oug
Calmer than you are.
+380|6943|Πάϊ

Ralph Peters wrote:

It would be a welcome development if negotiations fixed the problems we face in Iraq, but we’re the only side interested in a negotiated solution.

Passive resistance only works when directed against rule-of-law states, such as the core English-speaking nations.

But if we’re unwilling to fight the fraction of humanity that’s evil, ...

Attempts to try such monsters in a court of law turn into mockeries that only provide public platforms for their hate speech, which the global media is delighted to broadcast. Dead, they’re dead. And killing them is the ultimate proof that they lack divine protection. Dead terrorists don’t kill.

the need to defeat enemies who revel in butchering the innocent, who celebrate atrocities, and who claim their god wants blood.
So these, to point just a few, aren't [insert fart sound]?
ƒ³
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7025|132 and Bush

oug wrote:

Ralph Peters wrote:

It would be a welcome development if negotiations fixed the problems we face in Iraq, but we’re the only side interested in a negotiated solution.
Thousands of years of bloodshed fighting their brethren. I'd say there aren't many relevant players who care to ever negotiate.

Passive resistance only works when directed against rule-of-law states, such as the core English-speaking nations.

But if we’re unwilling to fight the fraction of humanity that’s evil, ...
Poorly worded I'll agree, but the point is clear. Now lets put this back in the context of what he was saying. It doesn’t work where silent protest is answered with a bayonet in the belly or a one-way trip to a political prison. We’ve allowed far too many myths about the “innate goodness of humanity” to creep up on us. Certainly, many humans would rather be good than bad. But if we’re unwilling to fight the fraction of humanity that’s evil, armed and determined to subjugate the rest, we’ll face even grimmer conflicts.

oug wrote:

Attempts to try such monsters in a court of law turn into mockeries that only provide public platforms for their hate speech, which the global media is delighted to broadcast. Dead, they’re dead. And killing them is the ultimate proof that they lack divine protection. Dead terrorists don’t kill.
the need to defeat enemies who revel in butchering the innocent, who celebrate atrocities, and who claim their god wants blood.
So these, to point just a few, aren't [insert fart sound]?
This isn't true?
Xbone Stormsurgezz
PureFodder
Member
+225|6710

Kmarion wrote:

Vilham wrote:

I was going to write a couple paragraphs on why his opinion is stupid, but Cameron has already voiced my exact feelings on what he said.

CameronPoe wrote:

I'll be back with comments on the others later.
I get the impression he is going to attack everything he said irregardless of having valid points. Cam is however the only one making any kind of reasonable argument in this thread though. The propaganda yada yada and one liners are (insert farting noise).

A little extra info on Peters, for all the claims of denial in this thread.
http://blogs.usatoday.com/oped/2006/11/post_6.html
OK, point 8.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2006/jun/15/usa.iran
People are sensible enough in general to seperate Americans from US foreign policy. Americans are liked, people want to go there, live there and meet Americans. US foreign policy however is hated. Popular opposition within the US is at an unheard of level. The Vietnam war for example was only seriously protested against after it had been going on for years. The Iraq war was protested against before it had even begun.

Point 9.
http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature … ect_1.html
A 7-fold increase in terrorism as a result of the Iraq invasion.

Point 7.
The greatest immorality is for the United States to lose a war.
What if the US is conducting an immoral war? Take the unambiguously immoral attack on Nicaragua. Remember, the US kills vastly more people than the number of casualties recieved, the real question is what would happen if the enemies of the US could be as brutal as the US?

Point 10.
The Iraqi people disagree, they see the occupying forces as the catalyst of the violence there. ALL sides in Iraq agree on this point. They also agree that the coalition forces need to get out of their country. If Freedom and democracy were things we tried to bring to Iraq, why not put these important issues to a referendum? Surely it's up to the Iraqis when the US/UK get out of their country, not up to us.

Point 11/12.
Israel is only part of the problems in the middle east. The last century of imperialism has had major effects too. Supporting dictators, overthrowing democracies, violence, brutal sanctions etc. When Eisenhower asked why question 'why do they hate us' not the governments but the people of the middle east. The answer was researched and it was found to be due to the people having the impression that the US blocked democracy and supported brutal regiemes due to their interest in controling near east oil. Furthermore the impression was hard to counter because it was true.

The people of the middle east don't hate America because of it's 'freedom' but because of it's actions.

If the US is the enemy of the Saudis, why don't they act like it.

Point 1
Stupid assumption that the US winning any war represents the best outcome.

Point 2.
If the goal of the Iraq war was to bring democracy to Iraq and the people now want us to bugger off out of their country, then the aim cannot be achieved until we withdraw. The vast majority of the insurgents in Iraq were mobilised and are continuing ot be mobilised by the invasion of Iraq. Victory will occur when we leave the Iraqi populace to do whatever the Iraqi populace want. Until then we're just then next dictators of Iraq. To win via violence will involve inflicting far more suffering on the Iraqi people than they would have had under Saddam, so how exactly is that a victory?

