Topic: To be an American..... | |
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Peacekeeper...
We didn't bring peace and order to Iraq. We brought chaos and death. The sooner we leave, the sooner the Iraqis will get their act together. We are the obstacle to peace in Iraq. US analysts warned the Bush administration that this would happen if we invaded. He and his appointees disregarded their insights and recommendations, and so we created precisely what was predicted. You may choose to be there because you are being paid, but please do not fool yourself into thinking that it has done anything but increase the threat to US security. If you doubt this, please read the April 2006 NIE. I can send you references, but Google will pull it up easily. Nor, 'if we fight them there, we won't have to fight them here.' I assume you are talking about the fighters who have travelled to Iraq to help the Iraqi resistence liberate Iraq. They have zero interest in fighting us here. They do have an interest in getting the US to revise our blind support for Israel, and they do have an interest in getting the US to stop propping up corrupt regimes in the region. These are political issues, and we could resolve them easily if we wished to. If you are talking about the Iraqi resistence fighters themselves, all they are trying to do is liberate their country. Once we are expelled, they have no interest in invading the US. It is like our own War of Independence. Here, the French under the Marquis de Lafayette brought troops and ships to help our freedom fighters. Once the Americans won it, no one was suggesting we should invade Britain. And like our own War of Independence, foreign friends have arrived in Iraq to help the Iraqis fight for their liberation. Once they have won, there is no reason to think they will try and invade us here. I hope this makes sense to you. Oceans |
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Alex? Fanta? Undressing slowly? Okay! Fanta, good dog! Now go lay by
your dish. Now where were we? Oceans: foreign friends have arrived in Iraq to help the Iraqis fight for their liberation. Once they have won, there is no reason to think they will try and invade us here. Okee dokee, how about "the enemy of my enemy is my friend"? Do you really think their so-called friends would want to sit around and share the ol' hookah if the evil Americans weren't in the mix? Friends? Come on man, put the gravity boots on! lol |
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Just who are you talking about, Zap?
Zap, why the belligerence? Generally, the notion that 'the enemy of my enemies is my friend' is simplistic, though at lot of people do think that way. But it is short-sighted and leads to mistakes. Example: On the grounds that the USSR was our enemy and the Afghani mujaheddin were fighting the USSR, we backed the mujaheddin -- and Usama bin Laden. And then, guess what? Charlie Wilson undoubtedly thought that 'the enemy of my enemies is my friend', but, as I said, it was a simplistic notion and led to bad decisions. I can give you many other examples.... Oceans |
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I apologize if you thought I was being belligerent. You will eventually
pick up on the fact that not only do I have a sense of humor, I have a warped sense of humor. I am sure that you could give me an endless litany of reasons for any situation, but along the path of constant bantering to infinity, I will have taken the fork in the road that leads to common sense. Iranians helping Iraquis? Wait, didn't Saddam nearly run roughshod over them? You don't think they have motives beyond friendship? Quite frankly oceans, while your command of history concerning the middle east seems impressive, that's where it ends. It's much easier to drone on about history than it is to offer ideas for change.... for some anyway. Yes, mistakes are often made in foreign policy decisions but someone has to have the balls to try rather than wringing their hands and offering nothing toward change. Now that was belligerent, among other things. |
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Zap,
Belligerence does not equal humor, my friend. I am guessing that I do a lot more in terms of working for solutions in the Middle East than you do. And it all begins with understanding things, and then forming views as to what is happening, and then offering recommendations, and then working to support them. You are right: shooting one's mouth off is easy, and trivial. That's why I don't do it. Are your 'they' the Iranians? Then 'no', I don't see the Iranians trying to invade the US. And 'yes', they are helping their neighbors fight against the US invasion. You point out that Iraq invaded Iran -- good point. But it was Saddam who did so, and the Iranians, though they lost some one million people in that horrible war, do not hold the Iraqi people responsible. Indeed, at least tens of thousands of Iraqis (mostly from the Shatt al-Arab marshes), were killed by Saddam because they resisted his call to war against the Iranians. With respect, Zap. Oceans |
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"Remember back in 1979 when the Iranians under Ayatollah Khomeini took
over the U.S. embassy and held U.S. diplomatic personnel hostage? Remember how our government portrayed the Iranians as horrible devils and the U.S. officials as innocent angels? Well, the front page of last Sunday's New York Times had a full-length expose of what the U.S. government did in 1953 to precipitate what the Iranian people did 26 years later. Although the CIA, by its own admission, has destroyed many of its documents relating to its coup that put the Shah of Iran in power, a secret history of the CIA's role in the sordid affair turned up in the offices of the Times. The history was written by Dr. Donald L. Wilber, the CIA's chief coup planner. (For years, the CIA has maintained that release of the history would jeopardize national security, but so far the Times story hasn't caused the nation to collapse.) The history shows how the U.S. government (the world's premier defender of democracy) ousted Iran's democratically elected prime minister from power in 1953 and installed the (unelected) shah into power. (The history does not detail the CIA's participation in the shah's subsequent reign of terror and torture.) Thus, what we were not told in 1979 was that the Iranian people were expressing their angry and outrage over the installation of the CIA's brutal puppet 26 years earlier. Now, if we can just get the secret histories of CIA involvement in Chile and Guatemala published, we might just be making some progress toward figuring out why terrorists all over the world hate the United States." |
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The C.I.A. and Iran
by Jacob G. Hornberger, April 2000 |
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Before they get to us they'll need Europe, which they are slow getting.
