thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,587
I thought you said it was the lies of Rumsfeld that motivated people. Which is it, Ken?
Both.
I thought you said it was the lies of Rumsfeld that motivated people. Which is it, Ken?
The Scud missles were a violation of the UN resolutions, were being sought by Blix, and are an appropriate delivery vehicle for the very agents Iraq couldn't account for:
I'm sorry, but there were voices of caution before the war, and they were ignored. The political leaders don't give a pass. It's not a matter of sparing one party while blaming the other. Both the intelligence community and the political leaders are culpable.It's not their "feelings". I'm concerned with. It's their failures, and how to fix them.
Diverting attention to the political leaders they steered wrong not only doesn't fix the problem, it compounds it.
No, this is good enough. The reports provide information on the data being gathered, and the remaining gaps in the data. The Iraqis, procedurally, were cooperating very well, though Blix wanted more cooperation "on substance". By the time the second report had come along, Iraq had formed commissions to search for documents, and had provided people to verify the destruction of chemical weapons. THIS IS PROGRESS! And it is gathering data. If this is not gathering data, then you woudn't know about the missiles (not WMD, but still a violation). So we were gathering data. You can't accept it as gathering data for one purpose, but reject it for another, with no reason to do so.Whoops. Sorry. Wrong hyperlink:
Hans Blix, An Update on Inspection, January 27, 2003.
Better?
You you have one "more recent", or "mo betta"?
That's opinion, and apologetic at that.
I doubt Saddam would even thank you for it.
So I have to step in the place of the generals and make military decisions before I can have an opinion on foreign policy.
How would Pakistan react? They would have been really annoyed, to be sure. There would have been sabre rattling. But for them to retaliate against the United States would out them in a position of paying too high a price.
In fact, the Pakistani reaction to the limited air strikes is about what we could expect if we dropped troops in to search the border region.
And if they had reacted more forcefully? I would trade all the crap that we're experiencing in Iraq for an equal amount of crap in/with Pakistan-- perhaps more, since we would actually be dealing with a threat (Bin Laden), not a non-threat.
Do you realize that you're placing a greater burden of justification on me advocating limited military action in Pakistan (if that would indeed be necessary, deferring to the experts) than you place on the Bush administration for an ALL OUT INVASION of the non-threat Iraq. That is ridiculous. You "don't accept the price", yet you accept the price of invading Iraq. Rubbish. Absolute rubbish.
The risk-benefit analysis is inadequate. You have to consider the probability that you're wrong, because acting and being wrong also has consequences. As we have seen, those consequences are really bad. The loss of prestige in the world, the loss of American lives, the derailment of the war on terror, the freedom of Bin Laden, all ramp up the risk of acting and being wrong. Besides, Saddam was contained, as I said before. The risk was minimal compared to the risk of destabilizing the region.No, you have to do a risk-benefit analysis. You have to consider the consequences of what happens if you're wrong. If we invade and he had no weapons, how does that compare to if we don't invade and there are weapons? One scenario is much worse than the other, and you sometimes need to act based on the magnitude of the consequences, not just the probabilities involved.
Got me on that.Well, actually, you CAN. Your argument is that you shouldn't.
None of these add up to a current threat to the United States, and with an actual threat running free, these do not add up to a reason to invade Iraq. It is the responsibility of our head of state to act in our best interests. It is not in our best interest to attack a non-threat instead of attacking a threat.But that's rather simplistic, and it's far from the whole argument for going into Iraq. There were things about Iraq that we DID know (we knew they continuously violated many provisions of the cease-fire that stopped the first gulf war, for example). And sometimes, not knowing something SHOULD change how you act.
It also doesn't mean there ARE weapons in a particular place, at a particular time. This argument IAEA inspections have not uncovered clandestine etc. etc., therefore inspecctions in Iraq would be incapable of finding WMD", is at least a Division error, and may also include other fallacies. You're wanting to look at the entire history of weapons inspections, so you don't have to look at the actual evidence that was actually produced by one particular inspection. It would be inconvenient for you to look at that data, I understand. Your best efforts to invalidate it haven't even touched it, because you're attacking Blix and the IAEA, not the actual evidence.Sure: no IAEA inspection of any country has ever uncovered clandestine nuclear weapons programs. Ever. There was no reason to think that their failure to do so in Iraq constituted proof that no such program existed.
You're correct. I didn't intend this to be part of my argument, just a side note to remind anyone who may have forgotten this inconvenient little fact.That's a hind-sight evaluation, and has little bearing on how we should have made our decision. The logic is equivalent to saying I shouldn't have paid for car insurance this last year because I never got pulled over and I never got into an accident.
