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In message , Dav1936531
writes Or, with the upcomming war against North Korea, we can just explain to the Iraqis that they've become just too much of a drain on our resources, pull all our forces out, and leave them to their own devices to sort out their problems. Of course, that means civil war. This is one of the dangers faced by Iraq that the Iraqis themselves may not be considering. The time to sort out their problems is very short. They really need to start hustling and cooperating with US forces to root out Saddam and whoever else is conductiing guerilla operations against the occupation before the tax paying population of the US decides it is just "casting it's pearls before swine" in Iraq: i.e., that the reconstruction efforts, and its costs, do not have any proportional payback in additional security to the US in terms of 1) reduction of a terrorist threat to the US, or 2) of securing a realiable oil supplier. You assume that the individuals with the power want a US-aligned outcome. All it needs is a faction whose goal is "grab and hold power at any cost, take all the money, slowly and horribly kill anyone who annoys us" - fits the Ba'ath Party nicely - and they're left _praying_ for a hasty US withdrawal. Of course, this is the perfect time for a crash WME program. Probably too smart for the Ba'ath, but if I had a faction in Iraq and was a ruthless scumbag that's what I'd do. Stay feared until the Yanks get bored and leave, grab power ASAP, then rush at some seriously photogenic Weapons of Mass Effect to (a) fend off acquisitive neighbours like Turkey and Iran, (b) to make the US leave us alone this time. Not militarily, just politically... "not _more_ 'alleged Iraqi chemical weapons!') Don't think from the viewpoint of a sensible Iraqi citizen wanting a quiet life: he doesn't get any say in matters. Everyone else, from the criminals to the terrorists to the Old Regime, want the US gone first and fighting over the carcass is 'aftermath'. -- When you have to kill a man, it costs nothing to be polite. W S Churchill Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
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From: Peter Kemp peter_n_kempathotmaildotcom
(Dav1936531) wrote: Or, with the upcomming war against North Korea, we can just explain to the Iraqis that they've become just too much of a drain on our resources, pull all our forces out, and leave them to their own devices to sort out their problems. Wow, great idea, leave a muslim country with an enmity for the US, no central government, and an awful lot of weapons collapse in on itself. Have you ever heard of Afghanistan and how well that went? And this time, the Taliban Mk II would have an enormous industrial base, immense oil reserves, and the know how in place to produce WMD (since there don't appear to be any WMD in the country at the moment!). Peter Kemp I didn't say that it was a great idea or even a course of strategy that should be attempted......bbbbuuuuuuttttttt...........the Iraqis may get left holding the short end of the stick should problems arise that require US resources to be dedicated somewhere else. That is why the Iraqis themselves (at least the ones who care about the future of Iraq) should be working at full speed to cooperate with US attempts to root out the terrorists and former Bathist elements and to set up a working democratic system of self government. Iraq might just find itself at the bottom of a long list of US priorities. In regards Afghanistan, the place surely became a hell-hole due to lack of US attention subsequent to their war against the Soviets, however, until such time as the place was used as a base by Osama and his gang to attack the US, the place held little strategic interest to the US. And once it was of strategic interest (9-11 attack), US military might made short work of clearing out the Taliban.....just like we can make short work of destroying whatever rears up in Iraq should we leave. (Yes I realize the situation in Afghanistan is ongoing and that US might alone was not solely responsible for the Taliban's defeat.) The Iarqi Air Force and air defense system no longer exits. Whatever arises in Iraq, if the US does pull out, is right in the cross hairs of the US Air Force which will be able to operate with almost complete impunity in Iraqi airspace. Ditto Iraq's armored forces.....command and control.....etc., etc. Dave |
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Peter Kemp wrote:
Wow, great idea, leave a muslim country with an enmity for the US, no central government, and an awful lot of weapons collapse in on itself. Just like Afghanistan in 1992. Cheers David |
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In article ,
Peter Kemp peter_n_kempathotmaildotcom wrote: It's not the conventional weapons of war that concern me. It's the hundreds of thousands of trained troops, a large fraction of which will have the knowhow to build bombs (not IEDs, but real, nasty weapons, like the one that severely damaged the UN building), and a lot of whom are not particularly fond of the US (and the UK, but to a much lesser degree for various reasons). Don't worry about it. The standard of training for most Iraqi troops was so pathetic that I sorta *hope* the renegade types are out there trying to make bombs. We'll be able to find them by the smoking craters that will appear wherever their workshops were. -- Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
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On Wed, 10 Sep 2003 02:42:47 GMT, Chad Irby wrote:
In article , Peter Kemp peter_n_kempathotmaildotcom wrote: It's not the conventional weapons of war that concern me. It's the hundreds of thousands of trained troops, a large fraction of which will have the knowhow to build bombs (not IEDs, but real, nasty weapons, like the one that severely damaged the UN building), and a lot of whom are not particularly fond of the US (and the UK, but to a much lesser degree for various reasons). Don't worry about it. The standard of training for most Iraqi troops was so pathetic that I sorta *hope* the renegade types are out there trying to make bombs. We'll be able to find them by the smoking craters that will appear wherever their workshops were. I take it you've not been keeping track of the news? Several intact bomb makers and bomb making labs seized, no reports of own goals. You may be overstating the case somewhat. Peter Kemp |
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In article ,
Peter Kemp peter_n_kempathotmaildotcom wrote: On Wed, 10 Sep 2003 02:42:47 GMT, Chad Irby wrote: Don't worry about it. The standard of training for most Iraqi troops was so pathetic that I sorta *hope* the renegade types are out there trying to make bombs. We'll be able to find them by the smoking craters that will appear wherever their workshops were. I take it you've not been keeping track of the news? Several intact bomb makers and bomb making labs seized, no reports of own goals. You may be overstating the case somewhat. The labs and bombers that have been "in play" have been the leftover Saudis, Syrians, and other "hired guns" that the Hussein regime kept in-country. The ones who have been causing the most trouble are, for the most part, foreign to Iraq. Note also that there just haven't been that many attacks (and they're getting less and less common as time goes by). One or two bombs, but they just don't have the talent pool to draw on to make a concerted effort. -- Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
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