israel did/didn't do and even now when it's under no threat and offers the US nothing but continual embarassment is a totally different thing". I must be more careful with spotting red herrings, it seems, as you toss them around so liberally.
Changing the nature of the discussion, I see.

The rest of the formerly colonized world offers a valuable commentary: virtually throughout the European powers’ discarded dominions, socialism and Communism had taken hold. This was also true in the Middle East, where certain Arab leaders entertained notions of economic planning truer to Soviet than American forms of management. This naturally put most of the Arab nations on a course of engagement with the U.S.S.R., irrespective of the fact that the United States was not yet considered an egregious offender. This contradicts your earlier argument that without Israel, the Soviet Union might not have gained a strong foothold in the region, for they did so regardless.
No math.
We know that Israel has purchased tens of billions and equipment in arms from the United States, including everything from Sherman and M60 main battle tanks to F-15 and F-16 combat aircraft. I might not be able to provide you with specifics, but we can rest assured in the general figure quoted above. These forms of exchange then reduce the net outflow of cash from American sources, reducing considerably the figure stipulated by the critic in question.
That's evidence? Fascinating!
Well, as you may or may not know, “intertwined relationships in military, intelligence, and bureaucracy” generally indicate intertwined relationships in military, intelligence, and bureaucracy.
Where's the benefit from this $100 million down the toilet, hmmm? As usual, you have a lot of trouble reading your own damn links.
Research and development in the area of security and surveillance. Coordinated intelligence-sharing on the topic of international terrorism with connection to Palestine. This certainly has a great deal of relevance, considering the ebbs and tides of Palestinian resistance and its many and varied benefactors.
You have not shown any of these three to be 'rather useful', sorry. Your claims of technical collaboration are especially pathetic in light of the evidence.
Perhaps you missed SeaSkimmer’s discussion of the benefits of Israeli assistance as it pertained to the Vietnam War.
Christian charities, Israeli charities- who gives a fuck? Red herring. I didn't set out to defend an article tallying up ALL the costs, in case you didn't notice.
Evidence of the spuriousness of the argument of the critic – and thus the figure on which you attempt to rest your case that Israel is an unnecessary financial burden to the United States of America.
No, I'm saying the issue of post war reconstruction of Europe is entirely seperate from offering aid to Israel, and the two situations are not remotely comparable, which is what 'false analogy' means.
And why not? Both were Cold War allies. Why shouldn’t we question the value of paying tens and hundreds of millions in assistance to countries whose ultimate military contribution to the continent’s defense would have been negligible in comparison with our own?
Your $17 million claim is complete bullshit, for starters. A first generation F-15 costs $29 million, and the economist is probably referring to the downgraded F-15E model, the F-15S (S=Saudi)- which costs even more.


Let’s assume, then, that the Saudi aircraft would run the United States $25 million dollars per plane. That’s $5 billion for the aircraft and – assuming total maintenance and support runs us $.5 billion per year over thirty years -, we stand now with a figure of $20 billion dollars. That’s half of the $40 billion you are attempting to defend.
From WHO?! Are you insane?
The Soviet Union always had problems with Muslim separatists; fallout over the Holy Land would doubtless have set them off – it also poses questions as to whether Afghanistan would have been even more costly, considering the religious elements it already motivated to intervention.
Yes, acts of terrorism against the only ally willing to arm you sure is smart Furthermore, I would stop telling me what my argument rests on, since you clearly don't have an inkling.
So your argument that Israel isn’t worth the lost “opportunity costs” of the aid given them isn’t about the lost “opportunity costs” of the aid given them? Pure genius.
*sigh* ... YES. What'd you think it was? Hours? Furthermore, you seriously think anyone but you buys this inane idea that Israel is going to turn itself into radioactive rubble if the USSR ever decided to go for broke on NATO? Are you nuts?
It’s something the U.S.S.R. has got to consider – especially because the possibility of a general war between the United States and Soviet Union was almost always agitated by Arab-Israeli conflicts. Regardless of Israel’s actions after they obtain nuclear missiles of that range, the Soviets need to prepare contingencies.
And what the FUCK does that have to do with Israel, you stupid dumbass? Jesus Christ ... you do realize that what the topic is, and that if you really intended to bring up the US and USSR then you must've had some sort of brain fart, because as you can see here:

" Moscow would have precisely zero interest in a pre-emptive strike against Israel in the first place. "

To which you replied:

"And yet we both spent years jockeying so as to be able to do so with one another. "

Now then ... to reiterate what the FUCK does what the USA and USSR did in relaiton to each other have to do with Moscow's interest in destroying Israel, exactly?

You're either an extremely poor liar, or just so dumb you don't know how to rebut something (or, more appropriately, when to concede).
In the case of a wider, losing war with the Arab world – and in the midst of a general Soviet-American war –, one has got to ask if Israel’s “departure” would include a nuclear attack on Soviet territory – especially if the U.S. and U.S.S.R. are already exchanging their own missiles. Despite the terrifically low likelihood of this kind of thing, the Israelis are technically more likely to launch first – given the fact that they can’t possibly launch after – against the U.S.S.R.
Oh yeah, like the Soviets never examined the Israeli 'threat' (which, AGAIN, you have not even attempted to prove) before
What do you call this whole argument?
Complete unsubstantiated nonsense bereft of evidence, reasoning, or common sense (your continued laughable notion that the Arab nations would become confrotnational for nuking their enemy is beneath contempt ...)
I’ve already dealt with this – although I’ll take the time to laugh once more at your eager dismissal of non-state actors.

It seems that irrelevant comparisons to North Korea are quite your a habit for you.
On what basis? Please explain to me why an oil-rich nation would have desired atomic energy in the first place, unless to advance its experience for future weaponization.

Furthermore, the assertion that Iraq was prompted by Osirak to begin nuclear research rests entirely on the fact that their efforts began after its destruction. You have no proof that they would not have sought nuclear weapons regardless.
What's so hard to understand? I'm arguing that it offered no advantages, and several disadvantages. When you destroy something that wasn't a threat, and actually cause them to accelerate their efforts, and then you simultaneously get complacent, you are a *drumroll* IDIOT.
It offered the advantage that Iraq wouldn’t gain the experience. And, again, insisting that destroying Osirak because it would make us complacent is linking two situations out of context. It wasn’t the bombing itself that made us complacent – that was simply unforeseeable arrogance, which indicates that other nations might have walked away without compromising their wariness and thus gained a more complete victory from the whole ordeal.
Stop talking out of your arse. You have consistently demonstrated that you don't know a damn thing about anything to do with chemical, biological, nuclear, or conventional weapons, and your airy-fairy fart arse no nothing hand waving about "oooh, they would've gained 'signficant lessons' with that reactor" is not a substitute for an actual argument. Osirak was not a suitable reactor for an Iraqi nuclear weapons program, end of story. This makes the Israeli destruction of it quite useless, and your appeal to that historical non-event (no doubt in the hope that noone would question this common little historical falsehood) quite moot.
A nuclear reactor is still a dangerous piece of equipment. The scientists would have had time to familiarize themselves with technology similar to that essential for weaponization.
Bzzzzt. As usual, you go over the debatable tangent and ignore the rest of it. I'll remove the tangent from the quote so you get it: Either the US accepted your 'all WMD is the same therefore Iraq wanted nukes "logic" and happily supplied them BC items, thereby offering tacit approval to a nuclear program, or you abandon that so-called 'reasoning' and lose another point.
Just because we handed Iraq some of what they were after doesn’t mean we also desired that they make good on all of those same ambitions.
The US supplied Iraq with WMD components. Your claim that the US didn't want Iraq to get WMD, which you conflate into one big category in the first place, is thus false. I would further point out the US supplied Iraq with the "Atoms for Peace" Library, which initiated Iraq's nuclear program in the first place. Israel's bombing of an insignificant, unsuitable for weapons, light water research reactor was as such both firmly against the facts of what Iraq was capable of doing with it (not fucking much) and against US interests in supplying Iraq with that libary. Ouch.
A library is not the same thing as a reactor, Vympel.
Ah, and of course asking for protection= in danger from domino "theory" (though it is an insult to refer to that piece of debunked paranoia as such).
Proof that the Arab States were willing to engage the Soviet Union to meet their security needs.
In case you didn't notice, Indochina did jack shit for the 'Red Tide'. The Vietnamese and Cambodians hated each other's guts, the Chinese hated the Vietnamese, and Laos was a non factor. They had no effect outside their own little shallow region, and the Domino theory was totally incorrect in its predicitons. It is not enough to prove this 'theory' to say that "well, these three countries were communist". You must show a causal connection like that espoused by the theory . One that does not exist. Hence, the theory is less than worthless.
Communism spread across the Third World after decolonization. The Vietnam War was about rolling that threat back in one region from which, after it fell, socialist and Communist systems eventually set themselves in place across the Indian Ocean. Popularity and use in one place helped encourage the movement elsewhere.
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Post by Hamel »

Another DBZ-esque battle between Axis and Vympel

Nothing ever changes
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Hamel wrote:Another DBZ-esque battle between Axis and Vympel

Nothing ever changes
Indeed nothing does. I don't have time for this right now. I should be studying.
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Post by Vympel »

Now that I'm done for the day...
Axis Kast wrote:
Changing the nature of the discussion, I see.
Ummm... bullshit.
The rest of the formerly colonized world offers a valuable commentary: virtually throughout the European powers? discarded dominions, socialism and Communism had taken hold.
Irrelevant. We are discussing the Middle East, you'd be well advised to keep it there.
This was also true in the Middle East, where certain Arab leaders entertained notions of economic planning truer to Soviet than American forms of management.
False dilemma. Their economic policies do not necessarily tend to a Soviet/American bent. Key example: Iran. Of course, US/UK paranoia did that democratically elected government in.
This naturally put most of the Arab nations on a course of engagement with the U.S.S.R., irrespective of the fact that the United States was not yet considered an egregious offender. This contradicts your earlier argument that without Israel, the Soviet Union might not have gained a strong foothold in the region, for they did so regardless.
Nowhere did I use the term 'strong foothold' or anything of the sort, so you can put your strawman away. I also direct you to the number of countries in the Middle East that weren't under Soviet sway by default.
We know that Israel has purchased tens of billions and equipment in arms from the United States, including everything from Sherman and M60 main battle tanks to F-15 and F-16 combat aircraft. I might not be able to provide you with specifics, but we can rest assured in the general figure quoted above. These forms of exchange then reduce the net outflow of cash from American sources, reducing considerably the figure stipulated by the critic in question.
At discounted prices, and in some cases, outright gifts. Which the economist in question points out. Hence the loss in cash.

