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CHEMICAL weapons FOUND.

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Careful how you characterize my post.

You want to talk about policy? Fine. You have facts, data, a historical parallel? Let's hear it. But to lob grade-school level reasoning around is plain wrong. You don't like war. Bush doesn't either. He might know a few things that you don't. Ever consider that?

Remember me saying that?


What I have no tolerance for is the foolish statement made by
jcsoceanlord. This type of idiotic sniping gets us nowhere, and deserves some return fire.

If someone has a genuine opposition to the war, fine. For most, it seems to be a reason to attack Bush - nothing more .

I saw no intelligence or sense of reality in his post.
 
Re: An opinion...

ATL2CDG said:
It is amazing to recognize the ethnocentricity of the American public, in general.
Obviously, we don't have enough *diversity* here in the US!! :rolleyes:
 
Some "war" comments...

1. A major popular uprising has just begun in Basra against the Iraqi military during the overnight hours and British troops are doing what they can to aid them in the effort but likely will wait till daylight to enter the city. We can only hope the brave civilians aren't killed by the hundreds because the Iraqi military is now attacking them in Basra. Who says they don't want to be free?

2. Turkey is directly causing loss of life for the U.S. with a doubt. Military doctrine says two HEAVY divisions are needed in an invasion like this and we only have ONE because the 4th infantry division was supposed to go through Turkey but now won't even arrive till early in April via Kuwait. This particular division is supposed to be the most elite and now they are on the sidelines while the 3rd division is forced to hold the weight of the battle on their shoulders. It is a shame but they can do it.
 
saabcaptain,

Turkey voted on the issue of letting the Military use their bases and it was voted down. Isnt that what we are fighting for over there???? Democracy? Or is it only democracy that serves our purpose? I have no doubt that we will find chemical weapons. We did give them to him. That being said, I dont think he should have them, but we have chemical weapons. How come we get them and he doesnt?

ATL2CDG,

very well written. I wish I was that eloquent and could have said what you said. I get frustrated with people who tell me that because I am against the choice to go to war, I am unamerican. If you want a country that has 100% support for the government, move to Iraq. If you dont agree they will shoot you. That should make you happy.
 
skypine69 said:
We did give them to him. That being said, I dont think he should have them, but we have chemical weapons. How come we get them and he doesnt?
I question your dedication to this country based on this comment.
 
ATL2CDG

YOU SAID
Many of you quote that "45 countries" are supporting our war. Of a world of ~192 independent nations, I would hardly call this a motivating statistic for supporting the engagement.
Should we look into why some of these countries don't support us? Could it be that Russian companies are guilty of violating UN sanctions by selling Iraq GPS jammers? Could it be that France is heavily involved in illegal trade with Iraq?
There are many nations who neither support nor oppose the war. What does this war have to do with Bolivia?
There are many other nations for which we should pay little or no attention to http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,81153,00.html




You said
Many Americans believe that democracy and civil freedoms should be firmly planted and take root in the Middle East. I, personally, would love to see the freedoms that I enjoy exist throughout the world, however, I recognize that historical, cultural and religious characteristics unique to various parts of the world, including the Middle East, do not provide for such a realization. The plain and simple fact of the matter is that the socio-cultural structure that exists in the Middle East will not allow an American-style republic to be established - and attempting to coerce one through war will definitely not help the cause. We must recognize that while "our way" may be the best way for us, it may not be the best way for everyone else.



Your back up was quick to point out that Turkey is a democratic nation with free elections. Yeah I wish they would back us on this, but they have the right to disagree. In addition to the fact that their is at least one actual example that counters your point, I have one question for you. Would you say that the "historical" and ""cultural... characteristics" of such countries such as the UK, France, and Spain would have supported such change during their period of monarchy?

The rest of you post has as many flaws as the prior, but I will not waste my time pointing them out. I will take comfort knowing that 3/4ths of Americans (yes I do consider the dissenters Americans) understand what is going on
 
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Many people want to exercise their right to protest, and that's fine. However, if you choose to do so, do it with intelligence, facts, and respect.

One thing that has become clearly obvious (and the protestors made it so ) is that a very large portion of them are immature, irrational, and lack any real knowledge of what is going on. They are simply jumping on a bandwagon in an effort to draw attention to themselves for no other reason than their own selfish need for it. This group is not worth arguing with, and should just be ignored.

Of the rest, a great many are "anti - Bush", and just want an excuse to attack him. Well, you don't have to like him, and you don't have to like the war (I doubt anyone does), but if you truley believe that there is no reason for us to be over there, than your either deaf, dumb, or blind.

