san4
The Mas
+311|6947|NYC, a place to live
Is there a thread on the Baker commission report? I don't see one so here it is. Hey, it's a *bipartisan* report so I'm sure there's going to be a lot of Kumbaya-singing here.

I'll start. The Baker Commission's main proposal, to focus on training the Iraqi army and police, is naive and wishful thinking. There was a great op-ed in the NY Times a few months ago (sorry, all you NY Times haters, but I can't help reading it). It said people fight when they are dedicated and inspired. Training won't help someone who (a) just wants to kill ethnic enemies, (b) just wants to hide to avoid being killed by ethnic enemies, or (c) just needs the money and has no interest in facing any danger.

Thoughts?



edit: fixed a typo

Last edited by san4 (2006-12-06 21:01:22)

Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6663|North Carolina
I pretty much agree.  Withdrawal makes more sense than wasting anymore time or money on Iraq.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|6859|132 and Bush

san4 wrote:

Is there a thread on the Baker commission report? ]
No there isn't but use this for future reference .
http://our2142.com/tut/untitled.htm
(Searching)

Last edited by Kmarion (2006-12-06 21:11:07)

Xbone Stormsurgezz
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|6859|132 and Bush

san4 wrote:

I'll start. The Baker Commission's main proposal, to focus on training the Iraqi army and police, is naive and wishful thinking.
One thing I would like to add is why is it some forbidden to actually blame the Iraqi people for some of the failures.? I'm not trying to shift blame, we know we have our faults. But when the Americans took their independence they went and built towns and plowed fields, not walking around blowing each other up.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6663|North Carolina
I don't think it's forbidden.  It seems obvious that Iraq represents various sides of a religion that has yet to truly reform or evolve into modern decency.

Thankfully, most Muslims that immigrate to the West are more culturally modern than the ones that stay in the Middle East.  The liberals and reformists among Muslims are the ones that I can respect, but far too many ultraconservatives and traditionalists live in Iraq.  They are the types that become extremist.
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|6859|132 and Bush

Turquoise wrote:

I don't think it's forbidden.  It seems obvious that Iraq represents various sides of a religion that has yet to truly reform or evolve into modern decency.

Thankfully, most Muslims that immigrate to the West are more culturally modern than the ones that stay in the Middle East.  The liberals and reformists among Muslims are the ones that I can respect, but far too many ultraconservatives and traditionalists live in Iraq.  They are the types that become extremist.
Do you know what the difference between the ones here and the ones in Iraq?
Here they have hope and education. Something we unfortunately thought we could bring to them in the own country.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6663|North Carolina

Kmarion wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

I don't think it's forbidden.  It seems obvious that Iraq represents various sides of a religion that has yet to truly reform or evolve into modern decency.

Thankfully, most Muslims that immigrate to the West are more culturally modern than the ones that stay in the Middle East.  The liberals and reformists among Muslims are the ones that I can respect, but far too many ultraconservatives and traditionalists live in Iraq.  They are the types that become extremist.
Do you know what the difference between the ones here and the ones in Iraq?
Here they have hope and education. Something we unfortunately thought we could bring to them in the own country.
I sort of agree, but here's the key.  The ones that come to the West usually have a different mindset than the ones that stay in their native countries.  People who immigrate to America (Muslim and non-Muslim) are often trying to escape the oppression or desperation they are used to.  The ones who stay seem to accept and prefer it.  Whether or not they prefer it out of ignorance is dependent upon the person, but it definitely shows that their priorities are quite different from ours....

To put it bluntly, the ones that come to the West have figured out how outdated and oppressive theocracy can be....
Kmar
Truth is my Bitch
+5,695|6859|132 and Bush

The biggest impact will come from this statement.

"We do not recommend a stay-the-course solution," said James A. Baker III, the former secretary of state and Bush family adviser who was co-chairman of the commission. "In our opinion, that approach is no longer viable."

