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Tony Blair - Iraq, Syria and the Middle East.

24

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,696 ✭✭✭Jonny7


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »

    There were WMD and associated delivery methods remaining in the country after '91 - which later teams found and were admitted to by the Iraqis

    Inspectators were out of the country from about '98 and returned in 2002, where they found no evidence of useable WMD's
    Nonsense. The jihadists and foreign fighters and former Ba'athists were fighting from day one. The Republican Guard threw away their uniforms and began hit and run guerrilla attacks.

    Actually the vast bulk of the army just fled and didn't fight at all. Some units managed to put up a bit of resistqnce, but it was a very one-sided affair, they fell quickly and the most difficult aspect of the invasion was dealing with the looting/lawlessness and lack of admin rather than the sporadic attacks

    Ba'aathist loyalists and Sunni militia's like the Fedayeen did keep up a low intensity insurgency which grew gradually, there was plenty of cash, there were plenty of unemployed now ex-military who sold their skills

    However there were few if any 'jihadists', as you put it, (religious warriors, Islamists) - they were not there in any numbers during or immediately after the invasion - they came later flooding in from all corners through the porous borders, from the Dernah region in Libya, Yemen, even Chechnya - all with their own varied motives


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,410 ✭✭✭old_aussie


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »

    Islamic extremism has existed in Iraq and throughout the Middle East for centuries. Saladin the Muslim leader who captured Jerusalem and imposed his bloody rule across the Middle East during the Middle Ages came from Tikrit in what is now Iraq. Sunnis and Shias have been slaughtering each other since the birth of Islam.

    No,

    The original split between Sunnis and Shiites occurred soon after the death of the Prophet Muhammad, in the year 632.

    The Sunnis prevailed and chose a successor to be the first caliph.
    Eventually, Ali was chosen as the fourth caliph, but not before violent conflict broke out. Two of the earliest caliphs were murdered. War erupted when Ali became caliph, and he too was killed in fighting in the year 661 near the town of Kufa, now in present-day Iraq.

    The violence and war split the small community of Muslims into two branches that would never reunite.

    http://www.npr.org/blogs/parallels/2007/02/12/7332087/the-origins-of-the-shiite-sunni-split

    And it's the same war that's still carrying on today in Iraq, for 1382 years and will continue to do so until these people realise what the cause of all this is.

    Long before the west was even thought of.

    Islam's what's restarted this sectarian religious war again.


  • Registered Users Posts: 546 ✭✭✭Azwaldo55


    I woke up? How did the invasion of Iraq - a secular nation hostile to Islamists and which diverted military resources from Afghanistan, where there actually were Islamists - manage to "fight Islamists"?

    Iraq has all but become a failed state. It's now, not under Saddam, a breeding ground for Islamists. And you're asking what the alternitive is to jumping in like a half-arsed moron who doesn't know his arse from his elbow is?

    I suggest you wake up and smell the coffee. The policy failed and Europe isn't really interested in having to pay the price for any more of America's experiments in democratization. I suggest you educate yourself on the topic of asymmetrical warfare, before you start recommending strategies.

    So you are quite happy for Iraq to now become an Islamist state funding terror around the world financed by an ocean of oil?

    Islamism is sweeping the globe and Islamists in the West will be emboldened and launch insurgencies on our streets.

    There are large Muslim populations in Spain, Italy, France, Germany and the UK who will take their marching orders from the the Mid East and will seek to impose their religion on us all.

    If you want to live in denial go right ahead.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,777 ✭✭✭✭The Corinthian


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    So you are quite happy for Iraq to now become an Islamist state funding terror around the world financed by an ocean of oil?
    I'm quite happy to ignore that school of thought that thought invading was a good idea in the first place.

    It is a school that has lost all credibility.
    If you want to live in denial go right ahead.
    Would this be that place where the US invasion of Iraq was not a complete clusterfùck?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,696 ✭✭✭Jonny7


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    So you are quite happy for Iraq to now become an Islamist state funding terror around the world financed by an ocean of oil?

    Islamism is sweeping the globe and Islamists in the West will be emboldened and launch insurgencies on our streets.

    There are large Muslim populations in Spain, Italy, France, Germany and the UK who will take their marching orders from the the Mid East and will seek to impose their religion on us all.

    If you want to live in denial go right ahead.

    Hysteria.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 46,938 ✭✭✭✭Nodin


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    So you are quite happy for Iraq to now become an Islamist state funding terror around the world financed by an ocean of oil?

    Islamism is sweeping the globe and Islamists in the West will be emboldened and launch insurgencies on our streets.

    There are large Muslim populations in Spain, Italy, France, Germany and the UK who will take their marching orders from the the Mid East and will seek to impose their religion on us all.

