Virus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2006
- Messages
- 6,875
It's my opinion that if you invade a country and you are the initial aggressor (ie. they didn't invade you or an ally first) then you are responsible for the state of the country following the invasion, particularly any new problems that arise. As before, you may disagree, but this isn't a "moonbat" position.
Saddam started it by refusing to honour his ceasefire obligations. If you break a ceasefire, the hostilities are back on.
Joey's implication was that in retrospect the war may look bad, but the intentions were good, or something. I was pointing out that part of the support for the war was based on a false premise.
The Gulf War was partly based on false premises about Iraqi troops dumping kids from incubators. So what?
Show evidence that the million or so people who marched against the iraq war, or their organisers, were communists, supported saddam, or sympathized with terrorists.
I never said they were. I said the march was organized and run by Saddam and terrorist supporters. The people who turned up were just hapless, witless dupes of Saddam and terrorist supporters.
I checked with my dad about this one as he's been to enough protests over the years, and he says back when he was in university he was attending protests against america's original support for saddam. Remember when your government gave saddam hussein lots of weapons? That.
The Australian government gave Saddam lots of weapons? News to me.
Well, for one thing, show evidence there were any more plans for genocide or any indication that it might reoccur.
His predilection for it in the past. Multiple times.
If it were possible to fly a plane over a country and send out some kind of radio signal that painlessly switched their country from dictatorship to democracy, i'd pay tax towards that. But what america and the uk did was an invasion that had little international support and was based largely on lies (such as the false connection between saddam and 9/11, tony blairs dodgy "sexed up" dossiers, or the fake "iceman" informant). And as david cameron (who i dislike, but like the quote) recently said, "you can't drop democracy from 40,000 feet." Middle eastern intervention has a bad history, even if you decide that you do have a right to go around replacing dictatorships with democracies through extreme force.
Well duh, who wouldn't use magic democracy bombs if there were such a thing.
And if regime change was genuinely the only motivation, why do it to the country with the third largest oil reserves in the world, instead of, say, zimbabwe?
Because it's not a good thing when genocidal fascist regimes seize a quarter of the world's oil reserves.
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