Point 3.
It misses the other point that insurgents can be motivated by having their country invaded. Yes you can defeat an insurgency, but at what cost? The more violent you are against the insurgents the more people become insurgents to resist your violence. If inflicting vast amounts of violence on the populace is the method for putting down insurgencies then the obvious question is why bother overthrowing Saddam. He could have repressed them just as well if not better than we could.

Point 4.
Simply not true, the populace of the powerful country can decide that they prefer non-violent means to violence. It's one of the reasons that the imperial powers went from the much more effective wars of agression and bombings to more peaceful means. The populace demanded it.

Point 5.
Stupid argument, it implies that the US only responds to acts of agression and never does anything to cause them. This argument is a perfect justification for 9/11. Bin Laden was responding to the bully that was causing all sorts of problems in the middle east. It also demands that Palestinians fire rockets at the local bully Israel.

The idea that only core-English speaking nations are able to respond to non-violent protests without massacring them is amazingly racist and completely at odds with history. Wars of agression against non-violent opponents are the hallmarks of the imperial nations.

Point 6/7
Advocating a policy of mass murder isn't in keeping with all the ideas professed about the idealism of US interventions. Harsh teatment of enemies encourages more people to fight back against you.


Overall I'd strongly suggest doing this: Read each point but replace the US with another country, say Iran and replace terrorism with imperial interventionism. Now does the list of points sound like reasonable suggestions or outrgeous. If another country said that the way to respond to US agression is with bloody violence as it's the only thing that will work and the only thing they understand would that sound OK?
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7025|132 and Bush

Suggesting he is advocating a policy of mass murder really tops the list so far.
Advocating a policy of mass murder isn't in keeping with all the ideas professed about the idealism of US interventions. Harsh teatment of enemies encourages more people to fight back against you.
History has shown that it is almost always necessary. The enemy must be defeated and the will must be broke in order for hostilities to cease. It's ugly, it's true.

The majority of these replies are taking his words out of context. I'm starting to think we have some future campaign managers in this forum. Interesting none-the less, I enjoy reading other spin opinions .
Xbone Stormsurgezz
d4rkst4r
biggie smalls
+72|6877|Ontario, Canada
Whats this pro republican garbage?
"you know life is what we make it, and a chance is like a picture, it'd be nice if you just take it"
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 3: Insurgencies can never be defeated.

Historically, fewer than one in 20 major insurgencies succeeded. Virtually no minor ones survived. In the mid-20th century, insurgencies scored more wins than previously had been the case, but that was because the European colonial powers against which they rebelled had already decided to rid themselves of their imperial possessions. Even so, more insurgencies were defeated than not, from the Philippines to Kenya to Greece. In the entire 18th century, our war of independence was the only insurgency that defeated a major foreign power and drove it out for good.

The insurgencies we face today are, in fact, more lethal than the insurrections of the past century. We now face an international terrorist insurgency as well as local rebellions, all motivated by religious passion or ethnicity or a fatal compound of both. The good news is that in over 3,000 years of recorded history, insurgencies motivated by faith and blood overwhelmingly failed. The bad news is that they had to be put down with remorseless bloodshed.
Sorry Ralph. Imperfect model of reality yet again. Of course insurgencies can be defeated. Would you like me to show you how?

https://relatio.blogspirit.com/images/medium_grozny-2000-2.jpg

Absolute ruthless bloodthirsty decimation, pillage and destruction, that's how. The image is of Grozny, Chechnya. Modern popular insurgencies have had far higher rates of success due to the fact it is no longer politically or morally palatable to act like the old colonial powers of yore and the Stalins and Maos of this world. So unless Ralphy boy is telling us he wants to bring 'freedom' and 'civilisation' to the rest of the world by acting worse than some of history's most notorious criminals then I don't exactly know how he's going to 'spread the good word'.

It is funny how an Iraqi insurgency is dismissed as bad whereas a Kosovan one is hailed as good. Both ethnicities are just trying to do what all people strive to do in times of national strife - gain the right to self determine and to shape their own country free from external interference.

So basically Ralph - move to an authoritarian country whose army will obliterate everything in it's path: hooray for freedom. He really needs to get it into his head that the world will not stand being told what to do and that he is not engaged in a 'battle for survival' as I mentioned earlier.

Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-04-21 12:50:44)

oug
Calmer than you are.
+380|6943|Πάϊ

Kmarion wrote:

Thousands of years of bloodshed fighting their brethren. I'd say there aren't many relevant players who care to ever negotiate.
That is irrelevant. Are you suggesting that the peoples of the Middle East are somehow collectively unwilling to negotiate about anything? Because it looks to me like we are putting everything in one big basket and mixing it up. That's not the proper way to come to conclusions about people. Take each case on its own rather. For example: Bin Laden has made his requests pretty clear. Evacuate your troops and stop supporting Israel. Simple. And if the latter were to be clarified and negotiated, I'd say they're valid requests.