    If you want to live in denial go right ahead.


    Dear god that's awful nonsense, tbh.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,142 ✭✭✭Eggy Baby!


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    Anti-war no matter what the consequences?

    The Islamic insurgents carving out a Caliphate in Syria and Iraq are not very pacifist are they? They are happily slaughtering everyone they can get their hands on and it seems to be working just fine for their barbarian cause.

    No. Be anti-war at all times. By this I mean we have to hate war at all times. If it's a necessity to wage war to survive, then so be it, but your love for Tony Blair, one of the slimiest warmongers of our time, is misplaced.

    What you also seem to conveniently forget is that your American role models ****ed up Iraq in two wars in the first place.

    Lastly, the United States is cosying up with some of the biggest supporters of extremism in the Middle East/Central Asia sans Iran- Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. Now its cosying up to Iran. Save us America!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,686 ✭✭✭✭Zubeneschamali


    Powell again, 15 May 2001:

    [FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Senator Bennett: Mr. Secretary, the U.N. sanctions on Iraq expire the beginning of June. We've had bombs dropped, we've had threats made, we've had all kinds of activity vis-a-vis Iraq in the previous administration. Now we're coming to the end. What's our level of concern about the progress of Saddam Hussein's chemical and biological weapons programs?[/FONT]
    [FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif][/FONT]
    [FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Secretary Powell: The sanctions, as they are called, have succeeded over the last 10 years, not in deterring him from moving in that direction, but from actually being able to move in that direction. The Iraqi regime militarily remains fairly weak. It doesn't have the capacity it had 10 or 12 years ago. It has been contained. And even though we have no doubt in our mind that the Iraqi regime is pursuing programs to develop weapons of mass destruction -- chemical, biological and nuclear -- I think the best intelligence estimates suggest that they have not been terribly successful. There's no question that they have some stockpiles of some of these sorts of weapons still under their control, but they have not been able to break out, they have not been able to come out with the capacity to deliver these kinds of systems or to actually have these kinds of systems that is much beyond where they were 10 years ago.[/FONT]
    [FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]
    [/FONT]
    [FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]So containment, using this arms control sanctions regime, I think has been reasonably successful. [/FONT]


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 326 ✭✭Knob Longman


    Magaggie wrote: »
    What about when Iraq was backed by the US and was at war for several years with an islamic theocracy?

    The Iran Iraq War, The one where the US sold crack so it could use the profits to secretly arm Iran..
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran%E2%80%93Contra_affair

    I live in a mixed race/religion area so I don't have that "Muslims are terrorists" attitude, Rather the opposite..So I hate seeing what is going on in the Middle East.

    And all that House of Said money that spreads extremism, Ironic that its our petrol money..


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,252 ✭✭✭FTA69


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »

    There are large Muslim populations in Spain, Italy, France, Germany and the UK who will take their marching orders from the the Mid East and will seek to impose their religion on us all.

    If you want to live in denial go right ahead.

    Funnily enough I'm sitting in the heart of a Muslim majority area now and I feel pretty safe. The sun is shining and people are coming back from Friday prayers. The cafes are full and there are smells of coffee and home-cooked curry coming from the flats. There are a group of young single mothers in the community centre I'm based in and they're chatting while the kids play with lego. Anam and Monowar are still at prayers and texted me to say they'll bring me back a few chapatis and lentils.

    Hopefully they won't murder me when they get back for some reason. :rolleyes:

    It may cause you a bit of shock and panic, but most Muslims in the UK were born and raised here. They're British and know no other country. Interestingly enough, a higher percentage of Muslims here are "proud to be British" than their white Christian counterparts. They are as part of this nation as anyone else.

    The fact you think they are some sort of homogenous alien horde as opposed to rational human beings who think for themselves says a lot about you mate.

    Your opinions are baseless, rooted in a deep-seated hostility and are just plain nasty.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 26,567 ✭✭✭✭Fratton Fred


    "FTA69 wrote: »
    The cafes are full and there are smells of coffee and home-cooked curry coming from the flats. There are a group of young single mothers in the community centre I'm based in and they're chatting while the kids play with lego. Anam and Monowar are still at prayers and texted me to say they'll bring me back a few chapatis and lentils. .

    Aah, now that's just showing off.

    I used to work in a community centre. Our youth club was about 25% Muslim.

    When David Platt scored the last minute winner against Belgium 24 years ago, the room exploded. Oddly enough, nothing to do with suicides bombers or jihadists, just plain old supporters of their national team going nuts.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 974 ✭✭✭realweirdo


    For all those people who think Saddam was a nice guy who should have been left in power and only had Iraq's best interests at heart, they should read this.

    http://history1900s.about.com/od/saddamhussein/a/husseincrimes.htm

    ISIL are bad, but Saddam was a thousand times worse. He succeeded in pacifying the Iraqi people only by killing as many of them as possible. Nor did he merely kill potential trouble makers, he tried to wipe out entire ethnic groups.

