Which means exactly dick —counterintelligence is SOP among nations in their covert dealings with one another
Irrelevant. One does not suspend or withhold punishment merely because the guilty party was acting on what he or she had seen done by another in the past.
and it is more than clear that Iranian actions had little to no influence in regards to "forcing us into war" as you've been arguing.
Equally irrelevant. Iran’s attempt to help initiate a war in Iraq based on false information may still be considered a consciously hostile action, regardless of whether or not war was inevitable for other reasons.
NOT a Red Herring for the same reasons cited in rebuttal.
Absolutely a red herring for the same reasons cited in rebuttal.
No, asshole, there've been WORSE examples than this. You simply do not know what the fuck you're talking about.
Is that so?

Last I checked, I wasn’t the one trying to deny a reasonable assessment of Iran’s hostility by shouting, “George W. Bush is the devil incarnate” seventy times over.
Not a Red Herring and by no means irrelevant, no matter how much you wish it was. The fact that this White House refused to verify facts which conflicted with their views undermines your position that Iranian actions "forced us into war".
Strawman. I have never said that Iran “forced us into war;” I argued that they
attempted to do so, and were in some respects successful in using Chalabi as a source of misinformation to falsely support other rationales for war.
Wrong again —your entire attempt to redefine Iran's disinformation efforts as akin to an act of war is idiotic on its face.
Only to someone stubbornly blind to the threats before them. When somebody tries to push me into a hole, I don’t ignore their actions only until they achieve success.
And as all disinformation efforts aimed at other nations are "channeled externally", you again make no point whatsoever.
It’s a point of semantics whether Iran’s activities represented counter-intelligence, because either way, they were targeting the United States, not occurring within Iran itself.
Definitions do not change because you really really really really really really really want them to fit your conveinence.
Coming from you, that’s absolute gold.
It is you who is spewing the wild, sensational claims with no evidentary backing or anything remotely resembling logic to support them.
I’m not the one who tried to claim that the bombing of Iran would be an intended and carried out as an exercise designed solely to slaughter civilians.
Oh really? How is the national security of the United States imperiled by yet another fifth-rate power unable to project its force beyond its immediate regional sphere?
Because we have
interests in that immediate regional sphere, ding dong. Interests including the security of the neighboring countries of Iraq and Afghanistan, to whose occupation Iran is publicly opposed. Because Iran is obviously capable of conducting successful intelligence activities against the United States, and has done so in the recent past. Because Iran supports terrorists that
do attack American targets overseas. As much as you’d like to change the goalposts for this argument alone, the threat doesn’t begin only when Iranian Centurions fire on their American counterparts. But then, you already know this.
FACT —terrorism is a weapon of the weak, and is defeatable through counterintelligence and covert operations. It is not a threat which requires a general war as the sole option and certainly not one which can imperil the existence of the United States.
And when terrorism is backed by nation-states, those nation-states must be held accountable, or the ability of terrorists to defy the means and reach of police activities is too great. Stopping terrorism does indeed demand the flexibility to go to war with its major sources of funding, manpower, and material support. That is the lesson we learned on September 11th. Combating terrorists cannot be a purely defensive activity.
Pity you have zero evidence for the assertion that Iran has lost control of its military forces to any appreciable degree, but this is de-rigeur for you.
Except for the fact that the Revolutionary Guards routinely offer their own parallel public statements alongside those of the central government – and that the two regularly clash, as they did when the British sailors were taken prisoner only weeks ago. Or that elements in Iran’s military, as in Pakistan’s, are known sympathizers and collaborators. If Iran is truly interested in curbing these activities, why have they not done so?
FACT —this has no bearing whatsoever as to whether Iran presents a military threat. By this specious reasoning, Canada represents a source of peril to the United States.
Idiocy. Canada does not have a lengthy history of supporting terrorists and launching efforts to provoke the United States into war with other countries. Come now; don’t let the desperation show. It’s demeaning.
Yes, we can just argue anything when we play the "what if" game instead of the "examining the actual evidence" game. Speculation is not fact, no matter how much you think it is.
But it is an important part of preparing for the future. Arguing that simply because we cannot know the future, we should not act on the lessons of the past – which dictate that Iran is hostile – is the height of blind stupidity.
So has the Peoples' Republic of China. Again, you make no point.
Which means the forces for change you insist we would be retarding by launching an attack against Iran aren’t going to make a difference in the first place, dimwit.
And the United States has had to deal with foreign counterintelligence and disinformation in the past and did so without the resort to war. Furthermore, Iran's efforts had little to no bearing upon this White House already having decided to ram us into war and ignoring every bit of information which didn't support its wild claims. Again, you make no point.
And which of those past disinformation campaigns was intended to take us to war? Which came alongside support for international terrorism?
I am making a perfectly obvious point; you’re simply grasping at every possible Red Herring out there, regardless of how stupid it’s making you look.