Kmarion wrote:

Poorly worded I'll agree, but the point is clear. Now lets put this back in the context of what he was saying. It doesn’t work where silent protest is answered with a bayonet in the belly or a one-way trip to a political prison. We’ve allowed far too many myths about the “innate goodness of humanity” to creep up on us. Certainly, many humans would rather be good than bad. But if we’re unwilling to fight the fraction of humanity that’s evil, armed and determined to subjugate the rest, we’ll face even grimmer conflicts.
It seems that the US is constantly trying over the last few years to equate itself with their enemy. This is a huge subject and right now I don't have time, but in a few words maybe it would be better to go back to the initial values of this country and see whether current action coincides with them. I hope I can elaborate further later, right now I might not be making any sense...


Kmarion wrote:

oug wrote:

Attempts to try such monsters in a court of law turn into mockeries that only provide public platforms for their hate speech, which the global media is delighted to broadcast. Dead, they’re dead. And killing them is the ultimate proof that they lack divine protection. Dead terrorists don’t kill.
the need to defeat enemies who revel in butchering the innocent, who celebrate atrocities, and who claim their god wants blood.
So these, to point just a few, aren't [insert fart sound]?
This isn't true?
As above, what is the ultimate goal here? To spread democracy, or simply to kill a few people? Generally speaking, if winning will bring you down to their level, maybe it's not worth it...
ƒ³
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7025|132 and Bush

oug wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

Thousands of years of bloodshed fighting their brethren. I'd say there aren't many relevant players who care to ever negotiate.
That is irrelevant. Are you suggesting that the peoples of the Middle East are somehow collectively unwilling to negotiate about anything? Because it looks to me like we are putting everything in one big basket and mixing it up. That's not the proper way to come to conclusions about people. Take each case on its own rather. For example: Bin Laden has made his requests pretty clear. Evacuate your troops and stop supporting Israel. Simple. And if the latter were to be clarified and negotiated, I'd say they're valid requests.
Irrelevant? The point is it's always another thing. The middle eastern civilization has had a nice jump start on the majority of the rest of the world. Yet instead of moving forward and putting aside their difference they still choose to engage in thousand year old bloodfeuds.

oug wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

Poorly worded I'll agree, but the point is clear. Now lets put this back in the context of what he was saying. It doesn’t work where silent protest is answered with a bayonet in the belly or a one-way trip to a political prison. We’ve allowed far too many myths about the “innate goodness of humanity” to creep up on us. Certainly, many humans would rather be good than bad. But if we’re unwilling to fight the fraction of humanity that’s evil, armed and determined to subjugate the rest, we’ll face even grimmer conflicts.
It seems that the US is constantly trying over the last few years to equate itself with their enemy. This is a huge subject and right now I don't have time, but in a few words maybe it would be better to go back to the initial values of this country and see whether current action coincides with them. I hope I can elaborate further later, right now I might not be making any sense...
I would love to go back to "initial values". Believe it or not I'm not a kill kill kinda guy. Peace requires everyone to commit. The sword is the only thing some people understand (unfortunately). To pretend otherwise is a plan for certain doom. Wishing things into reality is fine behind a keyboard.


oug wrote:

Kmarion wrote:

oug wrote:

Attempts to try such monsters in a court of law turn into mockeries that only provide public platforms for their hate speech, which the global media is delighted to broadcast. Dead, they’re dead. And killing them is the ultimate proof that they lack divine protection. Dead terrorists don’t kill.
the need to defeat enemies who revel in butchering the innocent, who celebrate atrocities, and who claim their god wants blood.
So these, to point just a few, aren't [insert fart sound]?
This isn't true?
As above, what is the ultimate goal here? To spread democracy, or simply to kill a few people? Generally speaking, if winning will bring you down to their level, maybe it's not worth it...
I think you said a lot when you say maybe winning is not worth it. It would certainly depend on the mission. I differ with certain elements of the article. However let me be clear. I'm talking about the philosophy of thought here. "Spreading democracy" should not be the goal of the United States. There is nothing in our doctrine that says it's ok to invade a country to make sure women have the right to vote, drive, etc. As a conservative I believe the goal of government should be restricted to mandatory actions. Such as providing common defense against an immediate and clear threat.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 4: There’s no military solution; only negotiations can solve our problems.

In most cases, the reverse is true. Negotiations solve nothing until a military decision has been reached and one side recognizes a peace agreement as its only hope of survival. It would be a welcome development if negotiations fixed the problems we face in Iraq, but we’re the only side interested in a negotiated solution. Every other faction - the terrorists, Sunni insurgents, Shia militias, Iran and Syria - is convinced it can win.