Well, as you may or may not know, ?intertwined relationships in military, intelligence, and bureaucracy? generally indicate intertwined relationships in military, intelligence, and bureaucracy.
Which was not what you were asked to provide.
Research and development in the area of security and surveillance. Coordinated intelligence-sharing on the topic of international terrorism with connection to Palestine. This certainly has a great deal of relevance, considering the ebbs and tides of Palestinian resistance and its many and varied benefactors.
Not the question. Where's the benefit?

Perhaps you missed SeaSkimmer?s discussion of the benefits of Israeli assistance as it pertained to the Vietnam War.
Net zero gain. In case you didn't know, the Soviets got American examples of equipment from their Middle Eastern allies as a result of those same wars. Not that any of this could justify costs.
Evidence of the spuriousness of the argument of the critic ? and thus the figure on which you attempt to rest your case that Israel is an unnecessary financial burden to the United States of America.
Actually, I entered this thread in response to your overinflated estimates of Israel's value, but nevermind.

And why not? Both were Cold War allies. Why shouldn?t we question the value of paying tens and hundreds of millions in assistance to countries whose ultimate military contribution to the continent?s defense would have been negligible in comparison with our own?
Are you suggesting that the US would've been able to defend the continent if it had left Europe in squalor?

Let?s assume, then, that the Saudi aircraft would run the United States $25 million dollars per plane. That?s $5 billion for the aircraft and ? assuming total maintenance and support runs us $.5 billion per year over thirty years -, we stand now with a figure of $20 billion dollars. That?s half of the $40 billion you are attempting to defend.
I will not assume prices for aircraft that are wrong. The blocking of the F-15 fighter sale to which Stauffer refers was for the F-15F variant, an unbuilt variant that was a single-seater F-15E. The F-15E goes for $50 milllion, in 1998 dollars. Saudi Arabia wanted 72. Israel protested, and Saudi Arabia instead got 72 downgraded F-15S fighters. Not that matters, as you will see now:

" Israel has blocked some major US arms sales, such as F-15 fighter aircraft to Saudi Arabia in the mid-1980s. That cost $40 billion over 10 years, says Stauffer."

The F-15s are merely an example. Israel has blocked many arms sales to Saudi Arabia, including forcing the US to hedge on technology (and hence purchase price for AWACS), outright cancelling of some orders ( in 1985 President Reagan wanted to sell Saudi Arabia forty-two additional F-15s, antiaircraft missiles, Harpoon antiship missiles, and Blackhawk troop-carrying helicopters for example), and loss of business to other countries- in 1988, after a US rebuff, Saudi Arabai bought Tornados from Europe.
The Soviet Union always had problems with Muslim separatists; fallout over the Holy Land would doubtless have set them off
ROFLMAO. The Soviet Union destroys the number 1 enemy of Muslims everywhere and you think they'd be 'doubtless' set off? What muslim seperatists? Where? It was Russia that had problems with seperatists, not the USSR- the Soviet state was strong enough to keep the ethnic tensions in the union down. Russia, however, was not (see: Chechnya).
? it also poses questions as to whether Afghanistan would have been even more costly, considering the religious elements it already motivated to intervention.
I'm sure Osama would've been REAL angry ....
So your argument that Israel isn?t worth the lost ?opportunity costs? of the aid given them isn?t about the lost ?opportunity costs? of the aid given them? Pure genius.
Having fun chasing your tail, you stooge?

It?s something the U.S.S.R. has got to consider ?
For about ... two seconds.
especially because the possibility of a general war between the United States and Soviet Union was almost always agitated by Arab-Israeli conflicts. Regardless of Israel?s actions after they obtain nuclear missiles of that range, the Soviets need to prepare contingencies.
Stop repeating yourself. Israel in terms of threat, compared to the USSR's capability to retaliate, is a total non-factor. Your laughable "contingencies" claim is easily translated to a single retaliatory strike employing any of the means at the Soviets disposal. You make no case for arguing that Israel was 'worth it' at all. I can just picture it now "wow, it's a good thing we threw all this money at Israel, the Soviets have to consider the ridiculous idea that the Israelis will be insane enough to nuke the Caucasus, phew I'm so glad ...." :roll:

In the case of a wider, losing war with the Arab world ? and in the midst of a general Soviet-American war ?, one has got to ask if Israel?s ?departure? would include a nuclear attack on Soviet territory ? especially if the U.S. and U.S.S.R. are already exchanging their own missiles. Despite the terrifically low likelihood of this kind of thing, the Israelis are technically more likely to launch first ? given the fact that they can?t possibly launch after ? against the U.S.S.R.
Your assumption that the USSR would launch at Israel over a war in Europe is wholly without merit.

What do you call this whole argument?
A waste of my time. You have NOT established any Israeli plan,intent,or idle musing on the toilet to even consider striking the Soviet Union, sorry, and even if you did, it is insignificant.
I?ve already dealt with this ? although I?ll take the time to laugh once more at your eager dismissal of non-state actors.
Yes, I'm sure you're quite safe in your own delusions about the grand Muslim uprising against the USSR for destroying the No. 1 enemy of the Muslim world.

On what basis? Please explain to me why an oil-rich nation would have desired atomic energy in the first place, unless to advance its experience for future weaponization.
Total red herring, and a quite laughable one considering that Eisenhower certainly had no problem with the idea. The USSR was/is oil rich too, does that mean that all it's nuclear power plants are for weapons?
Furthermore, the assertion that Iraq was prompted by Osirak to begin nuclear research rests entirely on the fact that their efforts began after its destruction. You have no proof that they would not have sought nuclear weapons regardless.
The circumstantial evidence is quite compelling, which is considerably more than your laughable "all WMD are the same therefore Saddam wanted nuclear weapons and the Israeli provocation did nothing" reasoning. Not that this tangent particularly matters.
It offered the advantage that Iraq wouldn?t gain the experience.
Stop talking out of your arse. What experience?
And, again, insisting that destroying Osirak because it would make us complacent is linking two situations out of context. It wasn?t the bombing itself that made us complacent ? that was simply unforeseeable arrogance, which indicates that other nations might have walked away without compromising their wariness and thus gained a more complete victory from the whole ordeal.
Purely your assertion.
A nuclear reactor is still a dangerous piece of equipment.
So is a chainsaw. Big shit.
The scientists would have had time to familiarize themselves with technology similar to that essential for weaponization.
More ignorance. Weaponization is related to enrichment, which has nothing to do with an actual reactor, from which you can extract the fuel to be enriched. Except in Osirak you couldn't. Unless you were willing to grow old and die as you waited for the material to get maybe ONE bomb.
Just because we handed Iraq some of what they were after doesn?t mean we also desired that they make good on all of those same ambitions.
Concession Accepted. Just because Iraq pursued SOME WMD doesn't mean they desied to make good on ALL WMD.

A library is not the same thing as a reactor, Vympel.
Too bad you don't know what the program in question did. For example, it started Pakistan's and India's nuclear program. This also handily does away with your "we didn't want Iraq getting 'lessons' from reactors" nonsense, as clearly, you did.
Proof that the Arab States were willing to engage the Soviet Union to meet their security needs.
Thanks for restating exactly what I said in a verbose manner, and not rebutting anything.
Communism spread across the Third World after decolonization.
In some places it did, in some places it didn't. This has nothing to do with Domino Theory.
The Vietnam War was about rolling that threat back in one region from which, after it fell, socialist and Communist systems eventually set themselves in place across the Indian Ocean. Popularity and use in one place helped encourage the movement elsewhere.
I told you exactly what must be shown for the Domino Theory to be worth jack shit, and predictably, you launch off into a long winded, no answer spiel in general terms that is quite full of shit in any case- there was no proliferation of Communist systems across the Indian Ocean (honestly, what the fuck are you smoking?) and you have not established ANY causal connection at all between the loss of South Vietnam and such proliferation, if it even existed.
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Post by Coyote »

Some things to bear in mind--

The US did jack diddley to support Israel after the UN Resolution 181 in 1948. After midwifing the state, the US forgot about Israel. When the Arabs attacked in the War of Independence, it was with largely leftover WW-2 surplus stuff from Britain, FRance, America, some Soviet and a bit of German stuff. It did not imply that these nations supported aither side-- they just fought with what they had lying around.

America stayed uninterested in Israel until 1956. Colonel Gemal abd'al-Nasser took control in a coup in Egypt and decided to take charge of MidEast politics. Through Czech intermediaries, he bought huge numbers of Soviet equipment, which scared Israel, FRance and Britain. Israel feared for its borders; Britain and France for the Suez Canal. The first big ally of Israel was France, America was only marginally interested.

Basically, Israel's existance DID NOT rely on the US, or US arms.

It wasn't until later, after Nasser was seen as firmly in the Soviet camp, that the US countered his move by adopting Israel. The 1967 war was fought with a lot of US supplies, but also a lot of French stuff as well. Israel was still not 'dependent on the US for its survival'.

Bear in mind that the stated goal of the Arab states was to 'throw the Jews into the sea' and eradicate the state of Israel. Not defeat it, not impose terms, but make the nation and its people dissappear into the history books. Needless to say, this is not what most civilized people see as a 'just and righteous' frame of mind.

In the 1973 war (which the Arabs, not Israel, launched) the US withheld aid until the last minute, ostensibly to teach Israel a lesson about rocking the boat too much. After the war, Israel was willing to accept peace with Egypt (the chief belligerent) in exchange for the Sinai penninsula.