So if Saddam had failed to comply by destroying WMD without reporting its destruction, you'll hold this in the same reguard as his failing to comply by CREATING WMD?Well, no. Actual compliance on Saddam's part could have satisfied me, but he never did comply. And that's NOT actually in dispute.
If there are no WMD, then there is no appreciable risk to the United States. If you send troops into the country, you are creating risk. It is only reasonable to create this risk if you know that you're eliminating a greater risk. If you don't *know*-- to a degree that would satisfy a reasonable person's burden of proof-- then you're creating risks based on assumptions, faith, and lack of evidence. Your position is not rational.You can only make that claim if you assume I took the position that he DID have weapons. I never took that position. I took the position that it wasn't worth the risk. Just like I took the position that it wasn't worth the risk to drive without car insurance. I wasn't wrong about that decision, even though it turns out I haven't needed it.
If the UN had determined that Saddam had no WMD, they would have been correct. Inspections don't have to be infinite. If any future evidence arrises that WMD programs have been reconstituted, more action could be taken.But the problem goes fundamentally deeper than that. Inspections were explicitly not intended to be indefinite. The moment the UN was satisfied that he had no weapons, and it could have been completely true.
With continued scrutiny from the United States, Saddam would have been taking a huge risk to do what you're saying. In any case, if you start invading people because if what they may do, some day.... maybe kinda sorta... then you're going to have to invade a lot of countries.He could have disarmed completely, he could have taken that next step (which he NEVER did) of complying with all the UN security council resolutions, and then what? He's free to go. He's free of inspections, he's free of sanctions. And once that happens, do you honestly think he wouldn't start those programs right back up again? Of course he would.
That is just not true.And there'd be no basis on which to re-institute sanctions, either.
Yet you're satisfied that Bin Laden is no longer a significant threat. Fascinating. Your assertion that suddenly Saddam would be free from scrutiny after inspectors gave him a clean bill of health is simply fantasy.In other words, the inspection regime, REGARDLESS of how good you think it was, was never capable of doing the job that really needed to be done: ensuring that Saddam never got WMD's. It could, at best, ensure that at one moment of time, after which all bets are off. That simply wasn't enough of an assurance for me.
I have a hard time seeing toppling a bloodthirsty dictator who killed hundreds of thousands of his own people as being a particularly bad thing to begin with, so if we've got to do that in order to satisfy my concerns, well sorry, but I came to a different choice than you did.
Originally Posted by Huntster :
The Scud missles were a violation of the UN resolutions, were being sought by Blix, and are an appropriate delivery vehicle for the very agents Iraq couldn't account for:
The inspections were in the process of acounting for them-- accounting for their destruction, as it happens. You can't deliever agents that don't exist.
The Scud missles were a violation of the UN resolutions, were being sought by Blix, and are an appropriate delivery vehicle for the very agents Iraq couldn't account for:
...At a meeting of the Security Council the next morning, weapons inspectors Blix and El Baradei reported cooperation had improved, but that Iraqi cooperation was less than complete. Blix issued a report to the Council specifying a number of questions that remained unsolved since the passage of resolution 1441 (and previous resolutions). The UN weapons inspector's report specifically stated that Iraq had not accounted for up to 10,000 liters of anthrax, Scud missile warheads (missiles Iraq fired at Israel and coalition forces in the Persian Gulf War and that could be armed chemical or biological agents), and drone aircraft that could fly past UN-allowed limits and that also could be fitted with spray units that could deliver chemical or biological weapons....
It's not their "feelings". I'm concerned with. It's their failures, and how to fix them.
Diverting attention to the political leaders they steered wrong not only doesn't fix the problem, it compounds it.
I'm sorry, but there were voices of caution before the war, and they were ignored. The political leaders don't give a pass. It's not a matter of sparing one party while blaming the other. Both the intelligence community and the political leaders are culpable.
...Hans Blix, An Update on Inspection, January 27, 2003.
Better?
You you have one "more recent", or "mo betta"?
No, this is good enough. The reports provide information on the data being gathered, and the remaining gaps in the data. The Iraqis, procedurally, were cooperating very well, though Blix wanted more cooperation "on substance". By the time the second report had come along, Iraq had formed commissions to search for documents, and had provided people to verify the destruction of chemical weapons...
