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#161 |
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FFR Player
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Sorry for not clarifying, but we basically catalyzed this war by invading Iraq.
And, unless you're being sarcastic, I really don't see any harm that Iraq could do to the Continental U.S. I do agree, however, that we were on more peaceful terms when Saddam was in reign. Doing some more research on the Gulf War. |
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#162 | |
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FFR Player
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#163 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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The funny thing is, most of the inherent contradictions of the Bush administration were given by the President himself in his various speeches and addresses, all of which are preserved for anyone to read on the whitehouse.gov website. You could read it for yourself any time you want.
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#164 | |
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FFR Player
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According to Wikipedia, the 1990-91 Gulf War was due to the fact that Iraq seemed to disapprove of peace-keeping movements and had friendly relations with the Soviet Union, who was one of the dominant countries in the Cold War and considered a reasonable threat. Also, Saddam Hussein had commited crimes against humanity, which probably brought support of the other causes, but isn't a cause alone; one reason is probably the fact that Hussein's cruelty was well documented before the invasion.
Although no nukes were fired, they did have nukes, so the invasion may have been justifiable to some. What makes me scratch my head is Bush Senior's motives. Quote:
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#165 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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Because if they took Kuwait, Iraq would have control of roughly 20% of the world's oil reserve. The usual worry at the time was that the Soviets would invade major oil producing countries like Kuwait, but there was actually a report by Paul Wolfowitz in the late 70s (Wolfowitz was the Deputy Secretary of Defense under the George W Bush until 2005, and was a Pentagon staffer under George H W Bush during the first Gulf War) warning that it was likely Iraq could turn its attention to invading countries like Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.
Also, I'll point out that while the potentiality of a nuclear programme being undertaken by Iraq during the time of the first gulf war was definately something that should have (and would have) been considered by the Americans, after Clinton basically reduced to rubble what remained of their (by then) anemic nuclear program, claims in this iteration of Iraqi conflicts about WMDs have basically been spurious right from the outset. Last edited by devonin; 06-26-2007 at 08:59 PM.. |
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#166 |
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FFR Player
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What kind of influence did Wolfowitz have back in the 70's?
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#167 |
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FFR Player
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I'll go ahead and double post.
According to Kuwait's history, it was one of the most oil-bound countries in the Middle East, meaning that imports and exports were probably going through like a school of fish. I'm going to judge Saddam's nature by saying that he probably would've kept the oil to himself. Unfortunately, while being chased at sea, he ordered countless tons of oil to be dumped into the ocean. Millions if not billions of organisms died. Judging his nature again, he probably wouldn't have put that oil to good use. |
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#168 |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: In your mind, and it scares me.
Age: 33
Posts: 311
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Look, a president can't do everything the people want, weren't we the ones who ran to him after 9/11? But now that he's trying to do something about it everyone hates him!
__________________
There are nO suBliminal mEssages in mY foruM signaturE |
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#169 | |||
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Very Grave Indeed
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The invasion of Kuwait by Iraq to try and take control of the oil reserves had much more to do with their foreign debt as a result of the hostilities with Iran. They needed the oil and the money from selling it, to pay off their creditors. Quote:
You say that like invading Iraq with underequipped, underfunded troops in too small a volume to actually manage the country after they toppled the government actually had anything to do with 9/11 Last edited by devonin; 06-26-2007 at 11:47 PM.. |
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#170 | |
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FFR Player
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I think our plans for invasion put that to an end. |
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#171 |
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Old-School Player
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I refuse to answer this question. I fear the current government, and as such, I refuse to expose myself to any reasons for my silencing.
Actually, that's not true, but I could type paragraphs about this and other administrations. I'm just lazy right now. Look for more later. Perhaps in a separate post. Last edited by Coolgamer; 06-27-2007 at 01:48 PM.. |
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#172 | ||
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Very Grave Indeed
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If Wolfowitz had been taken seriously, and the US made it clear to Iraq that friends or no friends, they weren't going to take kindly to Iraq moving into Kuwait or Saudi Arabia, the entire first Gulf War might have been averted entirely. Quote:
It is pretty safe to say that Iraqi oil won't be powering American products at a profit ever again. |
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#173 |
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FFR Player
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I've heard a lot of people say that Bush Sr. had a great chance to catch Hussein, but backed down. What's the full story on that?
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#174 |
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FFR Player
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My understanding is that Iraqi forces were absolutely routed out of Kuwait, to the point where they were in shambles and had absolutely no chance of defending their own country. Bush Sr., however, decided not to pursue the Iraqis back into their own country after Kuwait was liberated. However "catching" Saddam, as in apprehending, I haven't heard anything about.