By this time, Israel had become very much a partner to the US. The ratio of Arab-vs-Israeli matched the worst fears of an imagined NATO-vs-Warsaw Pact confrontation; and seeing Western (US) made equipment fare well against swarms and swarms of Soviet technology bouyed US hopes and caused some dismay to Soviet designers. (However, it should be noted that the Arabs used equipment improperly).

As far as the USSR nuking Israel-- if there was only one single Arab left alive to piss on the smouldering ruins of Tel Aviv, the Arabs wouyld have accepted that. There was, at the time, some serious hatred in the area. Now, though, notice that the Arabs states largely ignore the Israel-Palestinian conflict, beyond rhetorical soundbites that play to home audiences.

In the long run, Israel does not matter-- had it never materialized, there would be PLENTY of other reasons for the Arab states to go at each other, and there would be ample US involvement in the region regardless.
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Post by Axis Kast »


Irrelevant. We are discussing the Middle East, you'd be well advised to keep it there.
The Middle East does not exist in a vacuum. It is impossible to appreciate and properly understand the nation-states which coalesced after 1945 without first taking into account the general matter of decolonization, in which Arab socialism and residual mistrust or outright hatred of the British and French helped discourage cooperation with the United States and prompted new governments to engage Moscow for support. Any ground lost by the United States during this time was because of general bungling – as in Saudi Arabia and to some extent Egypt with Nasser – or even too close an association with the British rather than ties to Israel per se.
False dilemma. Their economic policies do not necessarily tend to a Soviet/American bent. Key example: Iran. Of course, US/UK paranoia did that democratically elected government in.
Mossadeq nationalized oil concessions throughout his country; the Shah reversed that policy when he came to power. On the one hand you’ve got a central economist with an economy taking notes from socialists; on the other, you’ve got somebody committed to a system endorsed by the United States.
Nowhere did I use the term 'strong foothold' or anything of the sort, so you can put your strawman away. I also direct you to the number of countries in the Middle East that weren't under Soviet sway by default.
Which were? Israel? Saudi Arabia?

Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and Iran all favored the kinds of nationalistic, socialistic centralized economies so espoused by the Communists in Moscow. Lebanon was a thrall of its neighbors; Yemen attests to socialist revolutions. Jordan was the site of constant British intervention throughout the 1950s.
At discounted prices, and in some cases, outright gifts. Which the economist in question points out. Hence the loss in cash.
Which Israeli weapons were “gifted”? Do you deny that Israel has spent billions of dollars on American weapons? Even if offered as aid, it’s still being pumped back into the United States economy.
Which was not what you were asked to provide.
I was not asked to prove that Israel had entered into relationships with U.S. intelligence?
Not the question. Where's the benefit?
Perhaps you hadn’t heard: Palestinian terrorists have begun targeting Americans. The area is suspected to be a clearing house for international terrorism.
Net zero gain. In case you didn't know, the Soviets got American examples of equipment from their Middle Eastern allies as a result of those same wars. Not that any of this could justify costs.
That depends on what kind of dollar value you’re willing to put on the success of American endeavors in Vietnam and the long-term preparation of new technology to surpass similar Soviet equipment.
Actually, I entered this thread in response to your overinflated estimates of Israel's value, but nevermind.
You’re evading the question. The figures on which you claim to make the argument that Israel “costs too much” or “isn’t worth the cash” are absolutely farcical.
Are you suggesting that the US would've been able to defend the continent if it had left Europe in squalor?
Strawman. I’m pointing out that aid for the Netherlands and Belgium needn’t necessarily have been as comprehensive as it was.

I will not assume prices for aircraft that are wrong. The blocking of the F-15 fighter sale to which Stauffer refers was for the F-15F variant, an unbuilt variant that was a single-seater F-15E. The F-15E goes for $50 milllion, in 1998 dollars. Saudi Arabia wanted 72. Israel protested, and Saudi Arabia instead got 72 downgraded F-15S fighters. Not that matters, as you will see now:

" Israel has blocked some major US arms sales, such as F-15 fighter aircraft to Saudi Arabia in the mid-1980s. That cost $40 billion over 10 years, says Stauffer."

The F-15s are merely an example. Israel has blocked many arms sales to Saudi Arabia, including forcing the US to hedge on technology (and hence purchase price for AWACS), outright cancelling of some orders ( in 1985 President Reagan wanted to sell Saudi Arabia forty-two additional F-15s, antiaircraft missiles, Harpoon antiship missiles, and Blackhawk troop-carrying helicopters for example), and loss of business to other countries- in 1988, after a US rebuff, Saudi Arabai bought Tornados from Europe.
Forty billion dollars is more than the Shah spent on procuring his “golden toys” at a time when Iran turned out more oil than any other nation in the Middle East. If you cannot provide this man’s specific list, then that figure is insupportable. This article calculates “opportunity costs” on the most ridiculous of basis, as we have already seen.

Moreover, considering we subsidize the Saudi’s army, I’d like you to defend how selling them mountains of arms wouldn’t have been as costly as doing the same for Israel.
ROFLMAO. The Soviet Union destroys the number 1 enemy of Muslims everywhere and you think they'd be 'doubtless' set off? What muslim seperatists? Where? It was Russia that had problems with seperatists, not the USSR- the Soviet state was strong enough to keep the ethnic tensions in the union down. Russia, however, was not (see: Chechnya).
Russia was always suspicious of its Muslims; when the U.S.S.R. came around, it antagonized them even further. If Soviet fallout were to land in the Middle East, it would doubtless arm such malcontents with a powerful lure for potential allies.
I'm sure Osama would've been REAL angry ....
Considering that he was angry we guaranteed Saudi Arabia’s borders over the long term? That’s not a poor argument, no.
Stop repeating yourself. Israel in terms of threat, compared to the USSR's capability to retaliate, is a total non-factor. Your laughable "contingencies" claim is easily translated to a single retaliatory strike employing any of the means at the Soviets disposal. You make no case for arguing that Israel was 'worth it' at all. I can just picture it now "wow, it's a good thing we threw all this money at Israel, the Soviets have to consider the ridiculous idea that the Israelis will be insane enough to nuke the Caucasus, phew I'm so glad
That’s just it. It doesn’t matter that the Soviet Union could sweep the Israelis aside with barely any effort. It’s that they have to expend the resources to prepare to do it.
Total red herring, and a quite laughable one considering that Eisenhower certainly had no problem with the idea. The USSR was/is oil rich too, does that mean that all it's nuclear power plants are for weapons?
The U.S.S.R. had financial troubles of its own, but the Middle East was in a whole different kind of economic hurt. The sheer cost of nuclear energy was prohibitive in and of itself; oil burning was a far better and more economical option.
The circumstantial evidence is quite compelling, which is considerably more than your laughable "all WMD are the same therefore Saddam wanted nuclear weapons and the Israeli provocation did nothing" reasoning. Not that this tangent particularly matters.
The only circumstantial evidence is that: “We know Israel began seeking nuclear weapons actively after Osirak was destroyed.” Despite the fact that Osirak was their first exposure to nuclear technologies in the first place. And what is it with you and the Saddam/WMD strawman? Just because he might have set his sights on them doesn’t mean we handed them to him in a brown paper bag.
Stop talking out of your arse. What experience?
It’s what some people call “operating a nuclear reactor.”
Purely your assertion.
No different than your teleological argument. That’s a fallacy, in fact. You have some special name for it, I do believe. It goes something like this: just because one event occurs after another doesn’t automatically relate the two.
So is a chainsaw. Big shit.
Concession accepted.
More ignorance. Weaponization is related to enrichment, which has nothing to do with an actual reactor, from which you can extract the fuel to be enriched. Except in Osirak you couldn't. Unless you were willing to grow old and die as you waited for the material to get maybe ONE bomb.
So, essentially, the same thing was occurring on a smaller scale. We call working with that kind of technology “experience”.
Concession Accepted. Just because Iraq pursued SOME WMD doesn't mean they desied to make good on ALL WMD.
Yet we know that Hussein pursued a nuclear program for some time. What you’re really getting at is our debate over whether he would have hid components of more than one program. The answer: if he took the risk to hide components of one, why not the others?
Too bad you don't know what the program in question did. For example, it started Pakistan's and India's nuclear program. This also handily does away with your "we didn't want Iraq getting 'lessons' from reactors" nonsense, as clearly, you did.
The library launched an idea; it did not build a reactor.
I told you exactly what must be shown for the Domino Theory to be worth jack shit, and predictably, you launch off into a long winded, no answer spiel in general terms that is quite full of shit in any case- there was no proliferation of Communist systems across the Indian Ocean (honestly, what the fuck are you smoking?) and you have not established ANY causal connection at all between the loss of South Vietnam and such proliferation, if it even existed.
Bullshit. The spread and success of Vietnamese and Chinese Communism doubtless influenced those in Indonesia and much of the former British Southeast Asian dominions to experiment with socialism more heavily. The Domino Theory can work even without utterly totalitarian Communism.
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Post by Vympel »

Axis Kast wrote:The Middle East does not exist in a vacuum. It is impossible to appreciate and properly understand the nation-states which coalesced after 1945 without first taking into account the general matter of decolonization, in which Arab socialism and residual mistrust or outright hatred of the British and French helped discourage cooperation with the United States and prompted new governments to engage Moscow for support. Any ground lost by the United States during this time was because of general bungling, as in Saudi Arabia and to some extent Egypt with Nasser, or even too close an association with the British rather than ties to Israel per se.
Pure assertion.

Mossadeq nationalized oil concessions throughout his country; the Shah reversed that policy when he came to power. On the one hand you?ve got a central economist with an economy taking notes from socialists; on the other, you?ve got somebody committed to a system endorsed by the United States.
Precisely the same ignorant paranoia that created fundamentalist Iran as it stands today. Nationalizing strangulating foreign oil interests in his country does not= allied with the Soviet Union.
Which were? Israel? Saudi Arabia?

Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and Iran all favored the kinds of nationalistic, socialistic centralized economies so espoused by the Communists in Moscow. Lebanon was a thrall of its neighbors; Yemen attests to socialist revolutions. Jordan was the site of constant British intervention throughout the 1950s.
Trotting out your smelly 'socialist leaning economic policies'='allies of the Soviets' fallacy again, but yes, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Iran.
Which Israeli weapons were 'gifted'?
Between 1994-2001:

64,744 M-16A1 rifles
2,469 M-204 grenade launchers
1,500 M-2 .50 caliber machine guns
.30 caliber, .50 caliber, and 20mm ammunition
Do you deny that Israel has spent billions of dollars on American weapons?
For fuck's sake: what part of AID and DISCOUNT do you not understand?
Even if offered as aid, it?s still being pumped back into the United States economy.
Big shit, it's still lost cash.

I was not asked to prove that Israel had entered into relationships with U.S. intelligence?
No. As usual, you don't know what the fuck is going on, or you're just being a deliberately obtuse shit trotting out red herring after red herring. Fuck this is tedious:

"You can't provide a single example of useful intelligence that Israel has procured for the US in its so-called war on terror. Concession accepted. "

Was the original question. At no point did you answer it. You even admitted as such:

"No, I cannot provide any particular scenario in which Israeli intelligence helped the United States."

Your subsequent appeal to 'intelligence relationships' without any data as to their worth, is as such, worthless. Most amusing in light of the known incidences of Israel spying on the US.
Perhaps you hadn?t heard: Palestinian terrorists have begun targeting Americans.
Degan already smacked down this pathetic dead horse last time you tried beating it:

"The State Department issues travel warnings for places such as Palestine and other hot-spots where high risk to Americans may exist and where travel is well understood to be an "at own risk" proposition. That is longstanding U.S. and international law and U.S. practise in fact."
The area is suspected to be a clearing house for international terrorism.
Unsubstantiated shit, as usual, whatever. There is no evidence of a campaign of Palestinian terror against the United States.

That depends on what kind of dollar value you?re willing to put on the success of American endeavors in Vietnam
Vietnam was always doomed to failure. Or are you going to try and argue this point as well and embarass yourself further?
and the long-term preparation of new technology to surpass similar Soviet equipment.
US equipment was already well advanced of any Soviet monkey-model export shit the Israelis captured in their wars, sorry.
You?re evading the question. The figures on which you claim to make the argument that Israel ?costs too much? or ?isn?t worth the cash? are absolutely farcical.
Sorry if you don't like them.
Strawman. I?m pointing out that aid for the Netherlands and Belgium needn?t necessarily have been as comprehensive as it was.
You're the idiot who tried to equate aid to Israel to post-WW2 reconstruction, not I. As it is, put your money where you mouth is and prove that the aid needn't have been as comprehensive as it was. Of course, you won't.

Forty billion dollars is more than the Shah spent on procuring his ?golden toys? at a time when Iran turned out more oil than any other nation in the Middle East.
*holds nose* fwar that red herring stinks ...
If you cannot provide this man?s specific list, then that figure is insupportable.
Rubbish. You've lost the point (constructed off a ridiculous interpretation of the quote) and you know it- I need not provide an exhaustive list of every item Israel jumped up and down about- you don't like it, take it up with Stauffer, bitch.
This article calculates ?opportunity costs? on the most ridiculous of basis, as we have already seen.

Moreover, considering we subsidize the Saudi?s army, I?d like you to defend how selling them mountains of arms wouldn?t have been as costly as doing the same for Israel.
Because Saudi Arabia fucking paid for it, you dumbass. :roll:
Russia was always suspicious of its Muslims; when the U.S.S.R. came around, it antagonized them even further. If Soviet fallout were to land in the Middle East, it would doubtless arm such malcontents with a powerful lure for potential allies.
Oh yeah, I can see that one coming "the Soviets nuked Israel! Clearly, they are our enemy!" You're deluded.
Considering that he was angry we guaranteed Saudi Arabia?s borders over the long term? That?s not a poor argument, no.
You really are desperate aren't you? American Infidels on holy ground=Soviet destroying of Zionist infidels. Jesus Christ, what a moron ...
That?s just it. It doesn?t matter that the Soviet Union could sweep the Israelis aside with barely any effort. It?s that they have to expend the resources to prepare to do it.
Yeah, that pair of ICBMs, where oh were will they get more of them ...

The U.S.S.R. had financial troubles of its own, but the Middle East was in a whole different kind of economic hurt. The sheer cost of nuclear energy was prohibitive in and of itself; oil burning was a far better and more economical option.
Assertion.
The only circumstantial evidence is that: ?We know Israel began seeking nuclear weapons actively after Osirak was destroyed.? Despite the fact that Osirak was their first exposure to nuclear technologies in the first place.
No actually, they had a reactor before that. Gosh you're ignorant. Their first research reactor came online in 1966. And they even bought it from *gasp!* the evil Soviet Union! It's a good thing the Israelis bombed that ... oh ... wait ... they didn't.
And what is it with you and the Saddam/WMD strawman? Just because he might have set his sights on them doesn?t mean we handed them to him in a brown paper bag.
Your inability to recognize someone using your own spasticated reasoning against you is not my problem.
It?s what some people call ?operating a nuclear reactor.?
And what does that have to do with nuclear weapons? Oh that's right: fuck all.
No different than your teleological argument. That?s a fallacy, in fact. You have some special name for it, I do believe. It goes something like this: just because one event occurs after another doesn?t automatically relate the two.
Indeed it doesn't, but Khadduri SAID that's what happened. Therefore, that's evidence of it being the case, apart from the fallacious assumption of after this therefore because of this. And don't try and use fallacies anymore, you'll just hurt yourself.

Concession accepted.
I'm sure everyone's impressed by your own little declaration of victory, you boob.
So, essentially, the same thing was occurring on a smaller scale. We call working with that kind of technology 'experience'.
Ah, so now your argument has backpedalled to "the Israelis bombed Osirak to prevent them getting experience from a reactor totally unsuited to producing fuel for weapons so that in 50 years, they might have material for one bomb. Maybe."

All while their previous research reactor bought from the Soviets was left alone. So much for that one.
Yet we know that Hussein pursued a nuclear program for some time.
No actually, prior to 81 the nuclear program wasn't a real program at all: "dabbling with rudimentary research on fission bombs." was how Khadduri put it.
What you?re really getting at is our debate over whether he would have hid components of more than one program. The answer: if he took the risk to hide components of one, why not the others?
Total red herring. I'm not getting at anything at all. Try and stay on topic.
The library launched an idea; it did not build a reactor.
Indeed it didn't, but it's indicative of US intentions in that regard. As it is, the reactor originally meant for Iraq went to Iran, as the Shah was more palatable.
Bullshit. The spread and success of Vietnamese and Chinese Communism doubtless influenced those in Indonesia
Indonesia was never communist, you crashing idiot.
and much of the former British Southeast Asian dominions to experiment with socialism more heavily.
"Experiment with socialism more heavily?" Funny- I can't see where the Domino Theory said anything about that ... oh wait, that's it, you're not only bullshitting through your teeth, you've backpedalled at the rate of knots. See below for the dictionary.
The Domino Theory can work even without utterly totalitarian Communism.
The Domino Theory is defined in the fucking dictionary: "domino theory
Dom´i`no the´o`ry

Noun
1.
domino theory - the political theory that if one nation comes under Communist control then neighboring nations will also come under Communist control"

or, from here:

"The idea that if one key nation in a region fell to control of communists, others would follow like toppling dominoes. The theory was used by many American leaders to justify American intervention in the Vietnam War."

and then there's this one:

"The domino theory was a United States political theory advanced by both liberal and conservative Americans during the Cold War. It asserted that if one country were taken over by Communists, neighbouring countries would fall like dominos."

or this

"1 : a theory that if one nation becomes Communist-controlled the neighboring nations will also become Communist-controlled
2 : the theory that if one act or event is allowed to take place a series of similar acts or events will follow"

So sorry, your bullshit redefinition of the 'theory' so it can be compatible with your backpedalling is completely without support.

In addition, you have:

- zero proof of any causal connection between the fall of Vietnam and the emergence of other communist regimes (which you have not even mentioned by name, because you know there fucking AREN'T any)

- zero response to the fact that Laos was under North Vietnamese domination long before South Vietnam fell, making it usesless to the so-called Domino 'Theory' that you have already backpedalled from with your lame 'experiment with socialism' bullshit

- zero response to the fact that there is no causal connection between the fall of South Vietnam and Cambodia's (quite different from others) communist rule

- zero evidence of any countries in the region going communist as a result of the fall of South Vietnam.

Concession Accepted.
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Post by Axis Kast »

Pure assertion.
It is widely true: the majority of colonies under European imperial dominion not possessed of sizable white populations fell into socialist modes of thought both during and after decolonization. Such trends are observable in the post-war histories of Egypt, India, and Vietnam, among others. Certainly, the U.S.S.R. represented for the Arab world a much more attractive partner – considering its economic and political models – than the Western world.
Precisely the same ignorant paranoia that created fundamentalist Iran as it stands today. Nationalizing strangulating foreign oil interests in his country does not= allied with the Soviet Union.
It certainly represents the centralizing influence of Soviet thought and socialist policy; more evidence of stronger proclivities toward Moscow.
Trotting out your smelly 'socialist leaning economic policies'='allies of the Soviets' fallacy again, but yes, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Iran.
Until our intervention, Iran was much closer to the Soviet Union than the Western world.

