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willyapd

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QUOTE]Why hasn't or don't they remove all the other leaders in the world who are much worse & do much more horrific things to their own people ?[/QUOTE]

This war was 11 years in the making. Iraq open defied numerous UN resolutions. The US almost invaded Iraq in 1998. After sept 11th there seem to be more of a threat than they were before. Facts SADDAM hated the US, he at minimum is capable of producing weapons of mass destruction. He has TRAINED and SUPPORTED terrorist before, so the threat of him giving WMD was true. I’m not aware of any other country that is openly defiant of 17 different UN Security Council violations? By us attacking Iraq we have deterred other countries into cooperating with the US for example do you think that Libya wood give up their WMD program IF we did not attack Iraq. Iran is cooperating a little more with the UN
 
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Doc Holliday

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StripperLover: You forgot to mention Saudi Arabia. The worst offenders of Human Rights on this planet! It's all about money, oil, and power. The rest is baloney!
 

Doc Holliday

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Gen. Wesley Clark interview (Rolling Stone)

Rolling Stone: Why have you criticized the president for the war in Iraq?

Clark: It was a tough decision to become involved in partisan politics. I went to West Point when I was seventeen years old. I believed in this country. I served in the White House under Gerald Ford. To come out and oppose the commander in chief has been enormously painful. But after September 11th, I watched as the administration's policy diverged step by step from where it should have been. I went to the Pentagon nine days after the attacks and called on a man with three stars who used to work for me. He said, "Sir, I have to ask you, have you heard the joke going through the halls?" I said, "No, what is it?" He said, "It goes like this: If Saddam Hussein didn't do 9/11, too bad. He should have, 'cause we're going to get him anyway." He looked at me, and I looked at him, and we both knew that it would be a classic mistake if we did that.

I was relieved when we attacked Afghanistan, but I went back to the Pentagon as that war was going on, and this same guy said to me, "Oh, yes, sir, not only is it Afghanistan. There's a list of countries. We're not that good at fighting terrorists, so we're going after states: Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia and Iran. There's a five-year plan." From that moment on, I couldn't believe anymore that I was just a retired general of the United States Army. I saw something wrong, but I couldn't get anyone to listen, so I started to speak out last September in a vocal way.

Rolling Stone: Why was going into Iraq a mistake?

We made a historic strategic blunder. We attacked a state rather than going after a terrorist. Iraq had no connection to the war on terror. Of all the states in the Middle East to give chemical, biological or nuclear weapons to terrorists, least likely was Iraq. Saddam's a control artist. He wouldn't have given bioweapons to Osama bin Laden unless Osama's mother, four wives and fifteen children were in one of his prisons so he could rip their hearts out if Osama screwed up. But we didn't want to face the tough task of going after bin Laden, so we did a bait-and-switch and went after Saddam instead. And now, look at the headline on today's New York Times: bin Laden seen with aide on tape. We're less secure now than we were before. Spending $80 billion and putting half the U.S. Army in Iraq has provided a supercharger to Al Qaeda recruiters.

We helped bin Laden. The only thing we could have done that would have helped him more is if we had invaded Saudi Arabia and captured Mecca. We've also squandered the support that brought 200,000 Germans out after 9/11 two years ago. They're not coming back out again -- not for this administration. You won't get any support out of the Germans and the French until you get a regime change in Washington.

Rolling Stone: You call the war in Iraq unjustified. So why was the campaign you led in Kosovo justified?

Clark: Kosovo was OK because Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic was engaged in ethnic cleansing that was destabilizing the entire region. By intervening, NATO could stop the killing. We tried every means to resolve it, and we ended up using force only as a last resort. But there was no imminent threat in Iraq. If Saddam Hussein did all these bad things, we should have indicted him for war crimes, held an international tribunal and ordered him to surrender. That's what we did with Milosevic. In Iraq, we just invaded a country ten years after the crimes happened, in violation of international law, without charging him with anything. It just doesn't work that way.

Rolling Stone: What would you do in Iraq now that we're there?

Clark: What we're going to have to do is change the regional dynamic. I know this is hard for some people to understand, but if you threaten people, you make them mad. And if you make them mad, then they want to fight you. That's the way the world works. If what we want is to persuade countries in that region that the democratization of Iraq is not a threat, we should not be out there saying, "Your day will come!" What do you expect them to do?

I found out in the military that we weren't the only ones who had robust men with too much testosterone. We weren't the only ones who had smart guys. We weren't the only army who could speak of duty, sacrifice and courage. I also found out that if you want a fight, you're gonna fight -- in a bar in Colorado, or in the Middle East. Of course, that makes some people in the administration happy.


http://www.rollingstone.com/features/featuregen.asp?pid=1970
 

Doc Holliday

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Canadian newspaper?