    The current ISIL advances are heavily backed by the Sunni population who are p*ssed off by Al Malaki. If Al Malaki stepped down, this Sunni offensive would disappear almost overnight. ISIL alone are not strong enough to take Baghdad. But with widespread Sunni backing, they and their allies might be.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,410 ✭✭✭old_aussie


    realweirdo wrote: »
    If Al Malaki stepped down, this Sunni offensive would disappear almost overnight. ISIL alone are not strong enough to take Baghdad. But with widespread Sunni backing, they and their allies might be.

    What would be the purpose of al malaki stepping down?

    To have the majority shia population elect someone that they don't want?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 46,938 ✭✭✭✭Nodin


    old_aussie wrote: »
    What would be the purpose of al malaki stepping down?

    To have the majority shia population elect someone that they didn't want?

    Well having him stay on isn't serving much purpose.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,410 ✭✭✭old_aussie


    Nodin wrote: »
    Well having him stay on isn't serving much purpose.

    But isn't al malaki the one who was voted for in the elections?

    Was he elected by the general elections(public vote), or by the others who were elected to govern?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 46,938 ✭✭✭✭Nodin


    old_aussie wrote: »
    But isn't al malaki the one who was voted for in the elections?

    Was he elected by the general elections(public vote), or by the others who were elected to govern?


    And now he's made a balls of it, they can vote on him again.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,696 ✭✭✭Jonny7


    old_aussie wrote: »
    But isn't al malaki the one who was voted for in the elections?

    Was he elected by the general elections(public vote), or by the others who were elected to govern?

    Sadly much of the country looks like it will vote along sectarian lines.. and with the Shia majority a Shia leader is likely to get in

    Historically the Shia suffered horrendously under Saddam, this is all within living memory.. and as much as the US/rest of the world wants a unifying leader to take the reins in Iraq, well it just seems the Iraqi is the victim of more powerful forces at play

    Especially external forces that have been since approx 2006 doing their utmost to ferment sectarianism between two sides that were already extremely tense

    A bit like an external force endlessly blowing up both protestant and catholic in NI to exacerbate the situation


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,374 ✭✭✭InReality


    I think Blair is getting things mixed up.

    A shia vs sunni civil in Iraq is not due to "islamic extremism".
    Its due to a removal of the existing power structure ( Saddam ).


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 974 ✭✭✭realweirdo


    InReality wrote: »
    I think Blair is getting things mixed up.

    A shia vs sunni civil in Iraq is not due to "islamic extremism".
    Its due to a removal of the existing power structure ( Saddam ).

    Saddam was removed eleven years ago. The Iraqis have been given ample time and preparation to get things right, they haven't. In truth, and people like me will be saying it until we are blue in the face, Iraq has no future as a unified state of Sunni, Shia and Kurds. As soon as one group gets an advantage the other group is up in arms. Its impossible to please all three. Give the Sunni their own state, it's what they want after all. If they want to rule it using some 7th century ideology, fine, let them at it. The best that can be achieved is to save the rest of Iraq from this.

    The middle east is the most violent and unstable place on earth for one main reason, religion. They are killing each other over arguments that are 1300 years old. The place is a basket case and makes our own little banana republic look modern and progressive.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 974 ✭✭✭realweirdo


    fr336 wrote: »
    Nobody in Britain likes Blair. Nobody.

    And that's why he was voted into power 3 times, including after the Iraq War is it?

    Ditto George Bush in the US who won against the anti-war Kerry.

    Surely elections are the ultimate popularity contest where you can pass judgement on politicians and their policies and Blair remained popular to the end.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 974 ✭✭✭realweirdo


    Jonny7 wrote: »
    Iraq has shown that pre-emptive war really doesn't work - the situation must arise

    And reactionary war does work? The 1930s is the classic case. Had the Americans, British and French taken the Nazis seriously, the could easily have defeated Hitler in the late 30s or early 40s in a very localised conflict. Instead the world had to go through a war that cost 50 million lives - another victory for appeasers and non-interventionists, primarily in America. Being anti war in all cases is just nonsense. Some wars, most wars in fact need to be fought.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 46,938 ✭✭✭✭Nodin


    realweirdo wrote: »
    Saddam was removed eleven years ago. The Iraqis have been given ample time and preparation to get things right, they haven't. In truth, and people like me will be saying it until we are blue in the face, Iraq has no future as a unified state of Sunni, Shia and Kurds. As soon as one group gets an advantage the other group is up in arms. Its impossible to please all three. Give the Sunni their own state, it's what they want after all. If they want to rule it using some 7th century ideology, fine, let them at it. The best that can be achieved is to save the rest of Iraq from this.