The crux of this issue is whether the Arabs would have preferred the Soviet engagement in the first place, without the added influence of America’s ties to Israel. The answer is yes.
Between 1994-2001:

64,744 M-16A1 rifles
2,469 M-204 grenade launchers
1,500 M-2 .50 caliber machine guns
.30 caliber, .50 caliber, and 20mm ammunition
At best, we’re talking tens of millions of dollars in small arms and basic munitions. This is your damning argument?
For fuck's sake: what part of AID and DISCOUNT do you not understand?
We regularly reward allied nations with discounts on purchased equipment – and in many cases, Israel still pays a portion of the costs out of the aid it recieves. Thus the costs are recouped.
Big shit, it's still lost cash.
And then returned.
No. As usual, you don't know what the fuck is going on, or you're just being a deliberately obtuse shit trotting out red herring after red herring. Fuck this is tedious:

"You can't provide a single example of useful intelligence that Israel has procured for the US in its so-called war on terror. Concession accepted. "

Was the original question. At no point did you answer it. You even admitted as such:

"No, I cannot provide any particular scenario in which Israeli intelligence helped the United States."

Your subsequent appeal to 'intelligence relationships' without any data as to their worth, is as such, worthless. Most amusing in light of the known incidences of Israel spying on the US.
I provided evidence of the Clinton-administration cooperation. This certainly has to do with the War on Terror. Nice try, though.
Degan already smacked down this pathetic dead horse last time you tried beating it:

"The State Department issues travel warnings for places such as Palestine and other hot-spots where high risk to Americans may exist and where travel is well understood to be an "at own risk" proposition. That is longstanding U.S. and international law and U.S. practise in fact."
And, as Degan was told, this is no reason to tolerate it on any level. I also remind you that the most recent of those killed were government officials.
Unsubstantiated shit, as usual, whatever. There is no evidence of a campaign of Palestinian terror against the United States.
It’s a crossroads for international terrorism, whether or not the Palestinian liberation groups target Americans specifically.
Vietnam was always doomed to failure. Or are you going to try and argue this point as well and embarass yourself further?
So Israeli contributions are somehow negated? I think not.
US equipment was already well advanced of any Soviet monkey-model export shit the Israelis captured in their wars, sorry.
It doesn’t mean that putting our hands on physical models wouldn’t have helped drive the search for new deterrents.
Sorry if you don't like them.
Concession accepted. It isn’t about whether they please me. It’s about whether they are credible measurements in the first place. This brings down your whole argument, by the way.
You're the idiot who tried to equate aid to Israel to post-WW2 reconstruction, not I. As it is, put your money where you mouth is and prove that the aid needn't have been as comprehensive as it was. Of course, you won't.
I just did. If you deny it, prove to me that Belgium and the Netherlands needed exactly the amounts of money we gave them to ensure a successful conclusion to the Cold War.
Rubbish. You've lost the point (constructed off a ridiculous interpretation of the quote) and you know it- I need not provide an exhaustive list of every item Israel jumped up and down about- you don't like it, take it up with Stauffer, bitch.
Stauffer’s comments are broad and generalizing. The supposed evidence he provides is far from comprehensive. You cannot base a credible argument on what is clearly incomplete data.

I’ve lost the point, but you’re whining about it? I’ve lost the point, but you can’t explain what it was that Saudi Arabia was going to purchase at the cost of $40 billion dollars?
Because Saudi Arabia fucking paid for it, you dumbass.
Source that Saudi Arabia finances the entire American military mission in that country?
Oh yeah, I can see that one coming "the Soviets nuked Israel! Clearly, they are our enemy!" You're deluded.
More like: “The Soviet response has rained fallout on tens of thousands of our people and killed countless members of our families.” These are non-state actors, Vympel.
You really are desperate aren't you? American Infidels on holy ground=Soviet destroying of Zionist infidels. Jesus Christ, what a moron ...
Evidence that not everybody sees any given action in the same light. Americans will argue that it was for Saudi Arabia’s protection that their troops were sent to the Holy Land; Osama Bin Laden insists that it is for some other end.
Yeah, that pair of ICBMs, where oh were will they get more of them ...
A pair of ICBMs. Technicians. Fuel. Trucks. Planning committees. Expensive analysis.
Assertion.
Fact. An oil-burning power station is far easier to operate, supply, and finance than a nuclear facility.
No actually, they had a reactor before that. Gosh you're ignorant. Their first research reactor came online in 1966. And they even bought it from *gasp!* the evil Soviet Union! It's a good thing the Israelis bombed that ... oh ... wait ... they didn't.[/quote

Iraq.
Your inability to recognize someone using your own spasticated reasoning against you is not my problem.
But that’s your argument: because we gave him biological and chemical precursors, we are somehow responsible for his nuclear program as well.
And what does that have to do with nuclear weapons? Oh that's right: fuck all.
Cut the act. A nuclear reactor is the basic foundation of a nuclear weaponization program.
Indeed it doesn't, but Khadduri SAID that's what happened. Therefore, that's evidence of it being the case, apart from the fallacious assumption of after this therefore because of this. And don't try and use fallacies anymore, you'll just hurt yourself.
Khadduri could say the sky was falling, too. Does that mean you’d believe it?

It’s a teleological argument, end of story. Nobody can raise any conclusive proof that Iraq would have remained content to abstain from weaponization even if the Israelis hadn’t struck.
Ah, so now your argument has backpedalled to "the Israelis bombed Osirak to prevent them getting experience from a reactor totally unsuited to producing fuel for weapons so that in 50 years, they might have material for one bomb. Maybe."

All while their previous research reactor bought from the Soviets was left alone. So much for that one.
What was the status of this second reactor?
No actually, prior to 81 the nuclear program wasn't a real program at all: "dabbling with rudimentary research on fission bombs." was how Khadduri put it.
Evidence of intent. We call that sinking your own battleship. Concession accepted.
Indeed it didn't, but it's indicative of US intentions in that regard. As it is, the reactor originally meant for Iraq went to Iran, as the Shah was more palatable.
What does this have to do with the status of Iraq’s program.
Indonesia was never communist, you crashing idiot.
It has socialistic leanings.
” Experiment with socialism more heavily?" Funny- I can't see where the Domino Theory said anything about that ... oh wait, that's it, you're not only bullshitting through your teeth, you've backpedalled at the rate of knots. See below for the dictionary.
Spread of Communist ideas.

2 : the theory that if one act or event is allowed to take place a series of similar acts or events will follow"
If some countries adopt socialist systems with seeming success, so others will be encouraged to do so.
In addition, you have:

- zero proof of any causal connection between the fall of Vietnam and the emergence of other communist regimes (which you have not even mentioned by name, because you know there fucking AREN'T any)

- zero response to the fact that Laos was under North Vietnamese domination long before South Vietnam fell, making it usesless to the so-called Domino 'Theory' that you have already backpedalled from with your lame 'experiment with socialism' bullshit

- zero response to the fact that there is no causal connection between the fall of South Vietnam and Cambodia's (quite different from others) communist rule

- zero evidence of any countries in the region going communist as a result of the fall of South Vietnam.
And yet the region leans more heavily toward centralized economics and strict market controls than capitalism and free trade. Evidence of socialist influence which grew especially after Vietnam (see, formerly British Malaya).
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Post by Vympel »

Axis Kast wrote:It is widely true: the majority of colonies under European imperial dominion not possessed of sizable white populations fell into socialist modes of thought both during and after decolonization. Such trends are observable in the post-war histories of Egypt, India, and Vietnam, among others. Certainly, the U.S.S.R. represented for the Arab world a much more attractive partner ? considering its economic and political models ? than the Western world.
Obviously, it did not, despite your no-history claims- as evidenced by the countries that did not lean towards the Soviet Union in the Middle East.
It certainly represents the centralizing influence of Soviet thought and socialist policy; more evidence of stronger proclivities toward Moscow.
More assertion: prove Mossadeq was influenced by Soviet thought.
Until our intervention, Iran was much closer to the Soviet Union than the Western world.
It was nowhere near the Soviet Union, nor was it Allied with it, nor was there any reason to think it would save for the US/UK own folly in that regard.
The crux of this issue is whether the Arabs would have preferred the Soviet engagement in the first place, without the added influence of America?s ties to Israel. The answer is yes.
They didn't. It was rather split, as is obvious.

At best, we?re talking tens of millions of dollars in small arms and basic munitions. This is your damning argument?
Don't try and change what the issue was you dishonest dickhead. You asked for proof of gifted weapons, which I said occued in "some cases". Other examples of free equipment:

14 AH-1E Cobras
72 Air Defense Artillery Vehicles
20 F-100 engines
5,000 C508 105MM HEAT-T, M456A
5,000 C518 105MM HEP-T, M393A2
2 Hawk Battallion Command Posts
500 MIM-72E Chaparral Missiles
170,000 H708 35mm subcaliber light antitank weapon rockets
Radios and miscellaneous support equipment
Miscellaneous support equipment
HAWK ground support equipment
36 M48A3 Chaparral anti-aircraft missile launchers; 500 MIM-72 guided missiles
28 FMC M-577A2 command post armored personnel carriers
121 Martin Marietta Walleye missile tube vidicons
35 digital computers for McDonnell Douglas F-15 aircraft
We regularly reward allied nations with discounts on purchased equipment ? and in many cases, Israel still pays a portion of the costs out of the aid it recieves. Thus the costs are recouped.
Bullshit. Prove it or drop it.

And then returned.
Bullshit. Prove it or drop it.
I provided evidence of the Clinton-administration cooperation. This certainly has to do with the War on Terror. Nice try, though.
You have no evidence of any Israeli help. Hence, you lose.
And, as Degan was told, this is no reason to tolerate it on any level. I also remind you that the most recent of those killed were government officials.
As government officials, they were even more aware of the risks of going there than an average citizen. Israel's sordid little quagmire has nothing to do with the United States, your repeated attempts to conflate the two as one notwithstanding.
It?s a crossroads for international terrorism, whether or not the Palestinian liberation groups target Americans specifically.
Assertion. This is the part where you repeat yourself in a different way.

So Israeli contributions are somehow negated? I think not.
I think so. Israeli capture of Soviet war material had no effect on the outcome of the war.

