Dilbert_X wrote:
FEOS wrote:
And where did they find traces of weapons grade? Oh, that's right. In Iran.
Need something to back that up.
And you need to read the links already provided.
Dilbert_X wrote:
You don't. It's simply time. Nothing else.
And a different system configuration, as noted in the OP.
As noted in multiple links provided, it is not a different configuration...it is simply more centrifuges running for longer. Same technology as they have now.
Dilbert_X wrote:
Like I said before: you have no idea what you're talking about.
Unless you were in the oval office you have no idea of what you're talking about.
Its crystal clear the 'objectives' weren't objectives at all, since there was no actual plan to achieve the publicly stated objectives.
Perhaps you should read what you just posted the next time you claim that there were motives other than those publicly stated.
I know the strategic objectives we were given. I know the operational objectives and tactical tasks that were derived from those. That is what was executed. If there were other strategic objectives that weren't provided, there was no way for them to be carried out, as all the planning was done based on the strategic objectives provided. Your argument is nonsensical. And completely typical.
PF wrote:
If the aim was to secure the WMD sites then why was a lot of the looting of WMD sites atributed to a failure to task military units to secure the sites?
That was fairly well documented: Not enough forces to secure the sites and continue to search other sites. So, when sites were found that didn't have WMD, they were abandoned and the forces moved on to other sites. The aim was to secure the WMD...not the sites (I hope you grasp the distinction between the two).
Yes, leaving sites (suspected WMD or otherwise) unsecured came back to bite everyone in the ass...Gen Shinseki was fairly prescient on the issue of required numbers of troops.
Dilbert_X wrote:
Ah whatever, the 'intel' on Iraq turned out to be entirely fabricated, no doubt the 'intel' on Iran will turn out to be fabricated.
No, it didn't. You can't prove any intel was "fabricated". All you can point to is intel that turned out to be wrong. That is a far, far, cry from being "fabricated".
Dilbert_X wrote:
I think FEOS' error is to assume he's important enough to be told anything of importance.
And your error is to assume that I wasn't told anything of importance.
I know for a fact that I wasn't told everything...but I certainly was told (and developed) a lot. Certainly enough to know what the overarching objectives were, the intel supporting targeting decisions and courses of action, and a lot of other things that you wouldn't have the first clue about. But please do continue to tell me what really happened. I'm always up for some good, inventive fiction to pass the time.