    The middle east is the most violent and unstable place on earth for one main reason, religion. They are killing each other over arguments that are 1300 years old. The place is a basket case and makes our own little banana republic look modern and progressive.


    Nothing to do with superpower politics, the imposition of borders of from outside......


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 974 ✭✭✭realweirdo


    Nodin wrote: »
    Nothing to do with superpower politics, the imposition of borders of from outside......

    It's got everything to do with colonial borders. Each country is different, particularly Iraq. While in some countries, two groups can live side by side relatively peacefully, this is never going to happen in Iraq. The Sunnis by and large hate the Shia and the Shia by and large hate the Sunnis. It's a constant struggle to get the upperhand over each other. I saw an interview with a Christian refugee from Mosul the other day who decided to return to the city. He said he hated and feared the Shia led Iraqi government more than ISIL. At this stage its almost a competition to see how many of their opposing group they can kill. And like Syria this will drag on for years and decades, because no-one in the west or elsewhere has the stomach or interest to properly deal with it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,956 ✭✭✭✭nacho libre


    realweirdo wrote: »
    It's got everything to do with colonial borders. Each country is different, particularly Iraq. While in some countries, two groups can live side by side relatively peacefully, this is never going to happen in Iraq. The Sunnis by and large hate the Shia and the Shia by and large hate the Sunnis. It's a constant struggle to get the upperhand over each other. I saw an interview with a Christian refugee from Mosul the other day who decided to return to the city. He said he hated and feared the Shia led Iraqi government more than ISIL. At this stage its almost a competition to see how many of their opposing group they can kill. And like Syria this will drag on for years and decades, because no-one in the west or elsewhere has the stomach or interest to properly deal with it.

    putting some manners on the house of saud would be a start, but as you imply America won't confront the house of saud.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,696 ✭✭✭Jonny7


    realweirdo wrote: »
    And reactionary war does work? The 1930s is the classic case. Had the Americans, British and French taken the Nazis seriously, the could easily have defeated Hitler in the late 30s or early 40s in a very localised conflict. Instead the world had to go through a war that cost 50 million lives - another victory for appeasers and non-interventionists, primarily in America. Being anti war in all cases is just nonsense. Some wars, most wars in fact need to be fought.

    With hindsight

    However in 1938 Hitler hadn't fired up the ovens, hadn't tried to invade Europe and everything was speculation. Virtually everyone in power apart from Churchill was terrified of another Great War and there was zero appetitie to trigger another conflict on continental Europe with the most recent so fresh

    A pre-emptive war, by it's nature, psycholgically and otherwise has a much slimmer chance of success (defined by its goals) than reactionary - esp regarding international intervention

    We all knew that Gbagbo in Ivory coast wasn't going to leave power when he lost the vote, however to pre-empt that would have left him with the moral upper hand, the "victim" and so on. Yet when he didn't leave power, then action could be taken, and it was.

    Likewise in Iraq. Saddam had invaded it's neighbour Kuwait in 91 in a very black and white aggressive move - little or no justification, broadly and roundly condemned - the world reacted to this, the main concerns were potential casualties, not the reasoning. It would have been relatively much easier to remove Saddam under those circumstances

    Would the country have been able to function/develop? perhaps, perhaps not

    Take any country with strong tribal or sectarian divisions, rip out their operating appartus and leadership that has been present for decades and fill the void with death, violence, bombing, external forces perpetuating the violence and so on - the result will be much the same


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,777 ✭✭✭✭The Corinthian


    realweirdo wrote: »
    And reactionary war does work? The 1930s is the classic case. Had the Americans, British and French taken the Nazis seriously, the could easily have defeated Hitler in the late 30s or early 40s in a very localised conflict. Instead the world had to go through a war that cost 50 million lives - another victory for appeasers and non-interventionists, primarily in America. Being anti war in all cases is just nonsense. Some wars, most wars in fact need to be fought.
    Hindsight is a wonderful thing. So is looking back at history and looking at only those things that turned out to be prophetic and ignoring the rest.

    For example, between the World Wars one of the most consistently aggressive nations was Poland, not Germany. It pursued an aggressive and nationalistic foreign policy that included war with neighboring Lithuania.

