Just to clarify; in this metaphor, it's the Ayatollah's testicles that are being fondled. Correct?
For the most part, yes.
Just to clarify; in this metaphor, it's the Ayatollah's testicles that are being fondled. Correct?
This is the hardest decision Obama has to make yet. Start WWIII or not? Assad needs to do the right thing for the World, and resign.If the violation is enough to warrant it, why are we pausing? It leads me to think that they still haven't conclusively connected all the dots yet with Syria, but to your point yes.
Here's an interesting article, that I want to believe is unbiased.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/08/24/us-syria-crisis-idUSBRE97K0EL20130824
Question, so should we attack the chemical weaponry units (we aren't talking a ground war yet)...what kind of damage would we be looking at?
The prevention or cessation of the use of WMD is an extremely good reason for military intervention, a case for which can always be made when there is sufficiently strong evidence that the Geneva conventions - in this case the use of chemical weapons - have been violated.
If?If the violation is enough to warrant it, why are we pausing? It leads me to think that they still haven't conclusively connected all the dots yet with Syria, but to your point yes.
The easiest solution is to remove and destroy their methods of delivery - destroy their airport runways so their attack planes cannot take off and bomb their military planes.Here's an interesting article, that I want to believe is unbiased.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/08/24/us-syria-crisis-idUSBRE97K0EL20130824
Question, so should we attack the chemical weaponry units (we aren't talking a ground war yet)...what kind of damage would we be looking at?
p-brane, have the occupants of this planet not "been sold that Bill of Goods" many times before? Iraq, Libya, Panama,...
May I ask you, p-brane, what is the one country that has, beyond the shadow of any doubt and in full view of the rest of the world, been factually proven to have actually used WMD's on another country's civilian population?
You mean like the one Saddam used against the Kurds in 1988?
The Halabja poison gas attack (Kurdish: کیمیابارانی ھەڵەبجە Kîmyabarana Helebce), also known as Halabja massacre or Bloody Friday,[1] was a genocidal massacre against the Kurdish people that took place on March 16, 1988, during the closing days of the Iran–Iraq War, when chemical weapons were used by the Iraqi government forces in the Kurdish town of Halabja in Southern Kurdistan. The attack came within the scope of the Al-Anfal campaign against the Kurdish people in North Iraq, as well as part of the Iraqi attempt to repel the Iranian Operation Zafar 7.
The attack killed between 3,200 and 5,000 people, and injured around 7,000 to 10,000 more, most of them civilians;[1][2] thousands more died of complications, diseases, and birth defects in the years after the attack.[3] The incident, which has been officially defined as an act of genocide against the Kurdish people in Iraq,[4] was and still remains the largest chemical weapons attack directed against a civilian-populated area in history.[5]
The five-hour attack began early in the evening of March 16, 1988, following a series of indiscriminate conventional (rocket and napalm) attacks, when Iraqi MiG and Mirage aircraft began dropping chemical bombs on Halabja's residential areas, far from the besieged Iraqi army base on the outskirts of the town. According to regional Kurdish rebel commanders, Iraqi aircraft conducted up to 14 bombings in sorties of seven to eight planes each; helicopters coordinating the operation were also seen. Eyewitnesses told of clouds of smoke billowing upward "white, black and then yellow"', rising as a column about 150 feet (46 m) in the air.[1]
Survivors said the gas at first smelled of sweet apples;[9] they said people died in a number of ways, suggesting a combination of toxic chemicals (some of the victims "just dropped dead" while others "died of laughing"; while still others took a few minutes to die, first "burning and blistering" or coughing up green vomit).[10] It is believed that Iraqi forces used multiple chemical agents during the attack, including mustard gas and the nerve agents sarin, tabun and VX;[3] some sources have also pointed to the blood agent hydrogen cyanide (most of the wounded taken to hospitals in the Iranian capital Tehran were suffering from mustard gas exposure).
Everything you say has merit...BUT...we need ALL of the facts before attacking. I'm not pro-Syria, by any means, but we shouldn't strike unless we have all the facts. Syria will see us as invading, and this will not shake out well. I'm telling you.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2013/08/24/syria-rebels-chemical-weapons/2695243/
(and this is but one of a number of news sources reporting the same)
Bolded for emphasis by me...
Why?
I don't believe that to be true. There is a lot of conjecture in that there post of yours, CptBork.
No matter what side of the aisle you sit on....US strikes should never be based off allegations.
That is the problem I'm having with this; if we strike, it better be because we were certain as to why.
PS >> This, from the article I posted above:
It took months of negotiations between the U.N. and Damascus before an agreement was struck to allow the 20-member team into Syria to investigate. Its mandate is limited to those three sites, however, and it is only charged with determining whether chemical weapons were used, not who used them.
Can someone explain to me if this is all that's needed to warrant a military strike, on our part?
If the violation is enough to warrant it, why are we pausing? It leads me to think that they still haven't conclusively connected all the dots yet with Syria...
CptBork, you stated in Post #49 : "Personally, I think the Syrian government's lack of a timely response to UN demands to inspect the attack site tells us everything we need to know about the responsible party."
You may be interested in this :
"Syria To Allow Inspection Of Alleged Chemical Weapons Attack; US Rebuffs, Says "Too Late'"
"Update: and there you have it - the US "demand" was nothing but a farce, and the second Syria complied the US says it was never interested in the first place."