It doesn?t mean that putting our hands on physical models wouldn?t have helped drive the search for new deterrents.
Or the Israelis providing the Soviets with the same information. Hence, net zero gain, try again.
Concession accepted. It isn?t about whether they please me. It?s about whether they are credible measurements in the first place. This brings down your whole argument, by the way.
You have not shown they are not credible assessments whatsoever. You have whined about some crap to do with charity, and simply scoffed in disbelief, with no math, at others.
I just did.
Funny, I don't see any proof there whatsoever ...
If you deny it, prove to me that Belgium and the Netherlands needed exactly the amounts of money we gave them to ensure a successful conclusion to the Cold War.
Not my argument, not my burden. Sorry.
Stauffer?s comments are broad and generalizing. The supposed evidence he provides is far from comprehensive. You cannot base a credible argument on what is clearly incomplete data.
Unsupported assertion. Claiming it is incomplete presupposes you have knowledge of 'complete' data. Of course, you do not.
I?ve lost the point, but you?re whining about it?
I think it's clear to everyone that you're the whiner in regards to this article.
I?ve lost the point, but you can?t explain what it was that Saudi Arabia was going to purchase at the cost of $40 billion dollars?
I don't need to. Purchases, construction, and maintenance over a long period can easily equal $40 billion, and I see no reason to question the veracity of the figure- especially considering over the past decade Saudi Arabia's actual purchases have figured at almost exactly that amount.
Source that Saudi Arabia finances the entire American military mission in that country?
Don't try and move the goalposts, you liar, you said:

"Moreover, considering we subsidize the Saudis army, Id like you to defend how selling them mountains of arms wouldnt have been as costly as doing the same for Israel."

This is in regards to Israeli vs Saudi purchases of military equipment, not the American military mission in the country- whatever the hell that's supposed to mean. Saudi Arabia pays every damn cent. From the Arms Sales Monitoring Project:
Saudi Arabia is America's top customer. Since 1990, the U.S. government, through the Pentagon's arms export program, has arranged for the delivery of more than $39.6 billion in foreign military sales to Saudi Arabia, and an additional $394 million worth of arms were delivered to the Saudi regime through the State Department's direct commercial sales program during that same period. (Foreign Military and Construction Sales and Direct Commercial Sales are recorded and published by the Dept. of Defense in Foreign Military Sales, Foreign Military Construction Sales and Military Assistance Facts; the most current online edition includes information through FY 1999.)

Oil rich Saudi Arabia is a cash-paying customer. It receives no U.S. military assistance to finance these purchases, although it does demand that about 35 percent of all major contracts be "offset"-that is, economic benefits equaling 35 percent of the arms contract value must be steered back to the Saudi economy.
(Offsets are a standard feature of arms sales and are demanded by all purchasing countries to various degrees and are accepted as par for the course. Israel also receives offsets:
American dollars and technology also pours into the Israeli arms industry via offsets, incentives that American weapons manufacturers offer to convince Israel to sign deals, including co-production of weapons, transfers of technology, and non-military related investment.
Oh, btw- notice that since 1990 Saudi Arabia has gotten practically $40 billion worth of arms. So much for your no numbers scoffing.

Furthemore, Israel also sells sensitive military technology to China- I'm sure you'll view that as in US interests too in your next apologetic.

So much for your 'subsidize the Saudi military' nonsense.
More like: The Soviet response has rained fallout on tens of thousands of our people and killed countless members of our families. These are non-state actors, Vympel.
LOL. I'm sure there are lots of Central Asians who have relatives in Palestine. Not to mention "the soviets have destroyed our enemies and have given back our land".
Evidence that not everybody sees any given action in the same light. Americans will argue that it was for Saudi Arabias protection that their troops were sent to the Holy Land; Osama Bin Laden insists that it is for some other end.
The point of view of the fundies is the only relevant factor in this argument.
A pair of ICBMs. Technicians. Fuel. Trucks.
You idiot- just, don't fucking try, ok? Do you even know what ICBMs are? They are stored in silos. They are launched from silos. They are already fueled. The support infrastructure already exists. They are already on alert. The act of retaliating against Israel would invovle the simple expedient of retargeting one of the 1,064 ICBMs in service at the relevant point (1990)- which takes less than mere minutes. This does not require any additional effort of any strategically significant amount, and if the Israelis were ever judged to be a credible threat (which, again is purely your no-evidence fantasy and part of your habit of simply forming an opinion first and then concocting bullshit reasons to justify it), ICBMs would have been targeted for the purpose.
Planning committees. Expensive analysis.
Stop talking out of your arse, your ignorance of basic nuclear warfare is already fucking astounding- that you're trying to bluff your way through a topic you know fucking zero about is obvious to anyone with a modicum of general knowledge. "targeting Israel is sooooo expensive, it's a good thing we gave the Israelis hundreds of billions in aid for 30 years, we've got them Soviets on the ropes now! What we do without Israel's Jericho missiles? Thanks Israel!" :roll: Just stop advertising your ignorance and desperation.
Fact. An oil-burning power station is far easier to operate, supply, and finance than a nuclear facility.
And yet the Soviets didn't rely on oil burning plants. Hence= assertion.

Iraq.
What?
But thats your argument: because we gave him biological and chemical precursors, we are somehow responsible for his nuclear program as well.
No, that's your argument. I don't believe that as all, but for your position, it must be true- you're the one who has conflated all three (NBC) in an attempt to disprove direct evidence from a credible witness. In which case you have failed, as you will see below when you got yourself into quite a neat little trap.
Cut the act. A nuclear reactor is the basic foundation of a nuclear weaponization program.
And useless without the appropriate kind of reactor to get fuel at an acceptable rate, or an enrichment facility to weaponize it. That's why weaponized material is the centre of non-proliferation efforts. A light water reactor is totally not suitable to a nuclear weapons program.
Khadduri could say the sky was falling, too. Does that mean youd believe it?
The testimony of a nuclear scientist (western educated) who participated in the program is far better than your ignorant shit, thank you very much. And considering you trumpeted his "evidence of intent", you are now trying to have it both ways. You lose either way. How efficient!
Its a teleological argument, end of story. Nobody can raise any conclusive proof that Iraq would have remained content to abstain from weaponization even if the Israelis hadnt struck.
That's what the man said. You want to prove him a liar, do so, but your simple, no evidence, no reasoning scoffing at inconvenient evidence proves nothing but your inability to concede a point.
What was the status of this second reactor?
Operational until it was destroyed in by the Coalition on Day 6 of Desert Storm.
Evidence of intent. We call that sinking your own battleship. Concession accepted.
Khadduri attests to a clear delineation between dabbling in research of an entirely rudimentary nature and a fast track bull rush towards nuclear weapons that started precisely after, and explicitly BECAUSE of, the bombing of Osirak. As such, the Israelis were responsible for the Iraqis rush to nuclear weapons, and their bombing of Osirak was both pointless and counterproductinve. And by trumpeting it as evidence of intent, you just conceded the point that you find this entirely credible man's (who has been proven right in all his statements about Iraq's nuclear program, specifically in regards to debunking the laughable claims of the 'saddam's bombmaker' fraud- who also had no credibility with UNSCOM/UNMOVIC) evidence persuasive. You are thus trapped, and have totally conceded. We call that leading your opponent up the garden path. And accepting his concession. Concession Accepted.
What does this have to do with the status of Iraqs program.
Merely showing what the US intentions were.

It has socialistic leanings.
And yet was a staunch US ally. We call that sinking your own battleship. Concession Accepted.

Spread of Communist ideas.
Nothing to do with Domino Theory.

If some countries adopt socialist systems with seeming success, so others will be encouraged to do so.
Not what happened, and not what the primary defintion of Domino Theory was in relation to Vietnam.
And yet the region leans more heavily toward centralized economics and strict market controls than capitalism and free trade.
Which has nothing to do with Domino Theory in any way, shape or form. The Domino Theory predicts the fall of regimes like Dominos to communism as the result of the fall of one. This did not occur. Your bullfuck redefinition of the theory to suit your utterly collapsed argument notwithstanding.
Evidence of socialist influence which grew especially after Vietnam (see, formerly British Malaya).
Post hoc fallacy. This fallacy is committed when it is concluded that one event causes another simply because the proposed cause occurred before the proposed effect. More formally, the fallacy involves concluding that A causes or caused B because A occurs before B and there is not sufficient evidence to actually warrant such a claim.

As I pointed out in the series of points which you completely failed to respond to, you must show a CAUSAL connection for such assertions (British Malaya was nowhere fucking near communism at the time of the fall of South Vietnam, nor did it become communist, but anyway) to be remotely useful.

PS. Notice the trend? If I ask you to prove an assertion, you simply repeat yourself as if it's fact. If you ask me to prove an assertion- I fucking do so. That's why you make such a fool of yourself. Instead of looking at the facts and then forming an opinion, you form an opinion first and *then* twist/invent evidence to support it. You've got it fucking assbackwards.
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Obviously, it did not, despite your no-history claims- as evidenced by the countries that did not lean towards the Soviet Union in the Middle East.
Your only examples are Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Iran. The former experienced an armed rebellion by Communists aimed at toppling the government, the second was in virtual thrall to British and American economic interests in the first place, and the later was drifting well toward socialist practices until our direct intervention. These are poor examples, and do not refute the fact that most nations in the Middle East favored engagement with the Soviets during the immediate post-war period – by virtue of similarities in finance and administration, and long-standing enmity toward the Western world.
More assertion: prove Mossadeq was influenced by Soviet thought.
Mossadeq chose nationalization of his country’s business interests. This is a typically socialist act, and bound him more firmly to the second- rather than first-world.
It was nowhere near the Soviet Union, nor was it Allied with it, nor was there any reason to think it would save for the US/UK own folly in that regard.
There was certainly grounds for fear that Mossadeq would in time engage the Soviet Union more heavily; witness his economic reforms.

They didn't. It was rather split, as is obvious.
Incorrect; the preponderance of evidence, nation by nation, supports my argument. You have the benefit of only a handful of examples, many of them inconsistent and not fully supportive of your assertions.