    German expansionism (which occurred only at the end of the interwar period) was considered justified by many. The Sudetenland was ethnically German, after all. That Austria was not part of Germany was seen by many as a historical anomaly. And many felt that Germany had been given a pretty raw deal at Versailles. Indeed, Hitler was admired by many for having turned his country around:
    "If our country were defeated [in World War I], I hope we should find a champion as admirable [as Hitler] to restore our courage and lead us back to our place among the nations?" - Winston Churchill, 1937

    Even by the late thirties, was Hitler as bad as all that? He was far less aggressive and brutal than the Japanese in China. Or Franco in Spain. Even Mussolini and Stalin were considered bigger problems.

    To underline this, consider this quote, one year into World War II:
    "I do not consider Hitler to be as bad as he is depicted. He is showing an ability that is amazing and seems to be gaining his victories without" - Mahatma Gandhi, 1940

    But what about the Holocaust, I hear you ask? Truth is, the idea that Germany would carry our an organized genocide was completely alien to everyone. Discrimination sure, atrocities certainly (everyone was at it), but with factory efficiency? Nope. A large part of our reaction to it was how it was carried out, not that it was - after all, Stalin's regime killed more people, he just wasn't as efficient. Oh, and winning the war helped.

    Truth is, with people like Stalin, Mussolini, Tojo, Franco and everyone else, Hitler didn't really stand out as the next Napoleon (that's whom we used to use as the standard before Hitler, btw) any more than anyone else, until it was pretty much too late.

    So using the preemptive approach, without the benefit of hindsight, we probably would have gone after Stalin long before Hitler.


  • Registered Users Posts: 546 ✭✭✭Azwaldo55


    Syrian war planes launch air strikes against ISIS in Iraq.
    BAGHDAD—Syrian warplanes carried out airstrikes in western Iraq, stepping up the military role of the U.S. adversary in helping Baghdad's Shiite-dominated government fight Sunni insurgents.

    The strikes on Tuesday came as the Pentagon announced that the first 130 members of a potential 300 U.S. military advisers were in place in Baghdad to start assessing and improving the Iraqi army's ability to counter the gains of rebels led by the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham.

    At least 50 people were killed and more than 132 others wounded Tuesday when missiles fired from what appeared to be Syrian government planes hit a municipal building, a market and a bank in the district of Al Rutba, according to an Anbar provincial official and Mohammed Al Qubaisi, a doctor in the district's main hospital.

    Those people said Tuesday was the second consecutive day of airstrikes by Syria, which has joined Iran in aiding the embattled Baghdad government against the ISIS-led rebels. Tehran has deployed special forces to help protect the capital and the Iraqi cities of Najaf and Karbala, which Shiites revere.

    http://online.wsj.com/articles/sunni-rebels-take-complete-control-of-iraqs-largest-oil-refinery-1403605510?tesla=y&mg=reno64-wsj&url=http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303549304579643821976526200.html

    Obviously because Obama has ruled out military action the Maliki government has had to depend on the Assad dictatorship to help them out.

    At the same time Iranian forces have been assisting Iraqi forces on the front line while only a few hundred American troops have been sent in.

    At the very least American advisers - Rangers, Delta Force, SEALs etc. - should be at the front lines assisting Iraqi commanders, directing air strikes by the USAF from the ground and launching raids against ISIS.

    Instead Obama has given surrendered the initiative to Syria and Iran.

    U.S. combat troops, tanks, artillery, mechanized and light infantry with air support should be sent right back into the fight.

    Obama is a coward and a disgrace.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,777 ✭✭✭✭The Corinthian


    Shouldn't you be in a church somewhere, preaching, rather than trying to do so here?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,753 ✭✭✭comongethappy


    Shouldn't you be in a church somewhere, preaching, rather than trying to do so here?

    Not very mod like!

    Though his "Obama is a disgrace" thing is a bit silly.

    Mid-east issues require a mid-east solution.
    If the crushing of ISIS is at the hands of a joint Iran/Iraq effort, then so be it.
    Better than the US expending more blood & treasure, when they are damned either way.

    Military advisors sent to assist the iraqi army is probably the best worst solution.... If it pleases no one, its probably the right call!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,777 ✭✭✭✭The Corinthian


    Not very mod like!
    What's that got to do with anything? I'm not even a mod here.

    My comment was directed at the fact that he is clearly soapboxing, or preaching. He's not actually engaging with other posters and even when he responds ignores what they've actually written so he can go on another monologue. It is an attack on what he's writing, not his person.

    Criticizing him openly gives him the opportunity to either prove me wrong or, if he persists, underline the soapboxing as intentional, which will make it easier to report.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,753 ✭✭✭comongethappy


    What's that got to do with anything? I'm not even a mod here.

    My comment was directed at the fact that he is clearly soapboxing, or preaching. He's not actually engaging with other posters and even when he responds ignores what they've actually written so he can go on another monologue. It is an attack on what he's writing, not his person.

