Upchurch
Papa Funkosophy
What makes you think he's OK with professing faith to bolster his popularity but draws the line at funding jihadists? He funded Hamas.
You misunderstand. I'm saying that it isn't likely that Bin Laden would work with Saddam.
What makes you think he's OK with professing faith to bolster his popularity but draws the line at funding jihadists? He funded Hamas.
What makes you think he's OK with professing faith to bolster his popularity but draws the line at funding jihadists? He funded Hamas.
How many Iraqi civilians would have died with Saddam in power?
When your child's brain is a smear on the wall, I don't think you would much care whose bullet put it there.
upchurch said:I'm saying that it isn't likely that Bin Laden would work with Saddam.
When your child's brain is a smear on the wall, I don't think you would much care whose bullet put it there.
I would care. But my point is would more Iraqi civilians been killed if Saddam had stayed in power.
As in al Qaeda or another group? The difference is key.Demonstrably wrong. Sunni jihadists accept cash and arms from the secular Allawite regime in Syria, who they consider to be heretics.
The secular who now?Demonstrably wrong. Sunni jihadists accept cash and arms from the secular Allawite regime in Syria, who they consider to be heretics.
Not impossible, just very unlikely. And lacking any concrete evidence that they ever did, there is no reason to think they might have.Jesus, Stalin can ally with Roosevelt and Churchill but you think it's impossible for Bin Laden to ally with Saddam?
I would care. But my point is would more Iraqi civilians been killed if Saddam had stayed in power.
Osama had the money, he could buy such arms as he needed locally, and had no logistical capability to store them outside the theater of operations. Why would Saddam provide arms to someone most likely to use them against him in his own country? And a safe house in a country whose leader you exist to over-throw is an absurdity in itself.Share the joke with the rest of us. Osama says no to money, arms and safe houses for his jihad does he? What does he wage it with? Pointed sticks?
People are sort of missing the point. Between the two parties, Saddam would be the one more likely to reject a partnership. For a strongman trying to maintain power over a country with artificial borders and a diverse population [the majority of which is hostile towards him], such an alliance would offer no long-term benefit and very little short-term benefit. Bin Laden has a history of turning against those who formed alliances of convenience with him for short-term strategic gain [see: U.S.-Mujahideen partnership in Afghanistan in late 70s/early 80s]. Saddam would have no assurance that if he were to sell weapons and offer training to al Qaeda that al Qaeda wouldn't then turn on him and work to overthrow his secularist Ba'athist government.
a sharpshooter would have been a sane use of military force
So his serial rapist son can take over instead? Great plan.
If you're referring to HAMAS and Hizbollah, you're going to have a hard time proving that they wish to overthrow secular Arab regimes.So why does the Baath regime in Syria give cash, arms and logistical support to terrorists that desire the overthrow of all secular Arab regimes?
Show me some conclusive proof that those trucks existed first.
Don't Be So Sure There Were No WMD in Iraq
Satellite Photos Support Testimony That Iraqi WMD Went to Syria
The history books on this issue shouldn’t be written just yet.
June 6, 2010
Ha’aretz has revived the mystery (http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/what-is-assad-hiding-in-his-backyard-1.292935 ) surrounding the inability to find weapons of mass destruction stockpiles in Iraq, the most commonly cited justification for Operation Iraqi Freedom and one of the most embarrassing episodes for the United States. Satellite photos of a suspicious site in Syria are providing new support for the reporting of a Syrian journalist who briefly rocked the world with his reporting that Iraq’s WMD had been sent to three sites in Syria just before the invasion commenced.
The newspaper reveals that a 200 square-kilometer area in northwestern Syria has been photographed by satellites at the request of a Western intelligence agency at least 16 times, the most recent being taken in January. The site is near Masyaf, and it has at least five installations and hidden paths leading underneath the mountains. This supports the reporting of Nizar Nayouf, an award-winning Syrian journalist who said in 2004 that his sources confirmed that Saddam Hussein’s WMDs were in Syria.