...Similarly to Blix, he reported that "we have to date found no evidence of nuclear or nuclear related activities in Iraq," but that "a number of issues are still under investigation." ElBaradei also noted that a new document provided by Iraq contained "no new information," and expressed the hope that the newly established Iraqi commissions "will be able to uncover documents and other evidence that could assist in clarifying … remaining questions."...
...THIS IS PROGRESS! And it is gathering data. If this is not gathering data, then you woudn't know about the missiles (not WMD, but still a violation). So we were gathering data. You can't accept it as gathering data for one purpose, but reject it for another, with no reason to do so....
...And lets keep in mind, ladies and germs, that they DIDN'T FIND ANYTHING. This was not because of Iraqi non-cooperation, but because THERE WAS NOTHING TO FIND.....
....In addition, Kay summarized some of the Survey Group's discoveries, which included: a clandestine network of laboratories and safe-houses controlled by the Iraqi Intelligence Services containing equipment suitable for CBW research; reference strains of biological organisms concealed in a scientists home; documents and equipment hidden in scientists' homes that could be used for resuming uranium enrichment activities; and a continuing covert capability to manufacture fuel propellant useful only for prohibited SCUD missiles...
...I'm not willing to throw American lives into an adventure based on someones belief that Hans Blix is incapable of finding WMD. Blix was there. He found nothing. That data was the best both in time and place. I'll make my decisions based on the best data....
The risk-benefit analysis is inadequate. You have to consider the probability that you're wrong, because acting and being wrong also has consequences. As we have seen, those consequences are really bad.
The loss of prestige in the world,
the loss of American lives,
the derailment of the war on terror,
the freedom of Bin Laden,
Besides, Saddam was contained, as I said before.
The risk was minimal compared to the risk of destabilizing the region.
None of these add up to a current threat to the United States,
This argument IAEA inspections have not uncovered clandestine etc. etc., therefore inspecctions in Iraq would be incapable of finding WMD", is at least a Division error, and may also include other fallacies.
So if Saddam had failed to comply by destroying WMD without reporting its destruction, you'll hold this in the same reguard as his failing to comply by CREATING WMD?
If compliance means "don't hide anything", well, he had nothing to hide.
If there are no WMD, then there is no appreciable risk to the United States.
If the UN had determined that Saddam had no WMD, they would have been correct. Inspections don't have to be infinite. If any future evidence arrises that WMD programs have been reconstituted, more action could be taken.
With continued scrutiny from the United States, Saddam would have been taking a huge risk to do what you're saying.
In any case, if you start invading people because if what they may do, some day.... maybe kinda sorta... then you're going to have to invade a lot of countries.
That is just not true.
Wrong. The sanctions and the inspections were specifically intended to disarm Saddam after the first gulf war, when it became obvious and undeniable that he had these programs. Once he's disarmed, the inspection regime's mandate would end. We would never have definitive evidence that he was rearming (even if we had suspicions), and we could never send in inspectors in order to gain the proof we would need in order to get those same inspections approved. For states like China, approving that kind of measure would be a risk to their own sovereignty that they could simply never accept. There's simply no chance in hell it could ever happen.
Yet you're satisfied that Bin Laden is no longer a significant threat.
Yes. What resources does Bin Laden have at his disposal? A video camera, a few remaining henchmen, and that's about it. What resources did Saddam have at his disposal? Most of a large country, an actual military, and a continuous and large revenue stream in the form of oil. Now you tell me: why is the former a bigger threat than the latter?
Your assertion that suddenly Saddam would be free from scrutiny after inspectors gave him a clean bill of health is simply fantasy.
We'd be taking satellite photos of him, sure. But what the hell do you think you can actually figure out from those? Large-scale troop movements, to be sure. Not a hell of a lot more. All it takes to hide from a spy satellite is a bloody roof.
to loose valuable support from allies,
I picked this one out because I find it particularly curious. Which allies are you referring to specifically? What support from them have we actually lost? Why was it valuable to begin with?
I can name some allies whose support we lost. I cannot, however, say that the support we lost was actually ever of much value.
I picked this one out because I find it particularly curious. Which allies are you referring to specifically? What support from them have we actually lost? Why was it valuable to begin with?
I can name some allies whose support we lost. I cannot, however, say that the support we lost was actually ever of much value.
I'm just curious if anyone actually read all this, checked the transcripts/links/whatever/etc.
Wow a politician lied. Shocking. I never cared much for Rumsfeld myself, but how is this even somewhat newsworthy?
Yeah I saw that as well. I can't think what the US is supposed to have lost... other than sound bites.