    Criticizing him openly gives him the opportunity to either prove me wrong or, if he persists, underline the soapboxing as intentional, which will make it easier to report.

    Fair enough.

    Lesser mortals get infractions for same.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,777 ✭✭✭✭The Corinthian


    Lesser mortals get infractions for same.
    I don't want to drag the discussion OT, but where? I don't think that's true at all.


  • Registered Users Posts: 546 ✭✭✭Azwaldo55


    Shouldn't you be in a church somewhere, preaching, rather than trying to do so here?

    I'm an atheist you moron.

    How about you engage with my arguments?

    The other posters refused blindly to take on board what I have been saying this whole time. Doubtless none of them read the essay Blair wrote which I linked in the OP.

    None of them have refuted the fact that Obama's premature withdrawal of US troops has led to the collapse of Iraq and none of them more importantly are willing to admit the existential threat that an Islamist regime in Syria and Iraq faces both to the region and to the entire world.

    Obama was warned not to do what he did but he did it anyway having preached a lunatic anti-war ideology since he first came into office.

    The consequences of retreating in the face of Islamic terrorism is now obvious - they gain ground and are emboldened and ready to mount future terror.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,777 ✭✭✭✭The Corinthian


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    How about you engage with my arguments?

    The other posters refused blindly to take on board what I have been saying this whole time. Doubtless none of them read the essay Blair wrote which I linked in the OP.
    Actually I and others have engaged and rebutted your points repeatedly on a number of occasions and instead of defending your arguments when this happens you've typically just ignored the rebuttals and just continued repeating yourself.

    For example, you claim that all the intelligence services of the major World powers believed Saddam Hussein still had stockpiles of weapons. I questioned whether this was either true or reliable based upon the fact that two years earlier they were claiming the opposite and even quoted two senior members of the US administration at the time.

    What did you do then? Defend your point? No, you just ignored it.

    So, when asking others to engage, I suggest you practice what you preach first.
    None of them have refuted the fact that Obama's premature withdrawal of US troops has led to the collapse of Iraq and none of them more importantly are willing to admit the existential threat that an Islamist regime in Syria and Iraq faces both to the region and to the entire world.
    It's interesting you consider a decade to have been insufficient to have dealt with problems in Iraq. Would two decades have done the trick? Maybe a permanent presence to keep the peace?

    Had you perhaps considered that this indicated that the interventionist policy was a failure in the first place and that by repeating the same failed policy we might just repeat this failure? Maybe dig an even bigger hole for ourselves and the Iraqi people?
    Obama was warned not to do what he did but he did it anyway having preached a lunatic anti-war ideology since he first came into office.
    You do know that it was Obama's predecessor who first set up the timetable for withdrawal? Are you going to ignore this point too?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,686 ✭✭✭✭Zubeneschamali


    It's interesting you consider a decade to have been insufficient to have dealt with problems in Iraq. Would two decades have done the trick?

    David Corn on John McCain: I asked McCain about his "hundred years" comment, and he reaffirmed the remark, excitedly declaring that U.S. troops could be in Iraq for "a thousand years" or "a million years," as far as he was concerned. The key matter, he explained, was whether they were being killed or not: "It's not American presence; it's American casualties."


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,696 ✭✭✭Jonny7


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    Obviously because Obama has ruled out military action the Maliki government has had to depend on the Assad dictatorship to help them out.

    Assad is helping himself out - ISIS is Syria's enemy, they are just focusing on a much softer target right now and Assad is taking advantage
    At the same time Iranian forces have been assisting Iraqi forces on the front line while only a few hundred American troops have been sent in.

    At the very least American advisers - Rangers, Delta Force, SEALs etc. - should be at the front lines assisting Iraqi commanders, directing air strikes by the USAF from the ground and launching raids against ISIS.

    And when they capture American forces and start beheading them on camera and dragging their bodies through the streets?

    Committing forces to Iraq in 2003 turned out to be a very costly, painful exercise - over 4,000 dead Americans, billions lost

    They are obviously being extremely careful
    Instead Obama has given surrendered the initiative to Syria and Iran.

    Initiative? it's not a race or a competition, it's about solving a very serious problem without making a serious ****up that is going to a) make situation worse b) cost more lives

    You're talking action in the tinderbox that is Iraq, in the tinderbox that is the Middle East, by the US - not exactly the most popular external force


  • Registered Users Posts: 546 ✭✭✭Azwaldo55


    Jonny7 wrote: »
    Assad is helping himself out - ISIS is Syria's enemy, they are just focusing on a much softer target right now and Assad is taking advantage



    And when they capture American forces and start beheading them on camera and dragging their bodies through the streets?

