Schmelzer
Valued Senior Member
The first time since the begin of the Syrian crisis there has been now a partial demobilization. Those who have been mobilized in 2010 will now be demobilized. The reason is, of course, that the Syrian army has now enough fighters to clear the remaining parts of the country from terrorists. With the clearing of the most of the remaining terrorist enclaves on Syrian territory, a lot of fighters who were necessary to block them are no longer necessary, moreover, some of those fighters in the enclaves have not joined the Syrian army volitionally.
It looks like the next operation will be in Daraa. At the same time, there will be also the clearing of the Daesh pocket in the desert West of the Euphrat. The clearing of Daraa will be, probably, again combined with a Western media campaign about evil Assad, probably also with yet another claimed gas attack, we will see. There has been some information that there was reached some agreement with Israel that Iranian forces will not participate in the operation in Daraa. That's not a problem for Iran, they care about defending Abu Kamal and the land bridge along the Euphrat, far away from Israel.
I think it is important, and good, that only the Golan Heights have been attacked, but for a different reason. Namely, if one retaliates, in a situation where one has not retaliated before, it is safer to increase the retaliation in small steps. Even if one has the right to retaliate in a much more serious way, this would be more dangerous.
It looks like the next operation will be in Daraa. At the same time, there will be also the clearing of the Daesh pocket in the desert West of the Euphrat. The clearing of Daraa will be, probably, again combined with a Western media campaign about evil Assad, probably also with yet another claimed gas attack, we will see. There has been some information that there was reached some agreement with Israel that Iranian forces will not participate in the operation in Daraa. That's not a problem for Iran, they care about defending Abu Kamal and the land bridge along the Euphrat, far away from Israel.
No. Libertarian principles have been quite irrelevant for my choice, given that I anyway don't live in that GULAG, and the world as a whole will become more libertarian without the US empire. Simply there will be much more independent, sovereign states, which means more choices between different systems. Competence and sanity are not sacrificed at all, this is cheap polemics from your side only.And you were willing to sacrifice anything - competence, sanity, libertarian principles, whatever - for what you saw in your utter ignorance as an off chance that Trump might be less likely to cause a nuclear war. You said that was your overriding issue, above all others, for supporting Trump over Clinton.
I support this because self-defense is ok for me - it is, by the way, an important libertarian principle - while starting an attack is not at all. So, don't suggest something different by wording like "you support Syrian attacks against Israel" or so.No, I don't. Syria is making noises about attacking the Israeli forces currently occupying the Golan Heights, and that is ok with you because Israel started it.
If after MAD nobody survives because of nuclear winter, it may not matter who started the war and who retaliated (except you believe in some afterlife). But so what? Does it follow that I have to change my position that starting a nuclear war is evil, retaliating following the MAD doctrine is not? The fact remains that Clinton is a known war criminal with open war threats against Russia in her program, Trump not, and up to now Trump has done nothing where I would have expected Clinton would have done something better for the world. (Of course, Clinton would have done a much better job for the American empire - and harmed in this way the world much more.)I'm just amused at that distinction, which simply will not matter if a nuclear exchange is somehow launched, suddenly becoming a priority with you - after all your yak about the risk of a Clinton presidency, Assad vs Netanyahu ramping up to nuclear is no big risk because it's "retaliation" or "self defense" on the part of the Russian proxy.
You think, given that some war criminals own nuclear weapons, the world has to submit to their rule giving up legitimate self-defense? Of course, this is a quite typical position for a statist, who supports submission to the government whatever the laws, simply because the government has the power. It is not a libertarian position, and therefore irrelevant for me.And you are willing to risk nuclear war over it, just as Russia's supposedly justified threats and so forth in Syria are ok with you regardless of the nuclear risk.
I'm German but see no particular reason to care about the German state, so the "proud" in relation to Germany is your fantasy. Germany is actually an irrelevant puppet state of America with no own foreign policy. There is some minor hope that this changes, thanks to Trump , we will see. I have family ties in Germany, that's the only reason I spend some time there. Köningsberg was taken by the Russians during WW II, which was started by the Germans with the aim to occupy a lot of foreign territories, so there is not much reason to object for Germany if the winner behaves in a similar way. Similarly, I personally don't care about Israel occupying the Golan Heights. The only role the Golan Heights have played here is that there was that the Israeli airforce attack was answered by a ground attack against Israeli forces in the Golan Heights. The right of self-defense would have allowed them to attack Israel itself too.I wonder if Schmelzer, proud German that he says he is, feels that occupied Konigsberg needs to be liberated from the Russians and repopulated in self-defense. Or does that logic only apply in the Golan?
I think it is important, and good, that only the Golan Heights have been attacked, but for a different reason. Namely, if one retaliates, in a situation where one has not retaliated before, it is safer to increase the retaliation in small steps. Even if one has the right to retaliate in a much more serious way, this would be more dangerous.