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#175 | |
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Very Grave Indeed
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Well...after the Iraqi forces were pushed back out of Kuwait, the US government implied very heavily that if the Kurds were to rise up, they would have American support to overthrow Hussein. They did, the US didn't, and the Kurds were slaughtered pretty wholesale by the Iraqis.
The US -could- have pressed on and completed a full-out overthrow of the existing Iraqi government, which would likely have resulted in the capture or death of Hussein, but it was pointed out (and rightly so) that to do so would a) Take -many- more American lives b) Take a -very- long time and c) Result in an American occupation of Iraq with no readily available way to turn power over to a national civilian authority. Basically it came down to the fact that the US -could- have gone in and taken over, but would then be forced to keep Iraq as an occupied nation under American Military control. Ironically, the best quote on the subject comes from Vice-President Cheney while he was the Secretary of Defense: Quote:
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#176 |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Jun 2007
Age: 37
Posts: 40
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Some of you in this post need to go take a class in the subject, or read a book or something. Some of your "logic" is quite humorous.
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#177 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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Perhaps you'd like to follow the rules of the forum, and I don't know...-support- your claim that people are making fallacious arguments with perhaps some kind of evidence? Or even explanation?
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#178 | |
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FFR Player
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Having a governing body of Iraq is about the only thing we can do to clean up this mess until Iraqi officials can manage the country on their own. |
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#179 | ||||
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Very Grave Indeed
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Multiple sources all showed that what anemic meagre nuclear program even existed after the iran-Iraq war was completely blasted to rubble by the Clinton Administration missile attacks. Inspectors found nothing, the intelligence community found nothing, and then after the invasion, they found more nothing.
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The Americans have not only diliberately worked -against- the ability of Iraq to actually govern itself, it has done a piss-poor job of managing things on its own. Before the invasion, electricity was available 20 hours a day for most people. Now they're lucky to get 10, in sporadic 2-hour chunks as rollig blackouts are the only way they can get power to much of anywhere. Ditto the fresh water supply and so on and so on. The country is falling apart due to the complete lack of authority in the state. Estimates before the invasion suggested that several hundred thousand troops would be needed to -properly- protect and manage Iraq after the government was toppled. To date, it appears that a -total- of 263,000 American troops have actually set boot in Iraq, with only 165,000 there currently. This to manage a country of almost 27 million people, in a landmass roughly the size of California. Edit: For scale purposes...Imagine you have to go to California, and on your own, with a rifle, you have to deal with 163 people, one of whom worked for the government and was fired, two of whom were members of the Iraqi military who were fired, lost their pensions, but still have their machine guns, oh, and also, you have to patrol, and keep peace and order in a full square mile of land. That's roughly what the US got itself in for. Now...if they'd followed the advice of the groups whose job it was to offer advice, and kept the government and Iraqi military around, that number goes from 163 per solider down to 47 per soldier. If they -also- listened to advice of their own officials who suggested that several hundred thousand troops were needed, and thus 300,000 troops were on the ground, the number goes down even more, to 38. Obviously the numbers don't line up like that in reality, with one person literally standing some kind of guard over 40 guys, but you get the point. There are reports of american soldiers assigned to guard facilities containing high explosive which were completely looted because there were only 20 guys assigned to guard it, and they were routinely outnumbered by looters. Last edited by devonin; 06-29-2007 at 11:46 AM.. |
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#180 | ||
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FFR Player
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Although Wikipedia doesn't give much if any information on inspections after the beginning of the invasion, I only got reports of inspections [possibly months] after the invasion began. That doesn't add up to me. Also: Quote:
I never said that I supported that action. Hell, I don't really support the war in general. Also, I've brought this up before, but I think that if we had Saddam's next-in-command(s) rule the country under the watch of the US/U.N. (Either/or), Iraq might be just a tad bit more stable. Unfortunately, his next-in-command(s) are either battling against us or are dead. The way that I interpreted the information, the overthrowing of Saddam meant that the Sunnis and Shia weren't divided anymore, and started going at each other to contribute to the fighting that was already going on. Again, I'm not supporting this war at all, and I think we could've made great attempts to avoid it. But I'm not sure if there's much else we can do about Iraq right now. Pulling out, although it sounds immoral, would sound like a great idea to me. The Iraqi people can lead themselves, whether they want to rule the country by slaughter or not; it's the lesser of two evils. However, I'm not sure if the U.N. will approve of us pulling out, and they probably don't. |
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