EB:

The newspaper you read was not Canadian. It was one of the most reliable newspapers in the US which can be purchased at ever newstand, including in Canada: The National Enquirer. :)

JaJ
 

willyapd

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Originally posted by stripperlover

Why don't they invade the Ivory Coast? Oops, I forgot, the US media doesn't report on THAT horrific civil war, could it be because there is NO glamour, money or could it be the fact that they are poor black people & they only thing that they are fighting over is diamonds & in the end of it all, no one REALLY needs diamonds to run our cars.

The Ivory Coast is no threat to the US, so the US should not get involved. Maybe the UN should!!! Then the UN would plea with the US to help out, yet again (Bosnia, Kosovo, Somolia ECT). Like they are with North Korea now!!!


North Korea is a bigger problem; you have a sociopath with his finger on the button. China, Russia, South Korea and Japan should be more involved.

It so easy to blame this war on oil!!! The US has reserve of our own in Alaska and in the Gulf of Mexico that we have not even tapped into yet!
 

willyapd

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JustaJohn

Quick points

A . Former Gen. Clark was Fired (discharged)
B . Became a Republican that openly supported Bush
C. Jumped ship to run for President and (dem)
D. cannot get the support of former generals
That he served with for character reasons

E. droped out of race(no message)
 
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gremlin

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Muslims, Bernard Lewis, and the press

Originally posted by Remy
look around the world, where ever there is muslims there is no peace.

really? name a large American or Canadian city where one would let their young kids play in the streets and go the store on their own? In Dubai, Beirut, Cario, Doha, Sanna, and the list goes, inter-personal violence is exceedingly rare by contrast. I'd call that a form of peace. Or better yet, replace the word "muslims" with "black man" and see where that leads you. All those Africans killing each other is due to what? If you want to pinpoint a part of the world in which the greatest killings and the most horrid human rights violations occur, Africa would beat the ME hands down. The terrorists groups of the Middle East would have to keep killing for centuries before they would ever reach the body count of just three months of killing in Rawanda in 1994.

the problems are political..not religious, not skin color.

I commend the idea to consult intellectuals like Bernard Lewis. But if you are going to read him, you must read his evil twin, the late Edward Said. What I have found in the end, is that neither is convincing. indeed, be wary of appeals to authority as an answer to a debate.

Lewis ascribes radicalism in the Muslim world to a kind of historical pathology and shame over the decline of Muslim power and culture. This sounds fine at a distance, but does not explain why it is that violence and instability occurs now and in the places it does and not say 100 years ago when Muslims and Arabs would have been suffering from the same pathology. Said tells us it's all about colonialism and western imperialism. That's fine, but the US was never a colonial power in the ME.

If the region's problems are all internal or religious (Lewis) then how on earth can several hundred thousand American troops change that? If all the problems are externally caused (Said), then it is clear that the US invasion was doomed from the beginning. Split the difference and the conclusion is that the invasion was a very, very bad idea.

finally, the Canadian press may be biased but the deeper question is why almost the entire world's press (from free and unfree countries) saw the US invasion differently than the US press or the Bush administration? it streches the imagination to believe that almost every country in Latin America, Europe, and Asia was biased yet the American press was balanced. are all these different people and their media simply blinded by the same forms of "liberal" anti-americanism, anti-israel, and anti-bushism?

gremlin
 

Red Paul

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O'Reilly's a lot bigger than I thought he was. But there's still one aspect of the case on which we don't quite agree:

"While critical of President Bush, O'Reilly said he did not think the president intentionally lied."

My theory is Bush and his people did believe the WMDs were there, but that they were willing to lie about specific points of evidence to strengthen their case. Most notably, you had the idea that Saddam was trying to buy uranium in Africa after the CIA had reported this wasn't true.

O'Reilly raises a good point about Tenet. If the CIA really is to blame for all this, why does that man still have his job?
 

Doc Holliday

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O'Reilly still hasn't kept his promise

How Long Before Bill O'Reilly Apologizes to the Nation? by Michael Moore

UPDATED!

In the build up to the war with Iraq, Bill O'Reilly was on television every night backing up Bush's whoppers. Like the White House team, O'Reilly assured us that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. On March 18, 2003, O'Reilly was on ABC's "Good Morning America." He made the following promise about Saddam's weapons of mass destruction:

"If the Americans go in and overthrow Saddam Hussein and it's clean, he has nothing, I will apologize to the nation, and I will not trust the Bush Administration again, all right?"