They are woprking on Africa as well. So eventually yes they will if they manage to consolidate their hold on the above. |
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Hey, Fanta,
Yes, we do need to know our own history before we will ever really understand why people react to us the way they do. There is more to the Iran story. It wasn't just the US secret overthrow of the Iranian government, though that is pretty fascinating. Kermit Rossevelt, the CIA covert officer, was the guy who did it. Mossadegh had just been elected head of the new Iranian Government. Iran was then openly allied with the UK and USA. But the CIA decided the new man wouldn't be sufficiently pro-US, and so Roosevelt flew to Tehran and distributed mucho bucks to various opposition politicians to bring their people into the streets and overthrow the Government. And things only got worse since then, 1953. We backed the Shah to the hilt, even as he became more and more repressive and hated by the Iranian people. With US CIA and 'School of the Americas' help, he created SAVAK, an internal secret police force that imprisoned and tortured tens (hundreds?) thousands of Iranians, and killed many. The free press that Iranians traditionally enjoyed was shut down, opposition leaders were killed or exiled. A rule of terror was imposed on the Iranian people, and they associated it with US support for the Shah. Eventually the Shah fled. Cancer-ridden, we was offered medical care and refuge by President Carter. In my opinion, Carter meant this as a simple gesture of compassion, but it inflamed the Iranian populace who saw the Shah as a brutal butcher and wanted him returned to face trial in Iran. The Shah later moved to Mexico and Egypt, where he died, but the damage had been done. Students attacked the US Embassy (not Khomeini, or the Khomeni government) and seiged the hostages, holding them for 444 days, IIRC. They were released the moment when President Reagan took the Oath of Office. Khomeini decided not to confront the students, and the story of the students-Khomeini discussions is a fascinating one, with a couple of books published in Iran that detail them. In effect, the hostages became pawns between the secular young activist students, and the aging religious mullahs. I've got one of the books in my library here and can dig up the title for you if you are interested. One of the upshots of this was that the students got ahold of the Embassy burn bags -- before they were burned. Over a period of several labor-intensive months, the students took the strips of shredded documents (this was in the days before cross-cutting!) and taped them back together so that the original documents could be read. Lots of very embarrassing material came to light, from the State Department, CIA, and military office cables. They drew a picture of a belated realization of the Shah's unpopularity and repression, accounts of secret discussions with opposition leaders, and discussion of military plans to keep the Shah and SAVAK in business. It confirmed Iranian suspicions that the US was broadly meddling in their affairs, and it created an understandable paranoia in Iran about US motives and actions. Whew! Oceans |
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Zap,
To know how to cure the cancer of evil. We must realize what created it. Continuing on the same path, we will never solve the problems. This addy will take you to an archive of recently declassified CIA documents. These documents cover Iran, and western interest in the yesr 1952-54. Interesting read if you have the hankering for an open-eyed view of American dealings in the region. http://www.foia.ucia.gov/search.asp?pageNumber=4&freqReqRecord=undefined&refinedText=undefined&freqSearchText=undefined&txtSearch=iran%2C+1953+and+shah&exactPhrase=undefined&allWords=undefined&anyWords=undefined&withoutWords=undefined&documentNumber=undefined&startCreatedMonth=&startCreatedDay=&startCreatedYear=&endCreatedMonth=&endCreatedDay=&endCreatedYear=0&startReleasedMonth=&startReleasedDay=&startReleasedYear=&endReleasedMonth=&endReleasedDay=&endReleasedYear=0&sortOrder=DESC |
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Hi, Hanged Man!