… snip …
On February 24, 2009, I went to see a talk Duelfer gave at the Free Library of Philadelphia to promote his book. He admitted there were some “loose ends” regarding the possibility that Iraqi WMD went to Syria, but dismissed them. Among these “loose ends,” Duelfer said, was the inability to track down the Iraqis who worked for a company connected to Uday Hussein that sources said had driven “sensitive” material into Syria. A Pentagon document (http://www.worldthreats.com/?p=60 ) reveals that an Iraqi dissident reported that 50 trucks crossed the border on March 10, 2003, and that his sources in Syria confirmed they carried WMD. These trucks have been talked about frequently and remain a mystery.
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2) Tell us the contents of the concrete bunker that was built under the Euphrates in 2002 (that locals said contained WMD) and that was looted before the CIA (in all it's *wisdom*) decided to take a look at it in 2006?
You tell me, dawg. It's your story. Nobody aside from a few true-believer NeoCons seem to think the "bunker" even exists.
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3) Tell us why Iraq selectively sanitized files, computers and facilities thought related to WMD? They did this before, during and even after the invasion, according to the ISG. What were they hiding?
Oh, I dunno. You do realize that Saddam and a lot of his high-ranking officials were kindasorta TRIED FOR WAR CRIMES following the invasion? Could've been trying to destroy evidence of THAT? Could've been trying to destroy evidence leading to the location of their "hidey holes"?
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4) Tell us where that still viable binary sarin shell that turned up as an IED actually came from and how you *know* it was the only one?
Could've come from practically anywhere. Iran, Syria, Yemen, Pakistan, Russia. Surely if it were part of some hidden stockpile left over from Saddam there would've been more than ONE.
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5) Tell us what the documents dated 2002 from Saddam that were found in Iraq but not translated until much later meant when they ordered "special" materials to be hidden ("special" materials was the way Iraq referred to WMD at the time)?
[citation needed]
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6) Tell us why you think invading Iraq was only about finding completed WMD munitions, and not precursors and the means to produce WMD as well (you see the ISG concluded that Iraq had not given up it's pursuit of WMD and that Saddam planned to reconstitute his chemical munitions within six months to a year after the UN gave Iraq a clean bill of health and sanctions ended)?
a) Because everything the Administration said in the run-up to the war would've had us believe that Saddam was a clear and present danger and had active stockpiles of WMDs.
b) Because perceived intent is not a justification for invading a foreign country.
c) Because if they thought mere PURSUIT of such weapons represented a reason to invade, North Korea would've been a much more logical target.
... we have three different countries (Iraq, Iran, and North Korea) that, while they all present serious problems for the United States -- they're dictatorships, they're involved in the development and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction -- you know, the most imminent, clear and present threat to our country is not the same from those three countries. I think Iraq is the most serious and imminent threat to our country."
You are obnoxious.
So when the ISG said there were trucks observed going to Syria right before the war they were just lying? LOL! You know how lame that argument is, CE, given that certain media venues even carried pictures of the truck convoys?
There's plenty of evidence to support this, starting with several Washington Times articles from 2004. For example, read http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2004/aug/16/20040816-011235-4438r/ . And another by Bill Gertz (http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2004/oct/28/20041028-115519-3700r/ ) stated that "U.S. intelligence agencies have obtained satellite photographs of truck convoys that were at several weapons sites in Iraq in the weeks before U.S. military operations were launched, defense officials said yesterday. The photographs indicate that Iraq was moving arms and equipment from its known weapons sites, said officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity. According to one official, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, known as NGA, 'documented the movement of long convoys of trucks from various areas around Baghdad to the Syrian border.' The photographs bolster the claims of Pentagon official John A. Shaw, who told The Washington Times on Wednesday that recent intelligence reports indicate Russian special forces units took part in a sophisticated dispersal operation from January 2003 to March 2003 to move key weapons out of Iraq."
And CE, what are the odds that if insurgents just picked a shell at random off the floor of the desert or in some arms cache to make an IED, they would have picked one of Saddam's best WMD weapons rather than one of the tens of millions...