The only negotiations that produce lasting results are those conducted from positions of indisputable strength.
His last line is actually completely and utterly at odds with the situation in Northern Ireland and hence verifiably incorrect. The US is not interested in negotiations. It won't even speak to Syria or Iran. They're more interested in engaging in what amounts to a political cock-measuring contest with Iran on the international stage. The sheer bare-faced lies this man is concocting are truly amazing. He's right that a military solution must be reached - a no hold barred civil war between the relevant factions. The US should have nothing to do with that.

This guy's view on matters is so narrow and concentrated. If he was more generic in his approach then perhaps he might have something interesting to say.

Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-04-21 13:18:24)

Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7025|132 and Bush

CameronPoe wrote:

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 4: There’s no military solution; only negotiations can solve our problems.

In most cases, the reverse is true. Negotiations solve nothing until a military decision has been reached and one side recognizes a peace agreement as its only hope of survival. It would be a welcome development if negotiations fixed the problems we face in Iraq, but we’re the only side interested in a negotiated solution. Every other faction - the terrorists, Sunni insurgents, Shia militias, Iran and Syria - is convinced it can win.

The only negotiations that produce lasting results are those conducted from positions of indisputable strength.
His last line is actually completely and utterly at odds with the situation in Northern Ireland and hence verifiably incorrect. The US is not interested in negotiations. It won't even speak to Syria or Iran. There more interested in engaging in what amounts to a political cock-measuring contest with Iran on the international stage. The sheer bare-faced lies this man is concocting are truly amazing. He's right that a military solution must be reached - a no hold barred civil war between the relevant factions. The US should have nothing to do with that.

This guy's view on matters is so narrow and concentrated. If he was more generic in his approach then perhaps he might have something interesting to say.
I agree that the US should have nothing to do with mediating the infighting. I think the point of military force or violent pressure is accurate the majority of time though. Incentives rarely have long lasting effects. Retribution can be forever. "There’s no military solution; only negotiations can solve our problems." would depend on who you are dealing with. The comparison you make with Ireland and the ME is not the best analogy. There are many different factors at work in each situation. I believe there was more reasonable forces at work in your circumstance.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 6: Killing terrorists only turns them into martyrs.

It’s an anomaly of today’s Western world that privileged individuals feel more sympathy for dictators, mass murderers and terrorists - consider the irrational protests against Guantanamo - than they do for their victims. We were told, over and over, that killing Osama bin Laden or Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, hanging Saddam Hussein or targeting the Taliban’s Mullah Omar would only unite their followers. Well, we haven’t yet gotten Osama or Omar, but Zarqawi’s dead and forgotten by his own movement, whose members never invoke that butcher’s memory. And no one is fighting to avenge Saddam. The harsh truth is that when faced with true fanatics, killing them is the only way to end their influence. Imprisoned, they galvanize protests, kidnappings, bombings and attacks that seek to free them. Want to make a terrorist a martyr? Just lock him up. Attempts to try such monsters in a court of law turn into mockeries that only provide public platforms for their hate speech, which the global media is delighted to broadcast. Dead, they’re dead. And killing them is the ultimate proof that they lack divine protection. Dead terrorists don’t kill.
Sentence one - blatant untruth. Who the fuck feels sympathy for a dictator, a mass murderer or a terrorist? Who doesn't find acts of terror appalling? Where does this guy get off spouting nonsense? Principled people feel due process should apply to all under the law and rightly deplore torture - he can fuck off if he thinks I or any of my principled western brethren will have my morals and principles breached for some lowlife scum snapping at our heels. Moral superiority comes from a steadfast adherence to principles.

He is somewhat correct in that 'martyrdom' has no material effect on morale or focus in the long term though. Although the spirit of Che Guevara lives on, but perhaps its because his goals were honourable that his legend has persisted. Killing a political figure, such as Moqtada Al Sadr, as opposed to a terrorist cell leader will delay peace or a conclusion to hostilities by years I would say however.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6966|Texas - Bigger than France

CameronPoe wrote:

The US is not interested in negotiations. It won't even speak to Syria or Iran.
I'm just going to say bullshit on two counts.

1) There has been plenty of negotiations, all failed.  why? Reason: #2

2) Refer to the quote re: "indisputable strength".  It seems both the US/Iran/Syria are struggling with the "indisputable" part.  Or to rephrase:

CameronPoe wrote:

They're more interested in engaging in what amounts to a political cock-measuring contest with Iran on the international stage.
In other words - Iran & Syria aren't being "forced" to the table.  Which is exactly what you are saying.
mikkel
Member
+383|7025
So this guy made a list of "12 myths of 21st century war", and he's using ages old historical evidence to support his "debunking"?