We are one of the largest nations, we are a super power, and we are the poster child for freedom and democracy. Through out history, and especially today, we are affected by all events around the globe. Our economy, our saftey, and our future depend heavily on the people, events, and resources of other countries.

The past few months (perhaps much longer) have been spent trying to avoid war. Through out this time a ton of evidence was ammassed to prove that we have cause for concern, and that if non-military efforts failed, that we would have cause to take action. This is not Pres. Bush' personal issue. Only if you have ignored all of the evidence could you possibly believe so. And if that is the case, and you are protesting without any knowledge or basis to do so against your own country, that is anti-american behavior.

If you want to oppose the war (wich is a bit late to do so now) try providing proof that w shouldn't be over there. You say it isn't right? Well, tell us why? It isn't moral? Why? We have nothing to gain frm it? Why?

The war has started, your not going to stop it with foolish behavior, particularly the defiant protestors in NY. Our troop are already there, support them with all your effort, and hope to god they come home soon.
 
NONE Found

Hot off the presses at the Jerusalem Post (which we all know is a hotbed of pro-Iraqi porpaganda)

In an inspection Tuesday of a military complex captured by US troops in the Iraqi town of Najaf, Army officials found no evidence of chemical agents to support suspicions that the plant was producing or storing illegal nonconventional weapons.

The monitors did find an ample store of conventional weapons, including mortars, artillery shells and anti-aircraft guns at the heavily fortified and camouflaged facility, Lt. Robert Anspaugh, the head of the inspection team, said.

Anspaugh said that his Site Survey Team 4 examined a sample of five out of about 100 bunkers at the complex that was captured Sunday by soldiers of the Third Infantry Division, near the town some 150 kms. (90 miles) south of Baghdad.

"In the bunkers we looked at, we did not find positive hints," of any chemical or nuclear agents, Anspaugh said. "We did not get indicators that there are any WMD (weapons of mass destruction) at the site right now. However, we only saw a small part."

Anspaugh said he could not rule out the possiblity that further sampling of the site would be done, once a laboratory analysis was conducted on his findings.

He added that no matter what their findings, only President George Bush or Prime Minister Tony Blair would be authorized to announce whether a site in Iraq was indeed found to contain weapons of mass destruction.

When the 100-acre Najaf complex was captured on Sunday, US officials described the site as a suspected chemical weapons plant, but stressed that this judgment was pending an inspection of the grounds.
 
Re: NONE Found - where searched!

midlifeflyer said:
Hot off the presses at the Jerusalem Post (which we all know is a hotbed of pro-Iraqi porpaganda)
"However, we only saw a small part."

Let's see what happens over the next few weeks to months. As I recall the place consists of something like 150,000-200,000 sq miles.
 
An abbreviated response...

For those of you noting possible illegal trades between France/Russia et al. with Iraq -- need I point out the Iran/Contra affair of the '80s? Or what about the US aid to the Afghan resistance fighters during the same time period? Interesting that other countries are expected to live up to "US standands" while the US is not. I can assure you that the trading that took place was not to meant to support Hussein's regime, but rather, being capitalism at its worse, was for a quick profit for all parties involved. And let us not forget that the US itself supplied and armed Hussein during the Iran-Iraq War. Rumsfeld himself met and "danced the friendly danced" with Hussein at this time. We cannot shun those with blood on their hands when it was us that gave them the knife.

What does the war have to do with Boliva? What does it have to do with Bulgaria or any of the other nations that support the US war with Iraq that have no vested interest in Iraq? They are simply seeking US dollars and other aid that the US is handing out fist over fist to its allies. The countries that have the most to benefit from a "regime change," such as Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria and other Iraqi neighbors are offering lukewarm, if any, support at all. They fear, as they rightly should, that once the US is finished democratizing Iraq, they will feel motivated to extend their "message" to Iraq's neighbors. It is not the US's place to morph, change or otherwise modify a sovereign nation's government or social structure. We wouldn't want it done to us, so what makes us think that they want it done to them.

Lastly, Turkey is not Iraq. Both the ethnic makeup, governmental development, relations with the West and religious stance are completely different. Only one ignorant of social/ethnic/historical demographics would assume that the geographical proximity of the two nations would equate to a correlation of socio-governmental similiarity. Also, Turkey was not democratized by any outside force. The Turks voluntarily, on the own timetable, evolved into the quasi-democracy that we see today.

Well, I'd love to ramble further, but my 3-month old daughter is crying and she carries a little more weight that you faceless phantoms. I'll respond to your flames-to-come when I get some more free time.
 
