lapman
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2007
- Messages
- 1,717
ROFL
These posts are getting just a tad ridiculous. The assertion that you are claiming is "false" is that that PNAC were referring to an event that was catastrophic and catalysing. This does not merit response.
The PH attack was the excuse for US involvement in WW2. It was used as a catalyst for public approval to enter the war, but the event itself wasn't. It was one of several attacks on the American military that started that week. You also had Wake, the Philippines and others. If it was simply stated that Japan declared war on the US, that would not have been a catalyzing statement for public approval.I hope you are not arguing taht PH was not the catalyst for US involvement in ww2....
Remember, the Lusitania was not the reason the US got into WW1. However, it was used as a catalyst for public approval to enter that war.
Again, Bush used 9/11 as a catalyst for public approval to start the WOT.I equally hope you are not stating 911 has not catalysing the WOT
You inferred it on the most elementary level.I know. Where did i say it did?Originally Posted by lapman
The PNAC document was not specifically written to counteract terrorism.
Every post by everyone else since. Yes, you acknowledge and quote the posts, but you ignore the content.![]()
You are out of your mind!!!
Unbelievable self deception! Show me one post that I have ignored in response to my points regarding similarities between RAD and WOT, encapsulated in #95. You will not find one. So why have you lied like this?
Actually, it's the opposite. Vietnam was a prime example. The seemingly endless war hurt our hegemony in the region, not helped it. The war in Iraq has hurt our hegemony in the region, not helped it. So no, the Iraq war is not supported by the PNAC document. Since the invasion of Iraq is supposed to be part of the WOT, the WOT is also not supported by the PNAC.They required a long lasting military transformation that would project american hegemony throughout the 21st century, What better way to do it than a potentially neve ending war.
Not necessarily true. If the enemy is not technologically superior, then there is no need for any R&D of new technologies. In WW2, there was a huge gap between the technology we had in 1941 and what was needed to win the war. Hence the radical development in technology. It was the same with WW1. The WOT is different. We are fighting a technologically inferior enemy. The only change needed is in strategy, not technology.Understand one thing, and do tell me if you disagree, as i will be able to gauge your apparent mental illness- in a wartime environment, military radicalisations are much easier to pursue, especially with the help of scare tactics, such as are being used by the Bush admin. Tell me if you disagree with that please.
See above.Yes, the fact that changes are easier and quicker to pursue in a wartime environment than in peace!!! How hard is this to understand??! And if you do understand it, tell me why, instead of having the change happen easily and timely, they would want them to happen with difficulty, and not timely!!?
Again, the inference was not made on any level. The inference of the document, as Spitfire has said, is the type of catastrophic and catalyzing event that would require radical technological change to win the ensuing war. 9/11 was not anywhere near that. The WOT is not that. Why is that so hard for you to understand?Basic, nursery level inference my friend, take some lessons in honesty, and you will find this thread a lot easier for yourself.