    Committing forces to Iraq in 2003 turned out to be a very costly, painful exercise - over 4,000 dead Americans, billions lost

    They are obviously being extremely careful



    Initiative? it's not a race or a competition, it's about solving a very serious problem without making a serious ****up that is going to a) make situation worse b) cost more lives

    You're talking action in the tinderbox that is Iraq, in the tinderbox that is the Middle East, by the US - not exactly the most popular external force

    If Islamism is not defeated in the Middle East it will spread its tentacles to the rest of the world.

    Force must be met by force.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,031 ✭✭✭Lockstep


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    If Islamism is not defeated in the Middle East it will spread its tentacles to the rest of the world.

    Force must be met by force.

    Coming dangerously close to outright bigotry. Tread carefully here.


  • Registered Users Posts: 546 ✭✭✭Azwaldo55


    Lockstep wrote: »
    Coming dangerously close to outright bigotry. Tread carefully here.

    You can't tell the difference between political Islam i.e. Islamism and the religion of Islam can you?

    Educate yourself about Islamism would you?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamism

    Islamists believe that politics and Islamic principles should be one and the same. Most of them believe in the violent imposition of Islamic principles on society regardless of individual beliefs and regardless of the belief systems of other faiths and Islamic theocrats should rule instead of secular politicians.

    That is the ideology of ISIS and the Taliban and Hamas and other Islamist organizations across the world.

    It is possible to be a Muslim and not to be an Islamist.
    However to be an Islamist often goes hand in hand with violence.
    Being a Muslim does not.

    So how is bigoted to oppose Islamism?

    If you are secular, pro-human rights, pro-women, pro-gay, ant-sectarian, pro-democracy, pro-freedom and pro-humanity you must be anti-Islamist.

    The ISIS and other Islamist groups are not just interested in local conflicts but they believe in a global struggle to impose their fundamentalist religious belief on the entire world.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,031 ✭✭✭Lockstep


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    You can't tell the difference between political Islam i.e. Islamism and the religion of Islam can you?

    Educate yourself about Islamism would you?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamism

    Islamists believe that politics and Islamic principles should be one and the same. Most of them believe in the violent imposition of Islamic principles on society regardless of individual beliefs and regardless of the belief systems of other faiths and Islamic theocrats should rule instead of secular politicians.

    That is the ideology of ISIS and the Taliban and Hamas and other Islamist organizations across the world.

    It is possible to be a Muslim and not to be an Islamist.
    However to be an Islamist often goes hand in hand with violence.
    Being a Muslim does not.

    So how is bigoted to oppose Islamism?

    If you are secular, pro-human rights, pro-women, pro-gay, ant-sectarian, pro-democracy, pro-freedom and pro-humanity you must be anti-Islamist.

    The ISIS and other Islamist groups are not just interested in local conflicts but they believe in a global struggle to impose their fundamentalist religious belief on the entire world.

    If you have a problem with my moderation, take it to PM or Feedback. Don't question it on the thread, it's in the charter which I suggest you read.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,696 ✭✭✭Jonny7


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    You can't tell the difference between political Islam i.e. Islamism and the religion of Islam can you?
    Muslims revere a creep who was 53 when he raped his 9 year old bride as a Prophet and millions of them call for anyone who insults this paedophile to be killed.

    Might want to chose your own words more carefully before lecturing others in that regard


  • Registered Users Posts: 546 ✭✭✭Azwaldo55


    Jonny7 wrote: »
    Might want to chose your own words more carefully before lecturing others in that regard

    It is true that Muhammad married a girl when she was 6 and "consummated" the marriage when she was 9.
    Muslims do not deny this.
    Insulting the Prophet carries the death sentence in much of the Arab world.
    These are facts.
    The guy was a pedo and a rapist and he also launched a war of sectarian conquest across the Middle East region.

    If you want to stick your fingers in your ears and go "lalalalalalalalala" fine by me.

    You are a complete and utter moral coward. Utterly pathetic.

    Why are you afraid to call a spade a spade?

    Islam is the very definition of a degenerate primitive backward ignorant intolerant psychopathic belief system.
    Every country in the world where Islam constricts the political system is a backwards sh*thole full of violence and illiteracy.

    Those are facts.

    The entire Middle East needs to be democratized and civilized by force.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,696 ✭✭✭Jonny7


    The mask has definitely slipped


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,777 ✭✭✭✭The Corinthian


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    If you want to stick your fingers in your ears and go "lalalalalalalalala" fine by me.
    You mean like when it's repeatedly pointed out to you that many of the 'facts' you come out with are actually factually incorrect?

    Militant Islam is a problem. No denying that. If a direct military approach works, then fine by me.