Who is the 'they' you are referring to? Hey, everybody, I hope you have great plans for the weekend! Oceans |
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Damn, zap! That has got to be the longest addy I've ever seen!
Thanks for posting it. One of the great things about America is that people really do want to know the truth, and so it is hard for things to stay secret too long. The press picks up a whiff of something, and off we go with FOIA requests! Of course, that doesn't mean we are going tointerpret things all the same. We will argue, and we will debate -- but the basic thing is that we do want to know what the hell happened, even if it is embarrassing, or makes us mad. pretty great, no? Oceans |
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Muslims in general, but among them the radicals.
We've already seen problems in France and England. They killed that van gough fellow in the Netherlands? they went apes*** over some cartoons. Sorry can't remember the fellows name. |
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Thanks, HMan
I'm running right now, and will get back here later. Have a great evening! Oceans |
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Whats up oceans....
Yes, in 1979, I volunteered for military service. I was 19 yrs old and naive as most are at that age. Growing up, TV was relatively new. America's great military victories in Europe, and the forgotten war, which was not such a victory were events of legend. Hollywood plastered the screens with heroic battles and popular heroes. War was glamourized and Americans were the world power with no equal. The righteous always, never wrong, white hats fighting evil around the globe.. You know the more I think about this, the more I agree with Karsi. America is a society bent on war. Anyway, Im rambling............... When the Iranians attacked our embassy, being a product of this society, I jumped to arms, patriotic, I knew who the evil enemy were. Just like so many of these boys today. (no names nec.) I was going to Iraq on my white horse and kill sand-niggers. (pardon the language) Then, slowly my eyes opened, as they saw more and more they revealed a picture of reality that didn't fit my propaganda filled American mind. So I started to read, more and more, and study about the world. The more I learned the more I looked. At first to try and find proof that what I was learning was a lie. I guess denial, and patriotic pride kept me from wanting to believe. If this was true why didnt they tell me while I was growing up. Later, I read and studied to learn more of the truth, because lets face it the government hides the truth. Oh well, that was 28 yrs ago. I still see the same re-runs running on, and on, and on. Some of the cast has changed, new generation of young naive soldiers, a new president, etc, but the same policies and the same results. To me it is not hard to understand that these policies aren't working, and we need to do something different. Otherwise, we can expect nothing new other than maybe the weapons we will use. Everyone makes mistake, but if you cant admit them to your self how can you ever hope to correct them. Like wise, to keep making the same mistake over and over makes you, some say stupid, I prefer DUMBASS!!!!! |
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Yeah, I was there. USS Nimitz (CVN-68) 144 days off the coast of Iran
and through operation Evening Light. I saw the signs the students!?! were waving. Oddly, some of them must have accidently grabbed signs from the wrong protest, since they had Khomeni's picture on them. Yes, the radical Muslims hate us, not only for our support of Israel to exist vs being pushed into the sea, but because we are the infidels. We live with dogs. we are materialistic, we don't keep our women in their "place"..... a myriad of reasons as to why they hate us as they have for centuries, and I don't simply mean the US, I mean ANYONE who is not Muslim. The radicals are all over the globe and to think they are friendly people who are simply angry because of what the evil USA has done to these poor loving people is utterly absurd. Do you really think the majority of Iranians agree with their politically correct, anti-war, free speach, freedom of religion government? How would you like to live life the way they are forced to? Well pal, they (radical fundamentalists) would like it. Of course if you did not choose one, there is the alternative...... Thanks oceans, maybe I don't get it as far as you see it but I'm good with that. I am free. |
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Dam that was a lot of writing.....LMAO
Now, I aint doing that again..... How about, Thats an internal concern for the Iranians. Why do you think we dont live like that? |
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Fanta, problems are not always fixed. My point is that a few people in
here sit around flapping their lips, mainly impressing themselves, and while they are patting themselves on the back for finally figuring out why the dog turd in their yard stinks, someone has walked by and stepped in it, creating another dilemma for them. Sheesh! A tug of war between intellectualism and common sense. One side has to win. Flappy flappy friggin flappy. Life is as complicated as you make it. Most of us don't go into mental overload in the cereal aisle at the grocery store. It's friggin cereal PICK ONE!!! G*D Da**it! Show a friggin spine! I feel better now. |
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baddie, bladdie, blah, blah, ha, ha, ho, ho, and yaddie, yaddie, yah, yah, ya, ya, yo, yo,if you dont believe that go to: http://killasheia.giveasunni/agun.alla |
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NOW ya tellen em Fanta,Have you got a drum to bash or a brick wall to
belt ya head against.???? |
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