The Aliens wrote:That was in response to a topic asking for the most historically significant, decisive battle ever. (Significant, decisive mean BOTH, not one or the other).
Liar. Check the subject heading.
The Man Who The Aliens Aspire to Be Like wrote:The most decisive battles of all time?
You claimed that you hadn't evaded a point, I showed you an example of where you did? Simple enough?
You gotta spell this one out for me. What point did I evade?
Look, wankstain, I debate all members of this board when I think they're wrong, I don't run around agreeing with everybody.
I'm sure you're so feverishly into "debating" (not what I would call it) that you frequently stumble onto arguments you can't possibly sustain. So you adopt the flashy, rapid fire ad hominem of some earlier poster to cover your batch of unsubstantiated claims and rebuttals, crude missteps, and outright lies.
If I was idolising people, I would tack on something to the effect of "yeah, me too" in these threads, not attack your ludicrous claims myself.
Well, mimickry is a form of flattery. I think you're sufficiently imaginative to write more than "me too." Even MKShep, who doesn't address anything, is more creative than a simple "yeah, me too."
My bad, I meant World War One, excuse the typo.
I'm pretty friendly about that sort of thing.
It was fouhgt with one strategic aim (stopping Germnay, Austro-Hungary and Italy) by taking their capitals, in constant enemy contact (trench warfare). According to your logic, it was one battle.
Yes, defeating the Axis was a strategic aim, taking Berlin, Vienna and Rome are three of many independent operational objectives to further that aim. There were no independent objectives of major combat operations before the capital fell, USCENTCOM's aim was always to seize the capital and destroy all enemy forces who interfered. Also, contact was not continuous. Forces met on the field in a given period of time until one side or both quit the field to rest--thus resulting in a series of individual battles each with an identifiable (if not entirely fruitful) operational objective.
Bullshit- if someone achieves the same result in less time against a greater enemy, it is more decisive.
Answer my question. If Germany had piled in even greater strength into the invasion of France than it did historically, how would that have affected the decisiveness of the operation?
Germany squashed France, America squashed Iraq- the difference here is that France had good defenses, a large army, and a plan against German attack.
See above.
That was a repsonse to a thread asking for the most historically significant, decisive victory in history, even if you claim to have miraculously changed the subject topic to cater to your whims, you didn't qualify your answer with anything.
Maybe I was too quick to call you a liar, given that the subject heading of that post is pretty damned small. I suggest you read it.
You persist on being an idiot. When AMerica took Baghdad, the 'regime' did not instantly change.
Uh, could you be a little more clear here?
The reason for the war was to disarm Iraq's WMDs, not change it's regime.
We've been over this. Iraqi WMD is a reason for both the disarmament and regime change objectives, but the long standing and predominant objective with regard to Iraq was regime change. Furthermore, disarmament is not an independent objective. The Administration made it clear that the conditions for success in the regime change mission would be satisfied if Iraq came into compliance with disarmament conventions.
Oh dear! It slowed down as they approached the capital city! No fucking kidding, but it doesn't count as military engagements of any other battle in history, such as Ypres, Vimy Ridge, The Somme, Berlin, France or the Danzig Corridor. And if you consider contact at long rnages with sporadic fire to be continuous contact, you claim that WWI was one long battle.
And like I said. You seem to think drama is what makes battles decisive. Aside from the fact that there's no purpose of value to such a definition, the US armed forces define decisiveness as the rapid achievement of an action's interdependant operational objectives over distance.
You gave me the numbers back on page 7, retard.
That's not what I asked, homey.
Yes, when I call your bullshit claims about transformation not meaning hange, navies not moving, and democratization not meaning the people get to vote, I'm lying.
Yes, essentially you are.
Wow, Sea Skimmer, you've just been thrashed by revprez! I'm sure you're as surprised as everyone else that read that moronic statement.
More ad hominem. Keep it up, your frustration is telling.
The numbers you produce aren't evidence then? Thanks.
So you admit that your arguments satisfy no evidentiary standard. You're debating in a vacuum.
Transformation means change, fucktard, if you don't like English, don't use it.
"Middle Eastern transformation" means spreading democracy through the region. If you don't like it, tough.
I don't know why I'm bothering either.
I don't know, either. If you want to avoid getting thrashed so badly you should at least skim some of the material before making an ass of yourself.
That's great, because your ridiculous double-talk makes me wnat to put my face through a plate-glass window.
I wouldn't try and stop you. Your issues are your issues.
Rev Prez