It's a pre-cursor of things to come.
Xbone Stormsurgezz
ATG
Banned
+5,233|6787|Global Command
The United States can not wield an iron fist in a velvet glove. You don't go into a country, kickout, kill and arrest their leaders and not have some resentment. I seriously kept waiting for them to announce that the oil revenues from Iraq would pay for our war, in addition to rebuilding, isn't there something about the spoils of war? When Germany invaded Russia they surrounded large cities like Leningrad, they set up the siege cannons and proceeded to murder and starve everybody.
     Perhaps the lesson  to be learned here is if you are not preparred to do that, just stick with sanctions and airstrikes. FFS we do not even have the balls to kill the Iranians and Syrians as they cross the border to bring weapons to and start shit in Iraq, we obviously do not have the intestinal fortitude to see this thing through.

Do you want to end roadside bombings? Announce that a square mile will be choosen at random and flatened without notice when one goes off. Do like the Germans did in WW1 and when you go into a town you take several hundred hostages randomly from the population, and shoot them all in public when one of our guys gets killed. That is war and if you can't stomach the idea stay the fuck out of it.
     America has no ideal worth fighting for that the Iraqis have embraced and joined us in. Fuck 'em. Iran cannot have the oil, fuck them. Bush and the Republicans actually thought they could invade a country, but not really fight a war. They thought history did not mean a goddamned thing and that everything would go different for America.
     Fuck them too.
    Either way, everybody seems fucked.
    Welcome to a quagmire. We have done this to ourselves.
Then when the WMD's did not materialize, I kept expecting W to dispatch some commandos to plant some, but, I guess nobody thought of that. Would easily have saved a lot of face.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nati … nworld-hed

It's not going that well for the private security details either.
Q, they pass half a dozen parked cars for the one explodes, what kind of stress must that be. And, what they hell would they be shooting at?
http://www.navyseals.com/community/navy … eo_16.html
RavyGravy
Son.
+617|6664|NSW, Australia

oh i thought you meant bread breaker, i was thinking why would they make a report
Bubbalo
The Lizzard
+541|6820
ATG is advocating Nazi policies, yet claims not to be a racist...........................
ATG
Banned
+5,233|6787|Global Command
Bull.
I said, unless you are  preparred to be brutal, do not think you can invade and occuply another country.
I updated my map btw;
https://i17.tinypic.com/2n6t941.gif
Added Sunnistan, Kurdistan, enlarged Syria.
beerface702
Member
+65|6951|las vegas

Kmarion wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

I don't think it's forbidden.  It seems obvious that Iraq represents various sides of a religion that has yet to truly reform or evolve into modern decency.

Thankfully, most Muslims that immigrate to the West are more culturally modern than the ones that stay in the Middle East.  The liberals and reformists among Muslims are the ones that I can respect, but far too many ultraconservatives and traditionalists live in Iraq.  They are the types that become extremist.
Do you know what the difference between the ones here and the ones in Iraq?
Here they have hope and education. Something we unfortunately thought we could bring to them in the own country.
education?

what US are you talking about?

our school system is horrid
Reciprocity
Member
+721|6839|the dank(super) side of Oregon

Kmarion wrote:

But when the Americans took their independence they went and built towns and plowed fields, not walking around blowing each other up.
We (Americans) took our independence because we, for the most part, wanted to.  Who ever said the majority of Iraqis wanted to be liberated from Hussein, and given Independence?  You can't necessairly expect someone to be grateful for something they didn't ask for.
GorillaTicTacs
Member
+231|6632|Kyiv, Ukraine
We (Americans) took our independence because we, for the most part, wanted to.  Who ever said the majority of Iraqis wanted to be liberated from Hussein, and given Independence?  You can't necessairly expect someone to be grateful for something they didn't ask for.
Ahh, another product of the American propoganda "Disney version" of American history, and by extension, world history.  Directly applying this to the current debate, after the British withdrawal from the area early this century they drew up very artificial borders which didn't much take into account deadly ethnic and religious differences, just their own political expediency.  Both the US and UK have been since laying down influence in many different ways to try to preserve this order they left behind, taking the form of blind military/financial support of Israel, funding radical islamic groups, installing and supporting dictators, military advisory of the most friendly tribe of the week, direct military intervention, arms sales of all kinds, etc. 

