GreNME
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2007
- Messages
- 8,276
Fedayeen Saddam.
... were not al Qaeda. That you seem to be unable to tell the difference is your own problem.
Fedayeen Saddam.
... were not al Qaeda. That you seem to be unable to tell the difference is your own problem.
I'll just point out that I already addressed the issue of where Iraq's WMD may have gone using NUMEROUS sources, and also noted the discover of a still-viable binary sarin shell that was anything but ancient, rusting and unusable.
The ISG said it's discover opened up the question of whether Iraq had more and in the end the ISG admitted they couldn't rule out that WMD went to Syria. Read the thread.![]()
Didn't you read the news at the time?
We invaded Afghanistan in part because al-Qaeda ran camps there where perhaps tens of thousands (according to some sources like http://www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518,449990,00.html and http://articles.latimes.com/2002/sep/15/nation/na-terror15 ) of would be terrorists learned and honed their murderous skills. A lot of those came to Iraq after the invasion. Iraq was fly paper.
Finally, in all likelihood even if we hadn't invaded Iraq in 2003, the presence of terrorists in Iraq would have continued to grow exponentially. Especially if we'd focused on Aghanistan and Pakistan to such an extent that life became unbearable for them there. They were already establishing camps and a network in Iraq by the time we invaded. That activity would surely have grown regardless of an invasion.
Al-Qaeda.
Stupid question really.
Stupid answer. Al Qaeda was not free to operate in Iraq until our idiot-in-chief kicked the door open for them.
You do not need that much of an intelligence operation to know that a modernist Sunni is not going to be happy about a bunch of takfiri dirtbags who want him dead organizing a harb in his country.I thought you said we had no intel on Iraq.
So given that more people died as a result of Saddam's totalitarian apparatus of death than the insurgency,
wouldn't you agree that the liberation of Iraq was a good thing?
So given that more people died as a result of Saddam's totalitarian apparatus of death than the insurgency, wouldn't you agree that the liberation of Iraq was a good thing?
So given that more people died as a result of Saddam's totalitarian apparatus of death than the insurgency, wouldn't you agree that the liberation of Iraq was a good thing?
You don't care.
You don't care.
Saddam's regime killed about hundred and thrity people a day.
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
I'll just point out that I already addressed the issue of where Iraq's WMD may have gone using NUMEROUS sources, and also noted the discover of a still-viable binary sarin shell that was anything but ancient, rusting and unusable.
I'm sorry, but somewhere in your wall of blather, I missed yopur documentation of that. It's the first I've heard of it, and I actually used to work regularly with soldiers who had been to Iraq, and may do so again soon.
The most interesting discovery has been a 152mm binary Sarin artillery projectile—containing a 40 percent concentration of Sarin—which insurgents attempted to use as an Improvised Explosive Device (IED). The existence of this binary weapon not only raises questions about the number of viable chemical weapons remaining in Iraq and raises the possibility that a larger number of binary, long-lasting chemical weapons still exist. ... snip ... ISG has no information to indicate that Iraq produced more binary Sarin rounds than it declared, however, former Iraqi scientists involved with the program admitted that the program was considered extremely successful and shelved for future use. According to the source, General Amer al-Saadi sought to downplay its findings to the UN to avoid heightened attention toward the program. ... snip ... Iraq only declared its work on binary munitions after Husayn Kamil fled Iraq in 1995, and even then only claimed to have produced a limited number of binary rounds that it used in field trials in 1988. UN investigations revealed a number of uncertainties surrounding the nature and extent of Iraq’s work with these systems and it remains unclear how many rounds it produced, tested, declared, or concealed from the UN."
Do you support the murder of George H.W. Bush Leftysargent? You seem to imply that someone trying to kill your father is nothing to worry about.
The Casus Belli was the invasion of Kuwait, the systematic violation of the ceasefire and all UN resolutions against the regime. How many resolutions should we have let him break? How much longer should we have let him break them?