Don't try and change what the issue was you dishonest dickhead. You asked for proof of gifted weapons, which I said occued in "some cases". Other examples of free equipment:

14 AH-1E Cobras
72 Air Defense Artillery Vehicles
20 F-100 engines
5,000 C508 105MM HEAT-T, M456A
5,000 C518 105MM HEP-T, M393A2
2 Hawk Battallion Command Posts
500 MIM-72E Chaparral Missiles
170,000 H708 35mm subcaliber light antitank weapon rockets
Radios and miscellaneous support equipment
Miscellaneous support equipment
HAWK ground support equipment
36 M48A3 Chaparral anti-aircraft missile launchers; 500 MIM-72 guided missiles
28 FMC M-577A2 command post armored personnel carriers
121 Martin Marietta Walleye missile tube vidicons
35 digital computers for McDonnell Douglas F-15 aircraft
Components or munitions not dissimilar to those we distributed among our allies elsewhere in the world. Need I also remind you that it was later within our interests to support Israel as a preventative against ever-encroaching Soviet influence among Egypt, Syria, and others? The costs of the assistance listed here is certainly far less than $1.6 trillions of dollars – and barely over $1 billion dollars, if at all.
Bullshit. Prove it or drop it.
The United States offers free or reduced-cost arms to others:

http://www.clw.org/atop/inside/inside36.html

But you knew this.

Israel purchases U.S. arms:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle ... 531098.stm

The cost will be withdrawn from existing military aid given to Israel.
You have no evidence of any Israeli help. Hence, you lose.
Intelligence-sharing is help. Providing arms to U.S. sources for study is help.

Israel also sought SCUD missiles in Iraq, a move coordinated with the American war effort.

http://www.frontpagemag.com/Articles/Pr ... sp?ID=4241
As government officials, they were even more aware of the risks of going there than an average citizen. Israel's sordid little quagmire has nothing to do with the United States, your repeated attempts to conflate the two as one notwithstanding.
… save that our diplomats were specifically targeted. Again, you must explain why we should stand for suffering collateral damage.
Assertion. This is the part where you repeat yourself in a different way.
Logic tells us that at any confluence such as the Middle East, many terrorist organizations do recruiting and find expertise.
I think so. Israeli capture of Soviet war material had no effect on the outcome of the war.
Ah, so Germany did not provide any meaningful help to Italy during the Second World War, and we know this because the Axis Powers lost? That’s patently absurd.

Or the Israelis providing the Soviets with the same information. Hence, net zero gain, try again.
Prove that the Israelis gave the Soviets the same data they gave the United States.
You have not shown they are not credible assessments whatsoever. You have whined about some crap to do with charity, and simply scoffed in disbelief, with no math, at others.
I have done math – you might remember your original reliance on that $40 billion figure the critic in question seems to have trotted out of his without attendant justifications or legitimate explanations.

Whine about charity? When he’s using one specific group’s charity as a creative – and disingenuous – method of justifying his crackpot “opportunity cost” list, it’s something worth calling out. Let me assert that the United States loses billions if not trillions every year because some American don’t buy our own products. Clearly, we must revert to protectionism.
Not my argument, not my burden. Sorry.
It is your burden, if you plan to refute it. If not, I win.
Unsupported assertion. Claiming it is incomplete presupposes you have knowledge of 'complete' data. Of course, you do not.
We can observe its flaws – and ridiculous presuppositions. There is no way to salvage it: the man’s “opportunity costs” included absurd calculations not borne out by the facts offered in the article itself.
Oh, btw- notice that since 1990 Saudi Arabia has gotten practically $40 billion worth of arms. So much for your no numbers scoffing.

Furthemore, Israel also sells sensitive military technology to China- I'm sure you'll view that as in US interests too in your next apologetic.

So much for your 'subsidize the Saudi military' nonsense.
Point.
LOL. I'm sure there are lots of Central Asians who have relatives in Palestine. Not to mention "the soviets have destroyed our enemies and have given back our land".
Land now radioactive.

Not every Arab fighting in Iraq has family there either, Vympel.
You idiot- just, don't fucking try, ok? Do you even know what ICBMs are? They are stored in silos. They are launched from silos. They are already fueled. The support infrastructure already exists. They are already on alert. The act of retaliating against Israel would invovle the simple expedient of retargeting one of the 1,064 ICBMs in service at the relevant point (1990)- which takes less than mere minutes. This does not require any additional effort of any strategically significant amount, and if the Israelis were ever judged to be a credible threat (which, again is purely your no-evidence fantasy and part of your habit of simply forming an opinion first and then concocting bullshit reasons to justify it), ICBMs would have been targeted for the purpose.
Point.
And yet the Soviets didn't rely on oil burning plants. Hence= assertion.
… and what did the Soviets do with their nuclear technologies?
What?
Never mind.
No, that's your argument. I don't believe that as all, but for your position, it must be true- you're the one who has conflated all three (NBC) in an attempt to disprove direct evidence from a credible witness. In which case you have failed, as you will see below when you got yourself into quite a neat little trap.
When have I ever laid the blame for Iraq’s nuclear program at the feet of the United States?

I have, in the past, argued that attempts to hide biological and chemical weapons increase the strength of arguments that Saddam also hid nuclear weapons, and that continued possession of chemical and biological weapons by Iraq also draws into question whether the nuclear program was continued as well (which would then have been a more likely possibility).
And useless without the appropriate kind of reactor to get fuel at an acceptable rate, or an enrichment facility to weaponize it. That's why weaponized material is the centre of non-proliferation efforts. A light water reactor is totally not suitable to a nuclear weapons program.
But technicians gain valuable experience in operating reactor equipment, becoming acquainted with safeguards, etc.
The testimony of a nuclear scientist (western educated) who participated in the program is far better than your ignorant shit, thank you very much. And considering you trumpeted his "evidence of intent", you are now trying to have it both ways. You lose either way. How efficient!
It’s teleological. All he tells us is: “After 1981, Iraq’s program began.” He also acknowledges that a study was done in the first place. Since in the one case he refers to an actual study and in the other makes his own ridiculous case without data, you have no trap at all.
Operational until it was destroyed in by the Coalition on Day 6 of Desert Storm.
And what were the circumstances surrounding it at the time Osirak was hit?

Khadduri attests to a clear delineation between dabbling in research of an entirely rudimentary nature and a fast track bull rush towards nuclear weapons that started precisely after, and explicitly BECAUSE of, the bombing of Osirak. As such, the Israelis were responsible for the Iraqis rush to nuclear weapons, and their bombing of Osirak was both pointless and counterproductinve. And by trumpeting it as evidence of intent, you just conceded the point that you find this entirely credible man's (who has been proven right in all his statements about Iraq's nuclear program, specifically in regards to debunking the laughable claims of the 'saddam's bombmaker' fraud- who also had no credibility with UNSCOM/UNMOVIC) evidence persuasive. You are thus trapped, and have totally conceded. We call that leading your opponent up the garden path. And accepting his concession. Concession Accepted.
But Iraq would have gone down that road anyway. And considering that Saddam was rather expansionistic in any case, there would have been plenty of other situations to set off his “rush for the bomb,” as you call it. Israel committed a rather subjective crime whose prerequisites would have anyway been fulfilled.

And yet was a staunch US ally. We call that sinking your own battleship. Concession Accepted.
What does the one have to do with the other? Socialism is bad no matter what. And standing as a clear U.S. ally generally allays fears of Soviet domination.
Nothing to do with Domino Theory.
Considering that I was able to quote your own definition in support of my argument, I’d say it’s your own definition that is wanting.
Not what happened, and not what the primary defintion of Domino Theory was in relation to Vietnam.
Domino Theory exists beyond the jungles of Vietnam.
Post hoc fallacy. This fallacy is committed when it is concluded that one event causes another simply because the proposed cause occurred before the proposed effect. More formally, the fallacy involves concluding that A causes or caused B because A occurs before B and there is not sufficient evidence to actually warrant such a claim.

As I pointed out in the series of points which you completely failed to respond to, you must show a CAUSAL connection for such assertions (British Malaya was nowhere fucking near communism at the time of the fall of South Vietnam, nor did it become communist, but anyway) to be remotely useful.

PS. Notice the trend? If I ask you to prove an assertion, you simply repeat yourself as if it's fact. If you ask me to prove an assertion- I fucking do so. That's why you make such a fool of yourself. Instead of looking at the facts and then forming an opinion, you form an opinion first and *then* twist/invent evidence to support it. You've got it fucking assbackwards.
The success of Communists in one location generally tends to provide a basis of exportable support for other Communists – now enthused – elsewhere in the region. A good example would be reinforcement of the ANC's position when Rhodesia fell.
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Post by Sea Skimmer »

Vympel wrote:
Don't try and change what the issue was you dishonest dickhead. You asked for proof of gifted weapons, which I said occued in "some cases". Other examples of free equipment:
Look, a big list of equipment, almost all of which the US military ceased using years ago. Surplus equipment like that is passed onto US Allies all the time, to the point that there are standing offers for many items.
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Sea Skimmer wrote:
Look, a big list of equipment, almost all of which the US military ceased using years ago. Surplus equipment like that is passed onto US Allies all the time, to the point that there are standing offers for many items.
So that somehow means that Israel should get them for free, right?
Your only examples are Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Iran. The former experienced an armed rebellion by Communists
Which was not successful.
aimed at toppling the government, the second was in virtual thrall to British and American economic interests in the first place
So what?
and the later was drifting well toward socialist practices until our direct intervention. These are poor examples, and do not refute the fact that most nations in the Middle East favored engagement with the Soviets during the immediate post-war period, by virtue of similarities in finance and administration, and long-standing enmity toward the Western world.
Most nations? Hardly. Syria and Egypt spring immediately to mind- what others?
Mossadeq chose nationalization of his country's business interests. This is a typically socialist act, and bound him more firmly to the second- rather than first-world.
No actually, other countries business interests. The British controlled practically all of Iran's oil industry. Regardless, you have not proven he was influenced by Soviet thought.
There was certainly grounds for fear that Mossadeq would in time engage the Soviet Union more heavily; witness his economic reforms.
Heaven forbid that they be reasonable and seek to renegotiate the unjust terms upon which they ground Iran under their heel economically rather than just overthrowing him out of unfounded communist paranoia.
Incorrect; the preponderance of evidence, nation by nation, supports my argument. You have the benefit of only a handful of examples, many of them inconsistent and not fully supportive of your assertions.
My assertions are merely that the Middle East was not a communist dominion. That is patently obvious looking at the history. You have a handful of nations as well, not a 'preponderance'.
Components or munitions not dissimilar to those we distributed among our allies elsewhere in the world.
Red herring.
Need I also remind you that it was later within our interests to support Israel as a preventative against ever-encroaching Soviet influence among Egypt, Syria, and others?
Red herring. These are 1990-2001 arms sales.
The costs of the assistance listed here is certainly far less than $1.6 trillions of dollars, and barely over $1 billion dollars, if at all.
Red herring. You asked for proof of gifts, I provided it.
The United States offers free or reduced-cost arms to others: /quote]