Somehow, with the 3-second goldfish memory, we waltz in once again to try to set "everything right" not realistically taking into account why they hate us already, why their own tensions exist, and even the roots of radical islam.  We are squarely to blame, as western powers, for just about every backwards mess that exists in the Middle East and we will continue to create more messes so long as those brown heathens are living on top of our oil.  They don't "hate us for our freedoms", they hate us for jerking them around for about 100 years or more.  They hate us because everywhere they look they see an American middle finger poking them in the ass, real or imagined.

The best thing we can do is to LEAVE, for real, and let them sort it out.  This will mean we need to figure out quick how to turn our ignored agricultural industry into energy producers.  It's win-win-win for everyone from John Q. Taxpayer, Farmer Fred, GI Joe, EXCEPT big oil (everyone in the current administration) and the religion industry ("what, no more holy war?").  If we remove ourselves as a "unifying enemy", then they will be forced to evolve along a different path as a society and culture.  Western influence has actually kept them about 100 years behind the power curve.  Liberal values and capitalism cannot be enforced at gunpoint.  Then its win-win again, we remove THEM as a unifying enemy so we are actually forced to evolve as a society instead of letting them drive our nation's mind set...how much money and space in the public debate has been devoted to demonizing foreigners as an excuse to waste taxpayer dollars and promote special interests (like big oil) in foreign countries? For example the Cold War (our excuse for dicking around Eastern Europe and Asia), war on drugs (our excuse for dicking around South America), and the War on Terra' (our excuse for dicking around the Middle East), collectively ALSO a convenient excuse for dicking around with our own civil rights back home.  Please, someone, put the adults back in charge.
Reciprocity
Member
+721|6839|the dank(super) side of Oregon

GorillaTicTacs wrote:

We (Americans) took our independence because we, for the most part, wanted to.  Who ever said the majority of Iraqis wanted to be liberated from Hussein, and given Independence?  You can't necessairly expect someone to be grateful for something they didn't ask for.
Ahh, another product of the American propoganda "Disney version" of American history, and by extension, world history.  Directly applying this to the current debate, after the British withdrawal from the area early this century they drew up very artificial borders which didn't much take into account deadly ethnic and religious differences, just their own political expediency.  Both the US and UK have been since laying down influence in many different ways to try to preserve this order they left behind, taking the form of blind military/financial support of Israel, funding radical islamic groups, installing and supporting dictators, military advisory of the most friendly tribe of the week, direct military intervention, arms sales of all kinds, etc. 

Somehow, with the 3-second goldfish memory, we waltz in once again to try to set "everything right" not realistically taking into account why they hate us already, why their own tensions exist, and even the roots of radical islam.  We are squarely to blame, as western powers, for just about every backwards mess that exists in the Middle East and we will continue to create more messes so long as those brown heathens are living on top of our oil.  They don't "hate us for our freedoms", they hate us for jerking them around for about 100 years or more.  They hate us because everywhere they look they see an American middle finger poking them in the ass, real or imagined.