For me to take this seriously, I need 21st century reasons to debunk 21st century myths.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|7025|132 and Bush

CameronPoe wrote:

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 6: Killing terrorists only turns them into martyrs.

It’s an anomaly of today’s Western world that privileged individuals feel more sympathy for dictators, mass murderers and terrorists - consider the irrational protests against Guantanamo - than they do for their victims. We were told, over and over, that killing Osama bin Laden or Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, hanging Saddam Hussein or targeting the Taliban’s Mullah Omar would only unite their followers. Well, we haven’t yet gotten Osama or Omar, but Zarqawi’s dead and forgotten by his own movement, whose members never invoke that butcher’s memory. And no one is fighting to avenge Saddam. The harsh truth is that when faced with true fanatics, killing them is the only way to end their influence. Imprisoned, they galvanize protests, kidnappings, bombings and attacks that seek to free them. Want to make a terrorist a martyr? Just lock him up. Attempts to try such monsters in a court of law turn into mockeries that only provide public platforms for their hate speech, which the global media is delighted to broadcast. Dead, they’re dead. And killing them is the ultimate proof that they lack divine protection. Dead terrorists don’t kill.
Sentence one - blatant untruth. Who the fuck feels sympathy for a dictator, a mass murderer or a terrorist? Who doesn't find acts of terror appalling? Where does this guy get off spouting nonsense? Principled people feel due process should apply to all under the law and rightly deplore torture - he can fuck off if he thinks I or any of my principled western brethren will have my morals and principles breached for some lowlife scum snapping at our heels. Moral superiority comes from a steadfast adherence to principles.
I believe he is speaking of the outrage heard when people act as if there is no difference between waterboarding 2 people and drilling holes in peoples heads while hanging them from bridges. Waterboarding is bad .. I get it. I'm not so naive as to draw moral equivalences between the two though. The waterboarding of the two was done right after 9/11 in an attempt to get information and possibly save lives. The absolute slaughter we see from the terrorist against their own is not quite the same.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Pug wrote:

CameronPoe wrote:

The US is not interested in negotiations. It won't even speak to Syria or Iran.
I'm just going to say bullshit on two counts.

1) There has been plenty of negotiations, all failed.  why? Reason: #2

2) Refer to the quote re: "indisputable strength".  It seems both the US/Iran/Syria are struggling with the "indisputable" part.  Or to rephrase:

CameronPoe wrote:

They're more interested in engaging in what amounts to a political cock-measuring contest with Iran on the international stage.
In other words - Iran & Syria aren't being "forced" to the table.  Which is exactly what you are saying.
Has any member of the Bush administration sat across a table from Ayatollah Khameini, Bashar Al-Assad or Mahmoud Ahmedinejad? No.

Whereas Ahmedinejad has to resort to sending Bush letters via the Swiss embassy to try to get in contact:

http://www.president.ir/eng/ahmadinejad … ndex-e.htm

PS The indisputable strength line is bullshit. Israel appears to have indisputable strength: they fail at negotiations. The British appeared to have indisputable strength: they had to make many concessions to the IRA - an army they could not defeat - several of whose leading members now run the government in Northern Ireland.

Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-04-21 13:40:04)

CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 7: If we fight as fiercely as our enemies, we’re no better than them.

Did the bombing campaign against Germany turn us into Nazis? Did dropping atomic bombs on Japan to end the war and save hundreds of thousands of American lives, as well as millions of Japanese lives, turn us into the beasts who conducted the Bataan Death March?

The greatest immorality is for the United States to lose a war. While we seek to be as humane as the path to victory permits, we cannot shrink from doing what it takes to win. At present, the media and influential elements of our society are obsessed with the small immoralities that are inevitable in wartime. Soldiers are human, and no matter how rigorous their training, a miniscule fraction of our troops will do vicious things and must be punished as a consequence. Not everyone in uniform will turn out to be a saint, and not every chain of command will do its job with equal effectiveness. But obsessing on tragic incidents - of which there have been remarkably few in Iraq or Afghanistan - obscures the greater moral issue: the need to defeat enemies who revel in butchering the innocent, who celebrate atrocities, and who claim their god wants blood.
Here he goes again with the nonsense comparisons to Nazi Germany. If he wants to fight as fiercely as 'our enemies' then what he needs to do is what I said in a previous post - annihilate everything with a scorched earth policy, man, woman and child, irrespective of what 'faction' they belong to (they don't wear badges ye know). Basically - be a Stalin/Mao/Putin type character- be the opposite of what the US purports to stand for. He just does not get asymmetric warfare. I'm beginning to doubt his military credentials at this stage. America is almost entirely insulated from any threat posed by the middle east (let's face it - how frequently does the US homeland get attacked) and will never face an existential threat - unlike in WWII. He needs to wise up.

Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-04-21 13:48:48)

CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 8: The United States is more hated today than ever before.

Those who served in Europe during the Cold War remember enormous, often-violent protests against U.S. policy that dwarfed today’s let’s-have-fun-on-a-Sunday-afternoon rallies. Older readers recall the huge ban-the-bomb, pro-communist demonstrations of the 1950s and the vast seas of demonstrators filling the streets of Paris, Rome and Berlin to protest our commitment to Vietnam. Imagine if we’d had 24/7 news coverage of those rallies. I well remember serving in Germany in the wake of our withdrawal from Saigon, when U.S. soldiers were despised by the locals - who nonetheless were willing to take our money - and terrorists tried to assassinate U.S. generals.

The fashionable anti-Americanism of the chattering classes hasn’t stopped the world from seeking one big green card. As I’ve traveled around the globe since 9/11, I’ve found that below the government-spokesman/professional-radical level, the United States remains the great dream for university graduates from Berlin to Bangalore to Bogota.

On the domestic front, we hear ludicrous claims that our country has never been so divided. Well, that leaves out our Civil War. Our historical amnesia also erases the violent protests of the late 1960s and early 1970s, the mass confrontations, rioting and deaths. Is today’s America really more fractured than it was in 1968?
He makes some good points here although they oddly contradict the whole 'US being a global force for universal goodness' - it appears that a great great many people disagree for quite a few years, thus scotching his assertion. I certainly prefer Europe to the US. I have nothing against the US, I enjoy visiting it. But I prefer Europe. Nobody likes someone interfering where they shouldn't. It's quite simple really. Backing one horse against another in a domestic dispute is just not on.
Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6966|Texas - Bigger than France

CameronPoe wrote:

Pug wrote:

CameronPoe wrote:

The US is not interested in negotiations. It won't even speak to Syria or Iran.
I'm just going to say bullshit on two counts.

1) There has been plenty of negotiations, all failed.  why? Reason: #2

2) Refer to the quote re: "indisputable strength".  It seems both the US/Iran/Syria are struggling with the "indisputable" part.  Or to rephrase:

CameronPoe wrote:

They're more interested in engaging in what amounts to a political cock-measuring contest with Iran on the international stage.
In other words - Iran & Syria aren't being "forced" to the table.  Which is exactly what you are saying.
Has any member of the Bush administration sat across a table from Ayatollah Khameini, Bashar Al-Assad or Mahmoud Ahmedinejad? No.

Whereas Ahmedinejad has to resort to sending Bush letters via the Swiss embassy to try to get in contact:

http://www.president.ir/eng/ahmadinejad … ndex-e.htm

PS The indisputable strength line is bullshit. Israel appears to have indisputable strength: they fail at negotiations. The British appeared to have indisputable strength: they had to make many concessions to the IRA - an army they could not defeat - several of whose leading members now run the government in Northern Ireland.
Do we want to expand the debate here to Israel and Ireland?  I can do so if you wish, because in both cases the points raised are still valid.

Isn't that the speech he gave at Columbia University?  Wasn't Iran/Syria at the table to talk about the Palestinian talks lately?
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Pug wrote:

Do we want to expand the debate here to Israel and Ireland?  I can do so if you wish, because in both cases the points raised are still valid.

Isn't that the speech he gave at Columbia University?  Wasn't Iran/Syria at the table to talk about the Palestinian talks lately?
1. If you wish. Both the Irish and the Palestinians, though in positions of extreme military weakness, never ceased their struggle. Ireland was a thorn in the British colonial overlords side for 800 years. It appears the same applies in Palestine. They'd rather blow themselves up near some Israelis just to take a few of them down with them in revenge. I don't see how the indisputable strength is forcing Hamas to the table. I don't see how Britain's indisputable strength brought them to the table to in 1921.

2. No - it's an open letter to President Bush. It is not his speech. The US and Syria have not held any meetings with each other.

George Walker Bush: on Iran "And that is that, if they would like to engage the United States, that they've got to verifiably suspend their [nuclear] enrichment program."

Now I don't exactly think that amounts to being willing to negotiate with Iran. Why the pointless preconditions? Because the US doesn't want to talk to Iran about anything other than undermining them.

Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-04-21 15:14:06)

CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 9: Our invasion of Iraq created our terrorist problems.

This claim rearranges the order of events, as if the attacks of 9/11 happened after Baghdad fell. Our terrorist problems have been created by the catastrophic failure of Middle Eastern civilization to compete on any front and were exacerbated by the determination of successive U.S. administrations, Democrat and Republican, to pretend that Islamist terrorism was a brief aberration. Refusing to respond to attacks, from the bombings in Beirut to Khobar Towers, from the first attack on the Twin Towers to the near-sinking of the USS Cole, we allowed our enemies to believe that we were weak and cowardly. Their unchallenged successes served as a powerful recruiting tool.