Potentiality is not actuality. Iran is unfriendly, but the only textbook example presented by this twaddle is that of neocon paranoia. Yours, specifically.
Iran is more than unfriendly. They are
outright hostile. But then, you know this, too. You’re merely trying to avoid having to admit the truth because you so badly want to win a false point.
The issue is whether the governments of the region as an act of national policy supported our position or at the least took a position of neutrality towards our attack of Afganistan. Pakistan supported us. Iran was neutral. It certainly did not attempt to hinder our efforts. In addition, there is no support for the assertion that any pro-Al Qaeda demonstrations in the wake of 9/11 were representative of the majority Muslim opinion. Again, you make no point.
The nations of the region were neutral because they could not interfere with any hope of success. You do realize that neutrality can come equally as readily from impotence as from partial agreement, correct?
Furthermore, our campaigns against Iraq and Afghanistan have already ignited the Arab Muslim community. Terrorist groups now active in Iraq have sworn to continue their war against the United States whether or not we withdraw and adopt isolationist policies. There is no longer a chance for deescalation.
Nice theory. It presupposes that America can bring the overwhelming preponderance of its power upon Iran without diminishing our strength elsewhere, and given the strain upon our military resources maintaining control of Iraq and Afganistan as it is in addition to the military committments we already carry elsewhere in the world, this is not at all a given. Iran, by contrast, can bring its full resources to bear for defence; and in any situation where a stronger attacking nation can only devote a fraction of its strength to the mission while the defending nation can call upon its entire force, the scenario favours the defender.
Your assessment is faulty. First of all, the preponderance of Iran’s strength lies with its ground-based forces, the vast majority of which will be irrelevant in any air campaign. It is also doubtful that Iran would launch a general drive into Iraq as a response to American air strikes – we’d naturally have forces on stand-by to prevent this anyway. Hence the major portion of our attention must be focused on the Iranian Air Force and air defense networks, the first of which is composed largely of older aircraft. Against two hundred American warplanes flying multiple and simultaneous sorties, the Iranians can actually offer up what is at best a mediocre defense that will decline substantially as time passes.
We have very clear evidence that Cheney used Chalabi's bullshit as fact both before and after the war, and the timeline of events has demonstrated this White House ignoring wholesale the results of UNMOVIC and IAEA inspections in Iraq which contradicted its position. Cease your efforts at moving the goalposts.
My efforts at “moving the goalposts?” I’m not the one who just backpedaled to go and talk about UNMOVIC and the IAEA. Concession accepted, fool.
Iran threatens itself?! That's the funniest thing you've yet said. And you're still trying to pass off opinion as fact.
It’s called a typo, genius. I meant Iraq. And whether or not a country is a threat is always an opinion. Not to mention that if you’ve already decided that Iran represents no potential threat to Iraq via any vector, you’re already delusional.
We certainly know they have chemical weapons. Bioweapons are the more uncertain.
We know that the Iranian government is no longer fully sovereign, as realists define the term – absolutely irrespective of outside intervention.
We "know" NO SUCH FUCKING THING. You have presented no evidence that Iran's government cannot control its military forces or that it is in danger of revolutionary overthrow or a military coup. So stop presenting your bullshit opinion as fact.[/quote]
http://msnbc.com/news/979921.asp?0dm=C23FN
Now
you eat it, moron.
No, it is your argument which is hysterical blindness and willful paranoia. Only somebody who's totally lost his head can credit this drivel as even remotely serious.
Did you just use a, “No, you are!” retort without actually addressing the issues?!
Which supports your position... how, exactly?
Which means your assessment is baseless.
No, this is not fact. This is opinion. Your confusion of the two basic concepts continues.
Obviously, you have difficulty reading. I’ll say it again: leaving Iran’s atomic energy program unmolested and giving them latitude in developing their “civilian” energy program will facilitate attempts at building a working nuclear bomb. This is fact. If Iran desires to do so, our acceptance of their existing programs will make it that much easier.
Which has no bearing upon the point being argued.
Bullshit. There are consequences for manipulation. Others have faced them in the past. We have found your vaunted “precedent.”
Wrong again, shitwit. At present, neutral and pro-U.S. governments still hold the reins of power in the region, and our occupation forces in Iraq and Afganistan are facing only a relatively small and divided opposition instead of a far larger, general guerilla war. This state of affairs is not at all guaranteed to endure if we start bombing more Muslims. Strategic prudence dictates not making a bad situation far worse than it already is.
And stopping Iran from acquiring the bomb is worth the potential increase in terrorism, much of which we already know is coming anyway. It doesn’t get much worse from this point on out; those “neutral” and “pro-American” governments you speak of are often ineffective at countering terrorism in any case; they’re only there because we either can’t remove them at all or because we can’t remove them yet. Pakistan and Saudi Arabia? They're still major sources of our problems.