" "If the Syrian government had nothing to hide and wanted to prove to the world that it had not used chemical weapons in this incident, it would have ceased its attacks on the area and granted immediate access to the U.N.— five days ago," a senior administration official said. "
much more to read @ :
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-...eged-chemical-weapons-attack-us-says-too-late
I expect that at the moment, the US and its allies are downplaying the evidence about the strike and who conducted it, because there's no point in tipping Assad off that some form of action is inevitable, and there's probably a desire to proceed with extreme caution. If proof exists for what the Syrian rebels are claiming, there is no doubt that someone needs to take action so that Assad and his allies feel a distinctively negative outcome from the affair. There are probably last-minute negotiations occurring between Russia and the US to try and settle the issue diplomatically, which I doubt would work, and indeed I think it's entirely possible (though purely speculative on my part) that Russia knew about the attacks in advance and promised Assad diplomatic cover for any fallout, which they've since provided at the UN security council. Furthermore, there's a serious risk of releasing toxic chemicals into the local atmosphere by bombing Assad's weapons storage and manufacturing sites, so precautions must be prepared in advance, although I don't think there's ever going to be a "safe" way of disarming him.
Your speculation that Russia might have known about these attacks seems to be what movies are made of, yes?
Bells, posting links to Wiki is no doubt to some people "...beyond the shadow of any doubt and in full view of the rest of the world, been factually proven" conclusive evidence.
The full article also states : quote - "Saddam Hussein was not charged by the Iraqi Special Tribunal for crimes against humanity relating to the events at Halabja. However, the Iraqi prosecutors had "500 documented baskets of crimes during the Hussein regime" and Hussein was condemned to death based on just one case (the 1982 Dujail Massacre)." - unquote .
If not charged, he was probably not proven guilty of those charges.
The full article also states : quote - "The U.S. State Department, in the immediate aftermath of the incident, took the official position based on examination of available evidence that Iran was partly to blame.[12] A preliminary Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) study at the time reported that it was Iran that was responsible for the attack, an assessment which was used subsequently by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) for much of the early 1990s. The CIA's senior political analyst for the Iran-Iraq war, Stephen C. Pelletiere, co-authored an unclassified analysis of the war[25] which contained a brief summary of the DIA study's key points. The CIA altered its position radically in the late 1990s and cited Halabja frequently in its evidence of weapons of mass destruction before the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Pelletiere claimed that a fact that has not been successfully challenged is that Iraq was not known to have possessed the cyanide-based blood agents determined to have been responsible for the condition of the bodies that were examined,[26] and that blue discolorations around the mouths of the victims and in their extremities,[27] pointed to Iranian-used gas as the culprit. Leo Casey writing in Dissent Magazine argued that "none of the authors of these documents [...] had any expertise in medical and forensic sciences, and their speculation doesn't stand up to minimal scrutiny."[28] Some[who?] opponents to the sanctions against Iraq have cited the DIA report to support their position that Iraq was not responsible for the Halabja attack."
But then again it is wikipedia...
Bells,would this not be another example of the "Smoke and Mirrors" or even "the Bill of Goods" I spoke of earlier?
I will repeat the question I posed to p-brane : What is the one country that has, beyond the shadow of any doubt and in full view of the rest of the world, been factually proven to have actually used WMD's on another country's civilian population?
I'll watch for any answers.
Russia makes a lot of money from Syria and Assad is one of Russia's major buyers when it comes to arms and weapons.The last part of your paragraph I had thought about, thus my question about what might the damage be should we attack. Bells' answer as to the potential strategy, might be the 'safest' form of warfare if we did strike. (not sure if you read his reply) The concern over toxic chemicals erupting into the environment from any attack on our part, is indeed very scary.
But I isolated this paragraph, because overall, this is a very refreshing view. I hadn't thought at all about the US 'downplaying' the evidence about the attack to not cause Assad to react any further. That makes a lot of sense.
Should evidence support conclusively that Syria was responsible for the chemical attack, then yes a definitive 'message' needs to be sent to Syria. In turn, that message will find its way to Iran. Your speculation that Russia might have known about these attacks seems to be what movies are made of, yes? Imagine if you are right.
I've read your entire post; thanks so much for taking the time to respond to my questions/concerns. We shall see what happens...
Since I'm already classified as a "shill", because apparently no Syrian could possible support Dr. Assad (despite the fact that a simple search would show otherwise), I'm not going to bother coming back here. Fuck off if you support imperialism.
Good day.
No. It would just be the same old backstabbing, xenophobic, homophobic Russia we've all grown used to, still acting out their inferiority complex from losing the Cold War.
So it's okay to allow Assad to murder thousands of innocent men, women and children by using WMD's?So you won't fight your corner?
Just run away like a little scared mouse.
I don't support Assad, but I don't want intervention either.
Another excuse to waste Billions of Dollars killing mainly innocent men women and children.
Assad's greatest crime in American military eyes is his friendship with the Iranian regime.
If it was tyranny the US hated, they would be flying drones over Riyadh, wouldn't they?
Obama and his cronies are murderous hypocrites.
Now, instead of running off,
why don't you come back, drop the swearing, and say your piece?