Wow...and I had such high hopes
Mad Martigan,
It just so happens that I do have a copy of the plan. Here you go.
Mad Martigan,
It just so happens that I do have a copy of the plan. Here you go.
I can gurantee you that that would cause more anger among fundamentalists than our occupation.It's never been about the oil. It's so that in ten years you can drive through Baghdad and see a McDonald's, KFC and Starbucks on your way to the local Wal-Mart.
So those are your qualifications for puppet governments?Eh, that's not saying much.
They don't serve any real purpose there either.Then why do we have bases in Japan and Germany?
It won't happen at all. The only friend that means anything policy-wise in OPEC is SA. So I do deny it, because it isn't up to Iraq. Invading a nation for posturing in the oil lmarket will also in no way make us more attractive trading partners with otehr OPEC nations. Iraq was pumping out huge amounts of (relatively) cheap oil before. Now they are not, they will not for some time, and when they do again it will be of no great advantage to us as compared to pre-invasion.While I don't believe this war is about oil every time someone uses this argument I have to laugh. As if you're suggesting that if the war was about oil then we'd have black crude flowing through the streets as we speak. You cannot deny that a US-friendly government in Iraq will undoubtedly provide us with not only a slight increase in our oil supply but a better bargaining position with other OPEC nations in the future. It wouldn't happen overnight.
You do realize that Iraq is not mentioned in one of these 90 pages, right? What percentage of our elected officials do you think subscribe to this ideology?Mad Martigan,
It just so happens that I do have a copy of the plan. Here you go.
If that is what you would do in a hole too deep to climb out of, I think you should have chosen an analogy you understand better.So if the hole is too deep to climb out, what the hell do you do? Keep digging, hoping you'll come out the other side of the earth? Just stand there until the hole fills with rainwater and you drown?
It is not like saying that at all.This argument, that the war was a mistake, but we're there now so we've got to stay, makes no sense. It's as if you're saying that, once you make a mistake, you've got no choice but to keep making it, and hope that, somewhere along the way, it won't be a mistake anymore.
I said that?You yourself say that you see no positive outcome to all this.
This and the following questions are non sequiters based on something I haven't said.How much of your money, and how many of your kids, are you willing to spend to achieve nothing?
No, you're right. It's mentioned in 18 of those pages. Perhaps you missed them.You do realize that Iraq is not mentioned in one of these 90 pages, right?
Enough to get us into this war.What percentage of our elected officials do you think subscribe to this ideology?
I did miss that.No, you're right. It's mentioned in 18 of those pages. Perhaps you missed them.
Pages 14. 16. 20. 21. 23. 26. 27. 29. 44. 47. 52. 57. 63. 64. 65. 66. 85. 87.
Then it must not be limited to neocons.Enough to get us into this war.
It means exactly what it says and nothing more. I cannot justify our enforcement of UN resolutions in place of a UN force. I cannot justify invading on such terrible intelligence. That does not mean our invasion cannot or has not had positive effects and not achieved anything. I do not think that justifies teh cost, but that does not mean it negates the outcome either.That's what I was responding to. If it doesn't mean what I think it means, tell me what you intended to say, and I'll discuss on that basis instead. And even if you did not mean to say what I thought you were saying, it's certainly an argument I've heard from others, and my response to that argument is what I said before.
Thats a fairly small percentage, wouldn't you say?As to who the elected officials are who subscribe to the PNAC ideology, the one that leaps immediately to mind is Cheney. But more importantly, the appointed decision-makers who are members of that think-tank are: Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Perle, Fieth, and many others at the highest levels of the executive branch. The people who were making foriegn policy in 2002 - 2003 were all PNAC members.
No, sadly it is limited to neo-cons. A lot of dog-wagging helped.Then it must not be limited to neocons.
I do not accept the "we were t3h tricked" excuse for the overwhelming support of the use of force in combination with numerous calls for the deposition of Saddam and on the record acknowledgement of (or belief in) Iraqi WMDs dating back before Bush took office.No, sadly it is limited to neo-cons. A lot of dog-wagging helped.
goslash said:I don't see this war as hopeless. We should not have started it, and we may not be fighting it in the most effective manner possible.....but that doesn't mean we shouldn't try to win it. I sense very bad ju-ju if we just drop it as a lost cause.
Do you recall the vote to authorize the use of force?Mad Martigan,
Funny...I don't remember it that way at all.
Perhaps if you could document this "overwhelming support of the use of force
in combination with numerous calls for the deposition of Saddam and on the record acknowledgement of (or belief in) Iraqi WMDs dating back before Bush took office", we could make some headway.
I agree but that doesn't change the fact that this entire conflict is about spreading capitalism, not democracy.I can gurantee you that that would cause more anger among fundamentalists than our occupation.
Not my qualifications but puppet governments are no stranger to the past century.So those are your qualifications for puppet governments?
Doesn't mean we're not going to have bases in Iraq for just as long.They don't serve any real purpose there either.
You're not looking at the big picture.It won't happen at all. The only friend that means anything policy-wise in OPEC is SA. So I do deny it, because it isn't up to Iraq. Invading a nation for posturing in the oil lmarket will also in no way make us more attractive trading partners with otehr OPEC nations. Iraq was pumping out huge amounts of (relatively) cheap oil before. Now they are not, they will not for some time, and when they do again it will be of no great advantage to us as compared to pre-invasion.
[W]e urge you, after consulting with Congress, and consistent with the U.S. Constitution and laws, to take necessary actions (including, if appropriate, air and missile strikes on suspect Iraqi sites) to respond effectively to the threat posed by Iraq's refusal to end its weapons of mass destruction programs."