Did our mistakes on the ground in Iraq radicalize some new recruits for terror? Yes. But imagine how many more recruits there might have been and the damage they might have inflicted on our homeland had we not responded militarily in Afghanistan and then carried the fight to Iraq. Now Iraq is al-Qaeda’s Vietnam, not ours.
I don't know of anyone who contends that the invasion of Iraq created the US' terrorists problems, which begs the question: who is he addressing in this excerpt?!? If there was no oil in the middle east none of us would hear peep out of the middle east, it would be just like Africa: a prime example of a continent we couldn't care less about whilst wallowing in our sated crepulence. Mountains of incidents of British, French, Russian and US interference in their political lives - modern economic and energy imperialism - is what has led to the terrorism, in addition to the stunted political institutions in the middle east many of which we fostered and supported for decades ironically using us or Israel as their scapegoat. If they had no resources they would mean nothing to us and they would just be another backwater. His brazen non-recognition of this renders his attitude and viewpoints on this region of the world almost null and void.

He also seems to be deluding himself into thinking that Al Qaeda operatives in Iraq right now are incapable of jumping on a plane to the US (or more probably Mexico), walking into a shop in the US, purchasing some fertiliser and blowing up the nearest school. Iraq is almost irrelevant in the 'war on terror' as far as logic is concerned.

Oh and I'll rephrase one of his comments: "Our continued presence on their oil-rich turf, support of their despotic governments, desire to impose our value system on them and support of Israel serves as a powerful recruiting tool."

Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-04-21 15:27:37)

Pug
UR father's brother's nephew's former roommate
+652|6966|Texas - Bigger than France

CameronPoe wrote:

Pug wrote:

Do we want to expand the debate here to Israel and Ireland?  I can do so if you wish, because in both cases the points raised are still valid.

Isn't that the speech he gave at Columbia University?  Wasn't Iran/Syria at the table to talk about the Palestinian talks lately?
1. If you wish. Both the Irish and the Palestinians, though in positions of extreme military weakness, never ceased their struggle. Ireland was a thorn in the British colonial overlords side for 800 years. It appears the same applies in Palestine. They'd rather blow themselves up near some Israelis just to take a few of them down with them in revenge. I don't see how the indisputable strength is forcing Hamas to the table. I don't see how Britain's indisputable strength brought them to the table to in 1921.

2. No - it's an open letter to President Bush. It is not his speech. The US and Syria have not held any meetings with each other.

George Walker Bush: on Iran "And that is that, if they would like to engage the United States, that they've got to verifiably suspend their [nuclear] enrichment program."

Now I don't exactly think that amounts to being willing to negotiate with Iran. Why the pointless preconditions? Because the US doesn't want to talk to Iran about anything other than undermining them.
1. I think the entire 12 points (modified for theme of course) apply - were the British going to win given the struggle lasted 800 years?  Do you think the British could have exterminated the Irish without a drawback?  Can the Israelis exterminate the Palestinians without drawbacks?  Were the Irish and the Palestinians FORCED to the table?  In Britain's case, it was the English who were forced to the table because the drawbacks were too grave for them to accept.  In Israel's case, no one is being forced to the table yet.

2. But isn't it both sides here?  Iran doesn't want to talk unless Israel is a bargaining chip.  Second, believe it or not, Syria was being courted by the US ten years ago to become like Jordan via a series of economic foundation building incentives and aid, which was turned down (for obvious reasons now), but then decided to go with Iran instead.  I could have sworn Syria and Iran were represented at the so-called "peace talks" between Israeli and Palestinians recently...hosted by Condi and Co.  Also, do you honestly believe both sides don't understand what the other wants?  (Where's Kmarion with his magic internet linking skills? lol)  The leaders don't meet until their minions work out the details.

So just like you said, it's a cock measuring contest.  On both sides.  Peters talks about it.  You agree to it, although you see it coming from one side only. 

But this is a muddied situation.  I thought we were talking about peace in Iraq?  Iran wants Israel on the table and its nuke program off the table.  US wants it to be three separate issues.  So instead, it's a proxy war that both sides are willing to fight.

Which means - no one is forced to the negotiation table. Yet.
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 10: If we just leave, the Iraqis will patch up their differences on their own.