The best thing we can do is to LEAVE, for real, and let them sort it out.  This will mean we need to figure out quick how to turn our ignored agricultural industry into energy producers.  It's win-win-win for everyone from John Q. Taxpayer, Farmer Fred, GI Joe, EXCEPT big oil (everyone in the current administration) and the religion industry ("what, no more holy war?").  If we remove ourselves as a "unifying enemy", then they will be forced to evolve along a different path as a society and culture.  Western influence has actually kept them about 100 years behind the power curve.  Liberal values and capitalism cannot be enforced at gunpoint.  Then its win-win again, we remove THEM as a unifying enemy so we are actually forced to evolve as a society instead of letting them drive our nation's mind set...how much money and space in the public debate has been devoted to demonizing foreigners as an excuse to waste taxpayer dollars and promote special interests (like big oil) in foreign countries? For example the Cold War (our excuse for dicking around Eastern Europe and Asia), war on drugs (our excuse for dicking around South America), and the War on Terra' (our excuse for dicking around the Middle East), collectively ALSO a convenient excuse for dicking around with our own civil rights back home.  Please, someone, put the adults back in charge.
Are you trying to argue with me, asshole?  because  I think you need to take another course in reading English.  please, at your leasure, read what I fucking wrote.
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6814
Bravo Iraq Study Group. I commend their report. A no bullshit assessment.
GorillaTicTacs
Member
+231|6632|Kyiv, Ukraine
Reciprocity wrote: Are you trying to argue with me, asshole?  because  I think you need to take another course in reading English.  please, at your leasure, read what I fucking wrote.
Specifically, I used the statement to back up the point that those that are ignorant of history are doomed to repeat it.  You made an erroneous statement about our own history to back up another erroneous statement about current events, being:

"We (Americans) took our independence because we, for the most part, wanted to.
We, for the most part, had no desire to break with Great Britain...in the beginning.  The revolutionaries and "founding fathers" were in a minority right up until the point where a winner could be called and/or the acts of the British occupiers became increasingly brutal.  Fleeing loyalists also brought the number of patriots up over time to the point at the end of the war a slim majority could be called "Patriots".  The other 67% or so (going with John Adams' 1/3, 1/3, 1/3 estimation) fell in to two camps, basically "fence sitters" (40%+) and "loyalists (to the British crown)" (20%, but losing over time as they fled).  I agree whole-heartedly with what happened, as the best of the founding fathers could be described as "liberals", "progressives", and most importantly "non-interventionists".  We could have been like Switzerland only 100x more, a financial and economic powerhouse WITHOUT enemies, but we strayed from these views at our own peril and chose to beat down the seductive path of empire building.

The parallel that could be drawn from this period of history and the current Iraq situation is how the actions of the British army, when occupying the land in support of their loyalists, eventually brought about the demise of public support.  Their inability to stop the "revolutionary terrorists" in a few token incidences and their blanket retaliations for such acts (hangings and property siezure), as well as the basic issue of "quartering of troops" in the homes of those they would be "protecting" did a great deal to turn both the foreign military support and popular local support in favor of the separatists.

Who ever said the majority of Iraqis wanted to be liberated from Hussein, and given Independence?
A majority of Iraqis were indeed quite happy that Saddam was gone, as pretty much every major political and ethnic force in that country was opposed to him...he just happened to be the most brutal (and US-backed) for quite a long time and could keep a lid on things.  Unfortunately, now that he's gone, they can't seem to get their act together and the puppets we put in place to control the situation are ex-oil shills or pro-Bush sycophants and chosen by our policies on these criteria.  Pretty much everyone with some integrity in our intelligence apparatus (myself included) pointed out these facts repeatedly before the invasion, but they (the political administration) did indeed cherry-pick what sounded good to them and ignore the fine print some of us painstakingly wrote right below the bullet statements.  Rumsfeld even put together his own intelligence office just to override and provide a "fair and balanced" opinion of any fact we at DIS handed to him.

So, if you want to call me an asshole for knowing what I know first-hand, go for it.  I just wanted to lay to rest some misconceptions that you are not alone in sharing with our fellow Americans.  While I do agree with your conclusion about "Not expecting people to be happy with what they didn't ask for", if taken wholly by itself out of context, I disagree with the context from which you drew it and to which you put it.  Next time I'll refrain from "serious debate" and go straight to name-calling instead.

Last edited by GorillaTicTacs (2006-12-07 04:28:15)

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