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Originally posted by the_oleneo
Fact: Saddam...
[...]
Saddam is a very evil man, given his history in the last 35 years.
...you and your anti-US kind...
Originally posted by wecomeinpeace
That's a nice list. Qn. 2: How many of the above have not been committed by the U.S. government and many other Western governments? Your answer will be graded on relevance to the original question and you must provide sources and footnotes. You may start...now.
Originally posted by the_oleneo
Originally posted by wecomeinpeace
Please explain what a "circumstantial fact" is, and then, if appropriate, list it/them.
Fact given in full details. These facts below are in summary of circumstantial facts that most people don't bother to read, learn or conveniently ignored based on their biased stance against the US efforts to remove Saddam from power.
Fact: Saddam have active & inactive WMD programs (active: chemical/biological; inactive: nuclear) going back over 20 years.
Fact: Saddam used WMD upon peoples in the past.
Fact: Saddam supported external terrorism extensively and funded families of Palestinian suicide bombers.
Fact: Saddam employed people to commit acts of terror, suppression and outright murder against Iraqis and others who opposed him or his regime.
Fact: Saddam lied to, stalled, deceived, bribed people engaged in international efforts to contain him.
Fact: Saddam instructed his military to shoot down American and British aircrafts patrolling in the No-Fly Zones in Iraq in defiance of the UN resolutions imposed on his regime.
Fact: Saddam have repeatedly undermined and threatened peace throughout the Middle East, especially with Israel and the Palestinians.
Fact: Saddam cannot be trusted or be counted on for his words in regarding to his WMD program.
Fact: Saddam is a very evil man, given his history in the last 35 years.
These are not pack of lies. These are a pack of facts that you and your anti-US kind conveniently ignored or looked the other way when the US removed Saddam from power.
[edit on 6/26/2005 by the_oleneo]
Originally posted by the_oleneo
Oh, no, you don't! We're not going off-the-subject. Let's stick to the subject on the Iraqi insurgents in negotiations with the US authorities.
And I'm not going to discuss with you on that question. You learned the facts, you know the facts. Stick to it.
Originally posted by WeBDeviL
People need to realize something here. I hear people screaming hypocrisy because it is against policy, but here's the facts folks.
While you all sit behind your computers comfortably, people are dying. Would you rather have negotiations - against policy - or not have negotiations and have people die?
BAGHDAD, Iraq - A suicide bomber trailed by five cars loaded with armed insurgents slammed into a wall outside the home of an Iraqi special forces police officer Saturday in the Sunni triangle city of Samarra, killing at least nine people on the street, officials said.
LONDON - Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld acknowledged Sunday that U.S. officials met with insurgents in Iraq, after a British newspaper reported two such meetings took place recently at a villa north of Baghdad.
Rumsfeld insisted the talks did not involve negotiations with Iraq's most-wanted terrorist, Jordanian-born Abu Musab al-Zarqawi who heads al-Qaida in Iraq, but were rather facilitating efforts by the Shiite-led government to reach out to minority Sunni Arabs, who are believed to be the driving force behind the insurgency.
I know it is difficult, but the coalition must stand firm. When governments negotiate with terrorists, everyone in the free world suffers. When political leaders sound the sirens of defeatism in the face of terrorism, it only encourages more violence. Working together, we will defeat the killers, and we'll do this by refusing to bargain about our most fundamental principles
Originally posted by koji_K
Saddam was doing most of these things while he was supported by the United States. How can we accept the argument that these really were our (ie, Americas) reasons for going to war with Saddam, when he was just as bad a guy when we were supporting him?
Originally posted by koji_K
Is it not possible that while removing Saddam may have some positive effects, we are making all new mistakes that we will pay for later?
Originally posted by koji_K
Another thing- Many of us "anti-US" types were against Saddam for these same reasons when he was America's darling.
Originally posted by wecomeinpeace
Dear valued student,
Your exam results are just in. We regret to inform you that you have failed the following course:
The Real Reasons Why We Invaded Iraq 101
However, your exemplary performance in the subjects related to the official story impels us to encourage you to reapply for entrance to the course next invasion/semester.
Academic Admin.
The 9-11 Truth Movement College.
Originally posted by the_oleneo
One of the reasons is pretty compelling and made sense: sometimes after November 2000 election, (this one was completely overlooked amidst all the uproar over that election fiasco) Saddam made the switch from petrodollar to euro for Iraq's oil exports. Why? Changing the petrodollar to a major currency like euro on oil exports can undermine the US national/economic security interests in the Persian Gulf oil markets. This goes all the way back to President Jimmy Carter's firm declaration linking the Persian Gulf oil to the vital national security interests of the United States in Carter's State of the Union speech in 1980.
Originally posted by the_oleneo
Back to the subject: I think it's the smart, right thing for the US military to negotiate with few insurgent groups, specifically Sunni-oriented groups with some Ba'athist elements who are loyal to Saddam.
Originally posted by the_oleneo
I don't think the US military is actively seeking al-Qaeda group in Iraq to negotiate with. This is perhaps the best way for the US military to weed out Iraqi insurgent groups from the foreign fighter groups.