Re: An abbreviated response...

ATL2CDG said:
Lastly, Turkey is not Iraq. Both the ethnic makeup, governmental development, relations with the West and religious stance are completely different. Only one ignorant of social/ethnic/historical demographics would assume that the geographical proximity of the two nations would equate to a correlation of socio-governmental similiarity. Also, Turkey was not democratized by any outside force. The Turks voluntarily, on the own timetable, evolved into the quasi-democracy that we see today.
How about the Kurds? They've developed a fairly decent democratic existence in Northern Iraq.

The entire sociological discussion smells of the labelling that has millions of school children on Ridlin and promotes class the warfare that's tearing our country apart. I thought all humans were equally intelligent and capable of living in a diverse society!?
 
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Re: Re: An abbreviated response...

flywithastick said:
The entire sociological discussion smells of the labeling that *** promotes class the warfare that's tearing our country apart.

Which "class warfare" label are you using?

(a) Those who want to give everything to the rich based on some noblesse oblige theory that went out with "What's good for General Motors is good for the US" and whine "class warfare" whenever someone one has the audacity to complain about it

(b) those who complain about those who want to give everything to the rich.

Just wondering. Using labels to throw a whole disparage a whole bunch of ideas didn't start with the silly political correctness movement.
 
Re: An abbreviated response...

ATL2CDG said:
For those of you noting possible illegal trades between France/Russia et al. with Iraq -- need I point out the Iran/Contra affair of the '80s?

That's different. We did that. We're entitled. They aren't.
 
Its about time this discussion turned intelligent and stopped simple name-calling.






P.S. Bush lost the election. Gore was no savior, but even shallow research will reveal that Bush truly had less votes and even used his ties to sway the vote.
 
Slapstick said, "Bush lost the election."

Actually, he did win the election.

He lost the popular vote but won the majority of the Electoral College votes. The last time that I checked, that's what wins the presidency - not how many Americans voted in aggregate for a particular candidate. If the popular vote elected a president, we would not have the Electoral College system.

Get over it. The Presidential election is over and has been for two years
 
The outcome would've been different had his brother not played tricks to dequalify black voters in Florida, had his cousin, running the election coverage at Fox, not reported Bush's victory in spite of the recount, and had the elderly supreme court justices who were worried about being replaced by a democrat not have stopped the recount.

I won't forget it; especially since he has done nothing to make this world a better place for people like you and me. The rich have grown 300-some percent richer during this economic slump. I don't blame it on Bush; I blame it on all us common people letting our government do as it pleases.
 
Slapstick,

The only outcome that would have been different would be the popular vote. And it wouldn't have mattered. All your dequalified black voters, elderly judges, and Fox election coverage would not have changed the electoral vote. They elect the president. He won.

I'm not necessarily a fan of Bush, but he won the election. People just don't seem to understand that the popular vote doesn't have that much pull. And Gore whinning like a baby and challanging every re count made the whole country look bad.
 
slapstick,

after the election was over and Bush proclaimed the winner a joint team of newspapers, tv, and magazines formed a joint coalition to under the public information act discover if Bush truly would have lost a recount in Florida. this liberal media spent millions to do this over more than 6 months hoping to show the world that Bush had really lost. they used several methods of determining what the recount would have been using in various scenarios the methods proclaimed by the Florida Supreme Court, the recommendations of Broward (sp?) county, and the methods suggested by disenting US Supreme Court justices. Under each method the vote count was different but one thing remained the same and was reported widely in the New York Times, WP, USA Today, National TV, and almost every other print, voice, and tv media in the world about 6 months later...

Bush would have won any recount in Florida.

He lost the popular vote no doubt but no matter how you shake it he won in Florida and therefore won the electoral vote and the Presidency.
 
skypine69,

certainly Turkey has every right to vote down the use of their nation for our forces. i never implied they did not have that right.

the fact though is they are considered a close ally and fellow NATO member of the USA though. considering they have failed to support us at this time you have to remember that in the future when they desire aid, support in their own regional politics etc.

point is: in our time of need they did not stand with us, and that decision may likely cost additional american lives. while totally within their right it doesn't make it any less painful for the USA, nor does it make it any less WRONG a decision in my opinion.
 
The real poop

About U.S. support and equipping of Saddam Hussein:

There have been plenty of articles written by anti-war activists saying everything from "The US supplied Iraq with weapons" to "The US gave Iraq chemical and biological weapons". A lot of this stuff is unverifiable, and other information is distorted half-truths bent to support the anti-war (or anti-Bush) cause. I'll address a few sample claims.