    Problem is that it doesn't, and what you keep on doing is simply repeat a solution that has been repeatedly tried and has been shown to fail. This has been pointed out to you here and all you've done is stick your fingers in your ears and gone "lalalalalalalalala" about that undeniable fact.

    Now, we could go and repeat this same approach you suggest and inevitably fail, or consider another approach; it could also be military, or political or economic or a mixture of the above. All we know is that the direct military approach has been a complete disaster.

    But if you prefer to ignore all that, fine by me.
    The entire Middle East needs to be democratized and civilized by force.
    Oh dear... when I hear statements as cretinous as that one, they tend to lead me to suspect their author that somewhere, there's a picture of them in an attic, getting smarter.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 9,031 ✭✭✭Lockstep


    Oh dear... when I hear statements as cretinous as that one, they tend to lead me to suspect their author that somewhere, there's a picture of them in an attic, getting smarter.

    Lay off the personal abuse.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 546 ✭✭✭Azwaldo55


    You mean like when it's repeatedly pointed out to you that many of the 'facts' you come out with are actually factually incorrect?

    Militant Islam is a problem. No denying that. If a direct military approach works, then fine by me.

    Problem is that it doesn't, and what you keep on doing is simply repeat a solution that has been repeatedly tried and has been shown to fail. This has been pointed out to you here and all you've done is stick your fingers in your ears and gone "lalalalalalalalala" about that undeniable fact.

    Now, we could go and repeat this same approach you suggest and inevitably fail, or consider another approach; it could also be military, or political or economic or a mixture of the above. All we know is that the direct military approach has been a complete disaster.

    But if you prefer to ignore all that, fine by me.

    Oh dear... when I hear statements as cretinous as that one, they tend to lead me to suspect their author that somewhere, there's a picture of them in an attic, getting smarter.

    Iraq violence plummeted due to the surge. Look at the figures.

    https://www.iraqbodycount.org/database/

    Notice that since American forces withdrew that the death toll has been rising month on month since 2011 and now it has exploded.
    You simply can't face up to the fact that Islamic terrorism has surged since Obama pulled the troops.
    Emboldened and triumphant they are in danger of taking over Iraq.
    A democratic government elected by millions of Iraqis is left twisting in the wind.
    Obama pulled the plug and look what happened.
    Thanks to him the West is going to have to double down even harder on Islamists both at home and in the Middle East.
    The job is going to be a lot harder now and much bloodier but it is going to have to be done.

    Obama is saying troops will not go back in but who really believes that honestly? The U.S. President will be forced to act. Hillary was screaming at him not to pull the troops out. If she had been elected in 2008 she never would have did what he did. She postured as opposed to the Iraq War but she never really was. If she isn't elected in 2016 someone is else will do what needs to be done whether Rep or Dem.

    What is the alternative? What do we have to negotiate about with these Islamist animals? They are quite open about their goal - a global Caliphate.

    The Saddam regime was irrelevant. These savages did not pop up out of thin air. They were waiting to get going with or without the invasion in 2003.

    Wake up!


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 47,334 CMod ✭✭✭✭Black Swan


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    You are a complete and utter moral coward. Utterly pathetic.

    Islam is the very definition of a degenerate primitive backward ignorant intolerant psychopathic belief system.

    Every country in the world where Islam constricts the political system is a backwards sh*thole full of violence and illiteracy.
    MOD: Ignored earlier Mod in-thread warning, discussed moderation earlier in-thread, and exhibited personal abuse in this post. 2-weeks ban.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 19,777 ✭✭✭✭The Corinthian


    Azwaldo55 wrote: »
    Iraq violence plummeted due to the surge. Look at the figures.
    Yet it failed to solve the security problem. It was a temporary stopgap, at great cost, that didn't achieve any real long term benefits. Sooner or later the troops were going to have to leave and we would still be where we are now.

    I know this is ultimately a rhetorical question, but are you suggesting a permanent 'surge' and, if so, how is this really a 'solution'?

    Boggles the mind, TBH.


  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Computer Games Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 8,527 CMod ✭✭✭✭Sierra Oscar


    Yet it failed to solve the security problem. It was a temporary stopgap, at great cost, that didn't achieve any real long term benefits. Sooner or later the troops were going to have to leave and we would still be where we are now.

    Indeed. Many of the militant groups merely went underground and became inactive on the combat front as the surge progressed in the knowledge that it would have to end at some stage. At the same time groups such as ISIL were building their organization and gathering funds, ready to strike when the US troops left.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,686 ✭✭✭✭Zubeneschamali


    I know this is ultimately a rhetorical question, but are you suggesting a permanent 'surge' and, if so, how is this really a 'solution'?

    As noted upthread, that really was John McCain's proposed solution: leave US troops there for a million years, enough of them that they are not taking casualties.


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