No, no, he's in Cuba, where everyone is equal. So he gets the same care as any other Cuban, which is better than average (just like in Lake Woebegone).Beeps, he's the President, FFS. He's going to get better than average health care, no matter the country.
I'll consider him to be in fine shape when he's being used to fertilize tobacco fields.I'll know he's back in fine shape when they report that he's smoking cigars again.![]()
Castro quit smoking 20 years ago.Beeps, he's the President, FFS. He's going to get better than average health care, no matter the country. I'll know he's back in fine shape when they report that he's smoking cigars again.![]()
DR
You appear to be the one who's living in never-never land. Dream on.No, no, he's in Cuba, where everyone is equal. So he gets the same care as any other Cuban, which is better than average (just like in Lake Woebegone).
Hey, I admitted Castro's getting better-than-average care, just like all Cubans, and that no goddamn HMO would've have sent me home five days after open-heart surgery if Fidel was running things here. So what's your beef?You appear to be the one who's living in never-never land. Dream on.
Harvard Publich Health Review: ”Cuba also boasts the highest rate of public health service in Latin America and has one of the highest physician-to-population ratios in the world. Alone remarkable for a developing country, these feats are even more extraordinary considering the context of a US embargo that's been in effect since 1961.”
I not only do, but some of what I was doing then was directly tied to both of those nations. I even got to meet the head of the Albanian Navy.
Again, where were you and what were you paying attention to?
DR
I already posted for you evidence of US forces in Albania, the iron hand behind the velvet glove of "dipomatic" means. The EU failed, miserably, to handle a European security problem. If you want slightly more fun, when the decision to lay the lumber on Serbia did come, roughly 90% of the sorties were flown by US aircraft.Appeal to authority. Post me sources that US forces - and I assume from the tone of your note the US alone - were involved in military action in Albania.
.http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/27c/623.html said:Eighty-seven people drowned in rough seas on the night of March 28, {1997}some 35 miles east of the Italian port of Brindisi, after the frigate Sibilla rammed the Albanian vessel twice, sinking it immediately. The Italian navy was enforcing Rome's orders to turn back refugees from Albania -13,000 of whom have reached Italy's coasts since February
I already posted for you evidence of US forces in Albania, the iron hand behind the velvet glove of "dipomatic" means. The EU failed, miserably, to handle a European security problem. If you want slightly more fun, when the decision to lay the lumber on Serbia did come, roughly 90% of the sorties were flown by US aircraft.
[snip]
On 20 April 1999 Secretary of Defense William S. Cohen directed the deployment of additional units to provide force protection for Task Force Hawk in Albania. Some 615 soldiers from the headquarters and headquarters company and two light infantry companies of the 2nd Battalion, 505th Infantry Regiment, 11 additional AH-64 Apache attack helicopter crews from 229th Aviation Regiment, and logistics support personnel from the XVIII Airborne Corps at Fort Bragg, N.C., began deploying to Tirane. This deployment brought the approximate number of US forces in Task Force Hawk to 3,300. Ultimately a total of roughly 5,000 personnel deployed.
It took almost four weeks to deploy the Apache helicopters. The Apache crews started training for deep strike missions against Serb forces in Kosovo. Given the changes in the scope and specifics of Task Force Hawk's deployment, a different means of moving the task force might have been chosen. It is a misimpression that the Task Force Hawk deployment merely involved 24 Apache helicopters. In fact, Task Force Hawk was an Army Aviation Brigade Combat Team. This unit included a corps aviation brigade headquarters, a corps artillery brigade headquarters with a Multiple-Launch Rocket System (MLRS) battalion, an attack helicopter regiment (Apache), a ground maneuver brigade combat team, a corps support group, a signal battalion, a headquarters troop battalion, a military police detachment, a psychological operations detachment, and a special operations command-and-control element.
Two 11th Aviation Regiment soldiers killed 04 May 1999 in the crash of their Apache helicopter in Albania were the first US troops to die in the NATO air offensive against Yugoslavia. The crash occurred about 75 kilometers northeast of the Tirana-Rinas Airport during a training mission in support of Operation Allied Force.
the Kosovar ALBANIAN cock

That's OK, having lived the problems of collective security, I should not expect anyone who has not to "get it."Darth Rotor: I suspect that the basis for Architect's statements have something to do with whether the action actually took place in the country of "Albania." You're being baited.
Darth Rotor: I suspect that the basis for Architect's statements have something to do with whether the action actually took place in the country of "Albania." You're being baited.
Way to act like an asshat, which is very not like you.After all, if he doesn't know the difference between (say) Yugoslavia and Albania, it would be a trifle worrying.
Actually, I'm giving him every chance to correct what appears to be a balls-up before he digs himself any deeper into the hole.
After all, if he doesn't know the difference between (say) Yugoslavia and Albania, it would be a trifle worrying.
But hey, Darth clearly has an anti-European thing going, so why let facts come in the way of his prejudice?
No such confusion was anywhere except in your mind.Darth made a big show and dance about US forces allegedly saving the EU arse by intervening in Albania - a country that in fact has seen no such military action - and has his "facts" so screwed up that (a) he confuses two seperate countries and (b) conventiently forgets - for example - the rather large British forces which have been present throughout the Yugoslav problems.