1. The US supplied the Iraqi war machine.

No, the US did not. Not a single piece of Iraqi artillery, nor a single Iraqi tank, gun, airplane, helicopter, APC or electronic warfare (EW) piece was made in the USA. Here's a list of what Iraq has owned and does own:

T55/65/72 tanks, Russian-made; MTLB APCs, Russian-made; BTR series APCs, Russian-made; BMP armored vehicles, Russian-made; various Russian-made troop trucks.

SA-2, SA-3, SA-6, SA-8, SA-7/14/16 surface to air missiles, all Russian-made; various calibers of Russian-made anti-aircraft artillery (ZSU series), and various calibers of Russian-made towed artillery pieces. They do have a handful of American-made self-propelled 155MM artillery pieces captured from Iran. Ballistic missiles include Scud models (Russian made), and Silkworm missiles (Russian-designed, but made in China). Also some home-grown missiles (ie al-Samoud).

MiG-21, MiG-23, MiG-25, MiG-29, Su-17 and Su-19 fighter aircraft. Il-76 transports, and a few various models of Anotov transports as well. All are Russian-made. Also some Mirage F1 fighters made by France.

Mil-3, Mil-8, Mil-17, Mil-24 Russian-made helicopters. Gazelle and Puma helicopters made by France.

Standard issue small arms are all Russian-made weapons. This includes the Kalishnikov rifles, handguns for officers, Russian-made mortars and crewed weapons.

Command-and-control (ie. communications) systems for the massive bunker compounds were provided by German defense corporations.

There was signficant assistance in the form of scientific and research help, sales of chemical munitions, and other support equipment (ie decontamination vehicles) from the USSR in the 1980s.

As you can see, the US played a very small role in the build-up of the Iraqi military machine.

2. The USA provided Saddam with WMD in the 1980s.

No, we didn't. None of Saddam's weapons are US weapons. For one, Saddam can't use a US chemical munition in his Russian-made artillery systems, because they aren't compatible. The one thing anti-war activists latch onto is the sale (from the US) of biological research material that was medical-grade pathogens that US medical facilities use to research disease. This was NOT weaponized biological material. Saddam attempted to turn this into weaponized material, but evidence suggests that his biological program was abruptly halted by the 1991 Gulf War, and he never totally suceeded. Saddam did, however, receive some assistance from the USSR in weaponizing biological pathogens. But again, his bio program is no where near as advanced as his chemical program.

3. The USA has chemical weapons, so why can't Iraq have them?

Actually, the US military has signed a treaty banning the use of chemical and biological weapons. The US stores of these weapons have been in the process of being destroyed by civilian contractors (I have a family member who supervises the destruction of old US chemical plants). As a military pilot and former Army ground-pounder, I have NEVER seen a doctrine that calls for the use of chemical or biological agents. ALL of the US military's doctrine concerning these weapons is focused on force protection from a NBC attack. We keep biological weapon serums around to protect us from an attack, not to develop new weapons. And we have a significant chemical protection system NOT so we can use the weapons, but to protect our forces from attack.


Be careful of what you read. Just because it appears on the internet and seems well-written doesn't mean it's true. And just because they (the anti-war activists) say they are "out for the truth" doesn't mean they won't lie to further their political aims. And always remember this....the protests are backed by ANSWER and Not In My Name, both of which are offshoots and backed by organizations such as the International Socialist Union and the Socialist Worker's Party. So it's fair to say that both of those anti-war organizations have much deeper rooted anti-American/anti-capitalist/anti-establishment mentalities, and they are using the war to provide a greater stage for their political views.

Finally, I find it horribly backwards that the efforts of the anti-war groups often serve to promote Saddam's propaganda and thus protect his regime. Also, many anti-war web sites (such as Indymedia.org) promote the "resistance" as if it was somehow being waged by valiant Iraqi freedom fighters defending their homeland. In fact, the "resistance" is often in the form of Special Republican Guard units and Fedayeen Saddam units using extremely underhanded tactics and deplorable violations of human decency, such as dressing as civilians and luring in Allied troops, dressing as Allied troops and accepting Iraqi surrenders only to execute the regular Iraqi troops, and using places such as hospitals as operating bases.

Pretending that these efforts are somehow valiant examples of self-defense are sickening. If you don't like the US justification of war, fine. But come to your senses....the forces the Allied troops are fighting and taking losses from are far from noble, and are amongst the most brutal military forces in the world.
 

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