On February 10, 2004 - 329 days after he made the promise - Bill O'Reilly returned to "Good Morning America" and apologized for supporting the claims that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction. He continued:

"I was wrong. I am not pleased about it at all and I think all Americans should be concerned about this. What do you want me to do, go over and kiss the camera?"


And then he said that he was "much more skeptical about the Bush administration now."

Well, Bill, you didn't promise to be skeptical of them, you promised "not to trust the Bush administration again."

So, when will Bill O'Reilly fulfill his promise to not trust the Bush administration? How long must America wait?

330 days and counting!
 
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Doc Holliday

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Former Bush aide comes forward with truth about Iraq

A year ago, Paul O'Neill was fired from his job as George Bush's Treasury Secretary for disagreeing too many times with the president's policy on tax cuts. Now, O'Neill - who is known for speaking his mind - talks for the first time about his two years inside the Bush administration. His story is the centerpiece of a new book being published this week about the way the Bush White House is run.

Entitled "The Price of Loyalty," the book by a former Wall Street Journal reporter draws on interviews with high-level officials who gave the author their personal accounts of meetings with the president, their notes and documents.

The main source of the book was Paul O'Neill.

Paul O'Neill says he is going public because he thinks the Bush Administration has been too secretive about how decisions have been made.

In the book by former Wall Street Journal reporter Ron Suskind, "The Price of Loyalty," Paul O'Neill charged that Bush entered office in January 2001 intent on invading Iraq and was in search of a way to go about it.

"In the 23 months I was there, I never saw anything that I would characterize as evidence of weapons of mass destruction," O'Neill, who sat on the National Security Council, told Time.

"There were allegations and assertions by people... To me there is a difference between real evidence and everything else," he added.

And what happened at President Bush's very first National Security Council meeting is one of O'Neill's most startling revelations:

“From the very beginning, there was a conviction, that Saddam Hussein was a bad person and that he needed to go,” says O’Neill, who adds that going after Saddam was topic "A" 10 days after the inauguration - eight months before Sept. 11.

“From the very first instance, it was about Iraq. It was about what we can do to change this regime,” says Suskind. “Day one, these things were laid and sealed.”

As treasury secretary, O'Neill was a permanent member of the National Security Council. He says in the book he was surprised at the meeting that questions such as "Why Saddam?" and "Why now?" were never asked.

"It was all about finding a way to do it. That was the tone of it. The president saying ‘Go find me a way to do this,’" says O’Neill. “For me, the notion of pre-emption, that the U.S. has the unilateral right to do whatever we decide to do, is a really huge leap.”

And that came up at this first meeting, says O’Neill, who adds that the discussion of Iraq continued at the next National Security Council meeting two days later.

He got briefing materials under this cover sheet. “There are memos. One of them marked, secret, says, ‘Plan for post-Saddam Iraq,’" adds Suskind, who says that they discussed an occupation of Iraq in January and February of 2001.

Based on his interviews with O'Neill and several other officials at the meetings, Suskind writes that the planning envisioned peacekeeping troops, war crimes tribunals, and even divvying up Iraq's oil wealth.

He obtained one Pentagon document, dated March 5, 2001, and entitled "Foreign Suitors for Iraqi Oilfield contracts," which includes a map of potential areas for exploration.

“It talks about contractors around the world from, you know, 30-40 countries. And which ones have what intentions,” says Suskind. “On oil in Iraq.”
 

Bizzie

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Originally posted by willyapd
Where did you study your history? Oh, I'm sorry, you must watch the same media network set up by Saddam's regime and Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf (a.k.a Baghdad Bob) I saw that one too. That was the one when Iraqi rebels invaded Shea Stadium.

War has been going on in these countries since Biblical times. Major front line warfare has been going on between these so called neighbors for years.

The US didn't bring terrorism to these countries. They brought it too us and we responded.



By the way.

I have friends who have served proudly in both Afghanistan and Iraq. The US military (along with Great Britain, Spain, Italy and Japan) have gone to great links to remove a butcher from power and you attack George Bush. Last I checked, my president wasn't testing biological weapons on us, or torturing us for losing soccer games.

Get your so called "facts" straight.

One word: Juvenile!

Suicide bombings in your neighborhood is NOT the same as "war between neighbor countries".
Having problems with comprehension? Read my post slowly.

The only people who subscribe to your logic are Palestinian suicide bombers, who consider it a war against an invader.

"They brought it (terrorism) to us and we responded. "
Yes, responded with terrorism!
In return my family, myself and my country are less safe now than EVER before.

" remove a butcher from power and you attack George Bush. Last I checked, my president wasn't testing biological weapons on us, or torturing us for losing soccer games. "

Let's correct this. A butcher with oil! There are plenty of other places with much more strife than the Iraqis (it's a long list!)