Not what you were asked to prove.
Israel purchases U.S. arms:
At discount and with US military aid.
The cost will be withdrawn from existing military aid given to Israel.
No math.
Intelligence-sharing is help.
No, it's help if it actually gets you something. What has it gotten?
Providing arms to U.S. sources for study is help.
And having your own arms captured by your enemies isn't.
Israel also sought SCUD missiles in Iraq, a move coordinated with the American war effort. /quote]

Considering that this odd report, if true, is merely proof that Israel looks after it's own interests, this is irrelevant.
save that our diplomats were specifically targeted. Again, you must explain why we should stand for suffering collateral damage.
Prove they were specifically targeted.
Logic tells us that at any confluence such as the Middle East, many terrorist organizations do recruiting and find expertise.
There is no such thing as a logical assumption. You either have evidence, or you do not.
Ah, so Germany did not provide any meaningful help to Italy during the Second World War, and we know this because the Axis Powers lost? That's patently absurd.
Another false analogy. Germany and Italy's military ties were far closer than Israel and the United States, and that you can make this comparison knowing full well that Israel never participated in Vietnam is just amazing.
Prove that the Israelis gave the Soviets the same data they gave the United States.
The Syrians/Egyptians captured Israeli war material, mostly tanks. These went to the Soviet Union for testing.
I have done math, you might remember your original reliance on that $40 billion figure the critic in question seems to have trotted out of his without attendant justifications or legitimate explanations.
Where have you done math?
Whine about charity? When he's using one specific group's charity as a creative, and disingenuous, method of justifying his crackpot 'opportunity cost' list, it's something worth calling out. Let me assert that the United States loses billions if not trillions every year because some American don't buy our own products. Clearly, we must revert to protectionism.
Nitpicking one component of an entire list does not a rebuttal make. You continue to trumpet one bit of disigenuous reasoning as carte blanche to dismiss an entire list. This is the classic tactic of the nitpicker.
It is your burden, if you plan to refute it. If not, I win.
You've provided nothing to refute.
We can observe its flaws and ridiculous presuppositions. There is no way to salvage it: the man's 'opportunity costs' included absurd calculations not borne out by the facts offered in the article itself.
There is no way to salvage a figure of $1.6 trillion because you trumpet about ONE component about charity? This is called nitpicking.
Land now radioactive.

Not every Arab fighting in Iraq has family there either, Vympel.
So the Arabs would prefer for Palestine to be occupied by their hated enemies? Please.
and what did the Soviets do with their nuclear technologies?
Don't try- this was in relation to power plants, and your assertion that NO nation with oil would ever build one for a use for weapons- on the contrary, their primary use is power, as well as for research, as well as for nuclear material.
When have I ever laid the blame for Iraq?s nuclear program at the feet of the United States?
*sigh*

*If* your reasoning that chemical and biological and nuclear weapons were all the same and pursuing/having some must mean pursuing/having others, then, by that logic, the US was giving it's tacit approval to Iraq's nuclear program by aiding them with chem and bio weapons. After all, if you think that's true- surely the US government would, no?
But technicians gain valuable experience in operating reactor equipment, becoming acquainted with safeguards, etc.
They already had that with the Soviet reactor.
It?s teleological. All he tells us is: 'After 1981, Iraq's program began.' He also acknowledges that a study was done in the first place. Since in the one case he refers to an actual study and in the other makes his own ridiculous case without data, you have no trap at all.
No, he said the Israeli bombing prompted the program.
And what were the circumstances surrounding it at the time Osirak was hit?
No idea.
But Iraq would have gone down that road anyway. And considering that Saddam was rather expansionistic in any case, there would have been plenty of other situations to set off his 'rush for the bomb', as you call it. Israel committed a rather subjective crime whose prerequisites would have anyway been fulfilled.
Whether Iraq would have gone down that road or not, the bombing served little practical purpose. Whether it was some great 'crime' on the part of Israel is not the issue- it was counterproductive, and not useful.
What does the one have to do with the other? Socialism is bad no matter what. And standing as a clear U.S. ally generally allays fears of Soviet domination.
What does being a US ally have to do with it ... are you serious?! *You're* the one trumpeting Egypt changing alleigiance as a great Cold War victory, and when I point out that another country was a staunch US ally you act like it doesn't matter? Also, can you explain Suharto's massive purge of communists and communist sympathizers when he came to power in 1965, and which continued for over a year? You know, the bloodiest episode in Indonesia's history? And ten years before the fall of South Vietnam? 'Socialist' indeed .... :roll:
Considering that I was able to quote your own definition in support of my argument, I'd say it's your own definition that is wanting.
No, you quoted the secondary definition while ignoring the primary definitions (note the plural) specifically related to Vietnam and Communism, which is the issue and the context in which you brought it up.
Domino Theory exists beyond the jungles of Vietnam.
It 'existed'- past tense, as it has been thoroughly discredited, in the minds of Cold War paranoids, and that's about it, as amply evidenced by the actual history.
The success of Communists in one location generally tends to provide a basis of exportable support for other Communists, now enthused,elsewhere in the region. A good example would be reinforcement of the ANC's position when Rhodesia fell.
I'm sorry, the ANC instituted a communist state ... when? The fall of South Vietnam resulted in the fall of other 'free' (in the loosest sense of the word) countries when?
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Post by Sea Skimmer »

Vympel wrote:
So that somehow means that Israel should get them for free, right?
Why charge for unwanted stuff that will cost money to store or destroy, because those are almost always the alternatives. Israel is not the only nation by far that gets free US military surplus, much of which is stuff that no one would actually pay for anyway. Who's going to pay Chaparral missiles and firing units for example? There not to bad to get for free, but the system is quite obsolete and even when new only a few countries bought them, and only then generally under US military aid programs.
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Post by Vympel »

Sea Skimmer wrote: Why charge for unwanted stuff that will cost money to store or destroy, because those are almost always the alternatives. Israel is not the only nation by far that gets free US military surplus, much of which is stuff that no one would actually pay for anyway. Who's going to pay Chaparral missiles and firing units for example? There not to bad to get for free, but the system is quite obsolete and even when new only a few countries bought them, and only then generally under US military aid programs.
It's stuff that you, the manufacturer, don't want- but you still paid for it back when it was much more useful, and if the country wants it, why not make them pay something for it and defray your costs? Certainly not full price because they're just not worth that much anymore, but free? The US charges under the Excess Defense Articles regime as well- not everything under it is given away free- which makes me wonder this stuff was. Even Russia does so under its own (e.g.making the US pay Russia to give T-55s/Mi-8s/ etc to the Northern Alliance 2 years ago). Still, it's quite valid to include it as part of the cost.
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Sea Skimmer
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Post by Sea Skimmer »

Vympel wrote:
It's stuff that you, the manufacturer, don't want- but you still paid for it back when it was much more useful, and if the country wants it, why not make them pay something for it and defray your costs?
Ever been given a gift you liked but wouldn't have bought for yourself? I get those all the time, and its the same situation here.

Certainly not full price because they're just not worth that much anymore, but free? The US charges under the Excess Defense Articles regime as well- not everything under it is given away free- which makes me wonder this stuff was.
Because no one would buy it. Take those F-100 engines for example, chances are they where short on life and in need of a major overhaul, which made them uneconomical to keep in use. The IAF might have thought otherwise and felt it could get some useful life out of them. But if the US wanted money for them then that would no longer be the case.

Yeah, I'm sure that you could probably work out some small price which would be fair and keep the transfers economical, but after a point there is no point, the amount of money the US would get would simply be irrelevant, and probably be swallowed up by all the long distance phone calls needed to work out the deal.


Even Russia does so under its own (e.g.making the US pay Russia to give T-55s/Mi-8s/ etc to the Northern Alliance 2 years ago). Still, it's quite valid to include it as part of the cost.
Russia knew the US would pay so it asked for money. With many free transfers that's just not the case, is the US hands over something that would not have sold then it is only losing a theoretical value, an object has no actual value if it is of no use to you and no one will buy it. If we go and count that as being a cost of supporting Israel, then personally I'm far more concerned about the trillions of dollars the US is losing to its own landfills. And all that dredge waste that's dumped at sea.. That could be used as fill on shore, if only someone would actually buy it.. .
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Post by MKSheppard »

Vympel wrote: Bullshit. Israel attacks USSR, Israel no longer exists. End of story. There are no complications.
I have to disagree. It's another area the USSR has to worry about,
along with Turkey.

Sure, Turkey would get curbstomped easily by the Soviets in the
first few days, but said curbstomping would be drawing soviet forces
away from Central Europe :D
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Post by Vympel »

MKSheppard wrote:
I have to disagree. It's another area the USSR has to worry about,
along with Turkey.

Sure, Turkey would get curbstomped easily by the Soviets in the
first few days, but said curbstomping would be drawing soviet forces
away from Central Europe :D
Turkey's different because it's conventional forces are actually able to attack the USSR and it's posiiton in NATO makes it obligated to join the war- however, Israel doesn't have access to the Soviet Union's borders. And do you really think Israel would ever launch a nuke against the USSR in any situation unless it was nuked first? Of course not- they'd merely be sealing their fate, and getting zero advantage out of it.
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