The point may come at which we have to accept that Iraqis are so determined to destroy their own future that there’s nothing more we can do. But we’re not there yet, and leaving immediately would guarantee not just one massacre but a series of slaughters and the delivery of a massive victory to the forces of terrorism. We must be open-minded about practical measures, from changes in strategy to troop reductions, if that’s what the developing situation warrants. But it’s grossly irresponsible to claim that our presence is the primary cause of the violence in Iraq - an allegation that ignores history.
I spoke at length to an Arab colleague of mine last week. His relatives (cousins/aunty/uncle), who used to live in Baghdad, finally had to emigrate to Bahrain. He tells me that under Saddam Sunni and Shi'a and Kurd lived largely intermingled bearing no animosity towards one another. In fact two thirds of the Iraqi national army were Shi'a. No discrimination on the basis of ethnicity or gender existed in the education and employment sectors. Since America arrived entire communities of Shi'a, Sunni and Kurd have been forced to move wholesale into blast wall self policed ghettos. Since America arrived the role of women in society has regressed. His take on the matter, and I'm not saying this is gospel, but his take on the matter which derives from the tales of his relatives is that the US are to blame for fomenting this as they seek to 'divide and conquer'. Perhaps it is Arab conspiracy theorizing. He does not blame the nation that is the USA though. He was quite philosophical about it: it's the elite in the US that have brought this upon Iraq, while the ordinary Joe Soap soldiers on. Just as the British and French elites brought misery to far flung countries in years gone by.

Iraqis 'own future' is exactly that: THEIR OWN FUTURE. THEY DECIDE. They have no duty to adopt western cultural norms or systems of government and they have a right to self determine, just as the US did when it fought the British colonial empire and just as the US did when Lincoln took on Jefferson Davis. This man's ego and sense of importance is reminiscent of Napoleon or King George III.
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 11: It’s all Israel’s fault. Or the popular Washington corollary: “The Saudis are our friends.”

Israel is the Muslim world’s excuse for failure, not a reason for it. Even if we didn’t support Israel, Islamist extremists would blame us for countless other imagined wrongs, since they fear our freedoms and our culture even more than they do our military. All men and women of conscience must recognize the core difference between Israel and its neighbors: Israel genuinely wants to live in peace, while its genocidal neighbors want Israel erased from the map.

As for the mad belief that the Saudis are our friends, it endures only because the Saudis have spent so much money on both sides of the aisle in Washington. Saudi money continues to subsidize anti-Western extremism, to divide fragile societies, and encourage hatred between Muslims and all others. Saudi extremism has done far more damage to the Middle East than Israel ever did. The Saudis are our enemies.
He is right in saying that Israel is many Arab regimes excuse for their own failings. He then messes up what could have been a fine point by stating that Muslims fear 'our freedoms and our culture'. GET IT INTO YOUR THICK FUCKING SKULL RALPH. THE WORLD DOES NOT REVOLVE AROUND MCDONALDS AND FUCKING BOWLING. His sheer irreverence towards other cultures is mind-boggling. He wants to live in a purely homogenous world where no deviation from free market uninhibited movement of capital style of plutocracy irons out any pluralism in this world. It's the very essence of dictatorial megalomania. Well Ralph - SHOVE IT UP YOUR FUCKING ASS.

Last edited by CameronPoe (2008-04-21 15:59:03)

CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6980

Ralph Peters wrote:

Myth No. 12: The Middle East’s problems are all America’s fault.

Muslim extremists would like everyone to believe this, but it just isn’t true. The collapse of once great Middle Eastern civilizations has been under way for more than five centuries, and the region became a backwater before the United States became a country. For the first century and a half of our national existence, our relations with the people of the Middle East were largely beneficent and protective, notwithstanding our conflict with the Barbary Pirates in North Africa. But Islamic civilization was on a downward trajectory that could not be arrested. Its social and economic structures, its values, its neglect of education, its lack of scientific curiosity, the indolence of its ruling classes and its inability to produce a single modern state that served its people all guaranteed that, as the West’s progress accelerated, the Middle East would fall ever farther behind. The Middle East has itself to blame for its problems.

None of us knows what our strategic future holds, but we have no excuse for not knowing our own past. We need to challenge inaccurate assertions about our policies, about our past and about war itself. And we need to work within our community and state education systems to return balanced, comprehensive history programs to our schools. The unprecedented wealth and power of the United States allows us to afford many things denied to human beings throughout history. But we, the people, cannot afford ignorance.
Of course the Middle East is to blame for its own failings. They should be vastly more assertive and they should strive to self determine rather than wasting away under heavily armed despotic regimes. The people of Saudi Arabia need to take up arms against the House of Saud. The Iraqis need to have their civil war and build one or more states of their choosing in its place. The Arabs need to join together to take on Israel. Their own subservience to self-indulgent sheikhs and their tribalistic divisions inhibiting pan-Arab nationalism are what makes them weak and easy prey for the west. But the odds are stacked so highly in our favour that kicking them around is not a challenge anymore. His final point is probably his most accurate, although not completely (to think we in the west have not exploited them is naive and an untruth). All in all though is twelve myths were full of various flavours of self-important bullshit.
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|7006|SE London

It's because of idiots like Ralph Peters that the whole Iraq debacle happened at all.

Ralph Peters is a moron and those myths of war are full of shit.

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