Yes. Biological weapons killed thousands of Kurds.
And thank god we rushed our troops in there to liberate them.
Didn't we???
OOps! Sorry, that was 20 years ago (not 2003), and we didn't lift a finger at that time.

Oh, and I don’t know whom your are trying to impress with this "my friends served in Afghanistan" non-sense, it aint gonna be me.
My brother was in active combat in the first Gulf (oil) war, and my cousin is in Afghanistan now (or a month ago, when we I got an email).

Here is a little tutorial in international affairs:
Iraq: no more an imminent threat than Ivory coat or Haiti is. (NO WMDs!!)
Bosnia: too little, too late.
Kosovo: too little
Rwanda: such a shame.
Somalia: I don’t wanna talk about that.
Afghanistan: an opportunity squandered.

Our high horse must not be so high that the thin air up there makes us delusional.
 

willyapd

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LL123

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Originally posted by Man911
If we wait experts to remove Sadam, then it will never happen, until he discover the atomic bomb, then it's too late.

Bush kill 1000 innocent and war is over, no more kill.

Sadam kill more than 1000 per year and he never stop...

Which one is better.
It's like Hilter, we wait, wait and wait, you all know what happen after.

Actually saddam used to kill more than 1000 per year for decades, but nobody in US adminstration was against him! Why? He used chemical weopons aginst Iran 17-18 years ago , nobody objected. Why? and a few months later Mr ramsfield met him in Baghdad!! All of us have seen the films showing him shaking hand with saddam. Then all of a sudden Mr Bush wanted to rescue Iraqi people!!
Nobody buys this idae that the reason for the war was freedom of Iraqi people.
 
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willyapd

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Nobody buys this idae that the reason for the war was freedom of Iraqi people.

We did not go in to free the Iraqi people; we went in to Iraq to remove Saddam because the US thought that he was threat to America. Freeing the Iraqi people was a secondary objective. If Saddam was not a threat to the US then the Iraqi people would probably still have him.
 
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HobKnobber

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You know I was watching the protest downtonw many moons ago before the war and I thought about how many people drove there. If I was Dubya watching that I would think there's some more gas customers. Perhaps this is cynical perhaps it doesn't make a bit of difference the fact of the matter is people still create a huge demand for imported oil, here and in the US. If this demand did not exist then there would be no issue of going into Iraq for any reason. The journey of a mile starts with a single step and I honestly believe pepole have no interest in sacrificing for another group of people. It's just that simple
 

willyapd

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Weapons hunter David Kay, testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee, said that based on the pre-war intelligence, Saddam Hussein posed "a gathering, serious threat to the world." Hussein’s scientists possibly misled the former dictator into believing Iraq possessed WMD, with the scientists possibly misappropriating funds. Kay also said that, based on his investigation, Iraq posed an even greater danger than previously thought.
French, Russian, UN all believed that Iraq possessed a large stock piles of chemical and biological weapons.

If I decide to walk up to you & punch you because you have a different view or opinion than me & I beat you into submission, all that proves is that, for whatever reason, I am stronger or a better fighter than you. It doesn't make me more moral than you.

This is not about opinions or morals, it’s a war. A war that people in Manhattan did not provoke.
 

willyapd

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Having a picture of a blond hair, blue eyed Jesus on my contries flag is offensive.
Is that some kind of christian Jihadist statement against non-christian americans?

I 2nd that. It's totally offensive.
The US is supposed to be the bastion of separation of church & state. I guess in some people's mind, whose church and whose state ?

Willypad, that's disgusting ! I'm Jewish & if you had put Moses' image there, I would also say emphatically that it is also disgusting. !

The link was not supposed to be religious, I personally have no affiliation with a religion or church, I don’t know if I even really believe in a god, furthermore I don’t know if god would be black, white, purple or any other color. This has NOTHING to do with religion with me Nor do I care to TALK about any kind of religion!

The link was just to remind people of what happened on 9-11-01 and what may happen again if we stand by and do nothing. The fact of the matter is that our enemies want to DESTROY us and America has 2 options 1) do nothing and hope it won’t happen again or 2) try and prevent another attack.

try this link then
http://www.outlaws-bengalen.de/html/body_tribute.html
 

LL123

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WillyPad;
You went to war because Saddam was a treat to US? What did you show to the world to prove this claim?Nothing!
You made a story, and based on this story occupied a country and now you are paying for it. Do you still beleive that Iraqi people welcom the occupiers by flowers?!! Or you think that every day attacks are act of a group of terrorists? If you think so, then I am sorry for you. I can not give two eyes to a blind.
 
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