![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ...
"robert arndt" wrote in message m... The US postwar history: Facts arent your strong point are they ? Korea: stalemate South Korea was saved from the invading forces of the DPRK and now a prosperous democracy and ally. Meanwhile the DPRK moulders in a prison of its own making. Cuban Missile Crisis: stalemate Nope, the Soviet missiles were withdrawn as the US demanded. And the Jupiters from Turkey as Russia demanded, along with assurances that US would not invade Cuba. Stalemate. Vietnam: LOST Operation Eagle Claw (Iranian Hostage Rescue): Failure Lebanon: Marines blown up- failure True enough Reagan-Bush years: a string of success shooting down a few Libyan MiGs and attacking small puny nations with no AF- Victory? Then there's the little matter of the fall of communism, the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact and the collapse of the USSR Gulf War I: had to raise a coalition to fight another Third World nation, didn't finish the job which leads to Gulf War II. Kurds and population suffer as a result. The war aims of expelling Iraq from Kuwait were achieved The Balkans: another attack on an unworthy adversary. Serbs leave with their armor and military/police units intact. International force needed. The war aims of protecting the Kosovans from Serbian ethnic cleansing were achieved Terrorist attack on the USS Cole: failed Quite so, the ship was repaired and re-entered service It was a very sucessful attack. 56 casualties, a cool quarter billion in repairs, ship out of the service for more than an year. 9/11: could prevent terrorist attack, 3000 fatalities Afghanistan: attack on another unworthy adversary. Taliban and Osama escape into Pakistan. International force needed again. Failure. Success , Afghanistan is no longer a safe haven for terrorist groups Terrorists out, drug lords in. And I suppose all those reports of Taliban resurgence in the Pashtun areas are all propaganda. Iraq prewar: Fires at US aircraft for 7 years, US retaliates in 1998, Iraq resumes firing at US aircraft for 4 more years Gulf War II: US goes it alone, captures Saddam but cannot get real reconstruction support or troops needed to finish the job due to isolating UN and certain European nations- failure The British troops who took Southern Iraq and Basra tend to disagree about the going it alone bit. Wow, how underwhelming it all is. We seem to be able to pound into submission any puny Third World nation without a significant AF. Iraq started GW1 with the 4th largest army in the world and a large AF and air defence system, of course when it was over .... But we don't dare strike Iran, N Korea, or China. In fact China openly threatens the US over Taiwan and is militarily developing systems to defeat our stealth, satellites, and to attack the US with missiles in the future. Iran has threatened the US over its nuclear reactor and N Korea has done the same over its nuclear program which we failed to stop. BTW, try attacking the FSU even at its weakest... they have twice the nukes we have and we all know the history of those that invade Mother Russia. On their turf the US would lose, same in China. The difference of course is the US knows that, your hero Adolf didnt. So I don't care how many time you say Germany lost. Germany is the size of 1 US state and took on the world. It took everyone with everything to beat them. Germany had a larger population than any 10 states combined LOL! Tell us more. and controlled the combined industries of western europe and couldnt even beat Britain. Before the War Germany was a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Today it still is a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Before the war Britain was a major world power with a globe spanning empire - today it is a mere lackey to the US. Germany might not have won, but Britain sure seems to have lost. Keith |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "robert arndt" wrote in message m... The US postwar history: Facts arent your strong point are they ? Korea: stalemate South Korea was saved from the invading forces of the DPRK and now a prosperous democracy and ally. Meanwhile the DPRK moulders in a prison of its own making. Cuban Missile Crisis: stalemate Nope, the Soviet missiles were withdrawn as the US demanded. And the Jupiters from Turkey as Russia demanded, along with assurances that US would not invade Cuba. Stalemate. Older missiles already planned for removal--we had a new program coming online about that time which you may have heard of...Polaris? We also removed the Thors from the UK at about the same time, and for the same reasons--they were liquid fueled and had been made superfluous. snip Afghanistan: attack on another unworthy adversary. Taliban and Osama escape into Pakistan. International force needed again. Failure. Success , Afghanistan is no longer a safe haven for terrorist groups Terrorists out, drug lords in. And I suppose all those reports of Taliban resurgence in the Pashtun areas are all propaganda. Uhmmm... the key at this point is,as Keith pointed out, it is no longer serving as an open bazaar and training ground for terrorists--and that a few other nations took note and became a bit less receptive of other terrorist operations. snip Germany had a larger population than any 10 states combined LOL! Tell us more. Uhmmm...the total population of Germany in 1940 was some 80 million, the US population was about 130 million, with the top four states (NY, PA, TX, CA) only accounting for some 34 million--so you can run the numbers further if you like, but it appears Keith's statement is in fact correct. www.ciaonet.org/book/schweller/appendix.html and controlled the combined industries of western europe and couldnt even beat Britain. Before the War Germany was a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Today it still is a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Thank goodness for the Marshall Plan, huh? Before the war Britain was a major world power with a globe spanning empire - today it is a mere lackey to the US. That's not correct. The UK remains an independent nation; that it has happened to agree with the US in more cases than it disagrees is as much a product of common values than anything else. Reading anything further into it merely indicates a degree of paranoia on your part. Germany might not have won, No, there is no doubt--she did not win. Thank goodness for that, huh? but Britain sure seems to have lost. Lost what? Are you sure you are not confusing the UK with *France*? Now France *did* lose, just like Germany eventually lost...sorry if that all upsets you, but them's the facts. Brooks Keith |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ...
"Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "robert arndt" wrote in message m... The US postwar history: Facts arent your strong point are they ? Korea: stalemate South Korea was saved from the invading forces of the DPRK and now a prosperous democracy and ally. Meanwhile the DPRK moulders in a prison of its own making. Cuban Missile Crisis: stalemate Nope, the Soviet missiles were withdrawn as the US demanded. And the Jupiters from Turkey as Russia demanded, along with assurances that US would not invade Cuba. Stalemate. Older missiles already planned for removal--we had a new program coming online about that time which you may have heard of...Polaris? We also removed the Thors from the UK at about the same time, and for the same reasons--they were liquid fueled and had been made superfluous. Are you disputing the fact that missiles in turkey were removed on the insistence of the soviets? Then you are utterly wrong. The fact that the removed system was obsolete and due for removal anyway is immaterial. All you can claim is that the soviets could have bartered de-nuclearization of Cuba for some more useful concession - not that there was no concession. snip Afghanistan: attack on another unworthy adversary. Taliban and Osama escape into Pakistan. International force needed again. Failure. Success , Afghanistan is no longer a safe haven for terrorist groups Terrorists out, drug lords in. And I suppose all those reports of Taliban resurgence in the Pashtun areas are all propaganda. Uhmmm... the key at this point is,as Keith pointed out, it is no longer serving as an open bazaar and training ground for terrorists-- If Taliban comes, can Osama be far behind? and that a few other nations took note and became a bit less receptive of other terrorist operations. This is undoubtedly true. And certainly a good achievement. snip Germany had a larger population than any 10 states combined LOL! Tell us more. Uhmmm...the total population of Germany in 1940 was some 80 million, the US population was about 130 million, with the top four states (NY, PA, TX, CA) only accounting for some 34 million--so you can run the numbers further if you like, but it appears Keith's statement is in fact correct. www.ciaonet.org/book/schweller/appendix.html and controlled the combined industries of western europe and couldnt even beat Britain. Before the War Germany was a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Today it still is a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Thank goodness for the Marshall Plan, huh? Before the war Britain was a major world power with a globe spanning empire - today it is a mere lackey to the US. That's not correct. The UK remains an independent nation; There are degrees of independence. And I never said UK is not independence, merely a US lackey. that it has happened to agree with the US in more cases than it disagrees is as much a product of common values than anything else. ummm. I dare say you could be right. Both seem to value oil over life, propaganda over facts. Reading anything further into it merely indicates a degree of paranoia on your part. Perhaps reading anything less indicateds a degree of myopia on your part? And why in the world would anyone be afraid of the UK? Fear of US is understandable - its rich, powerful and governed by a mad hatter. But why would US+UK be particularly more frightful. It is like arguing that you are afraid of the gorilla because a chipmunk is backing it up. Germany might not have won, No, there is no doubt--she did not win. Thank goodness for that, huh? You feel very grateful, perhaps with cause. I dont have any particular reason to feel happy or unhappy about the German loss. To me it is a story of distant land in a distant time. Personally it is as emotionally immediate to me as Napoleans loss in Russia or Roman razing of Carthage; I dont grit my teeth at massacres of the assyrians, the golden horde, nazis or the bomber command. It is just sad but engrossing history to me. I have seen sufficient bad stuff in my own life time - I dont need to weep for generations long past. Learning from them is enough. Despite the untold tragedy and suffering the second world war wrought, there is atleast one shining bright point about that whole tragic affair. Thanks in large measure to Hitler and Roosevelt, the British Empire is now history. BTW I wonder when colonialism will be history. but Britain sure seems to have lost. Lost what? Are you sure you are not confusing the UK with *France*? I am talking about the fortunes of nations on a larger scale, not battles and wars. Think big (if at all possible). France was crushed in the first world war. It is yet to recover from that beating. UK was smashed in the second world war, not as badly as france, but smashed non the less. Now France *did* lose, just like Germany eventually lost... Indeed Germany lost. But it seemed to have bounced back pretty much to the same stature it had before the war. Cant say the same for France or UK can you? sorry if that all upsets you, but them's the facts. So nice of you to be concerned about my happiness Grofaz. Thanks. Brooks Keith |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... "Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "robert arndt" wrote in message m... The US postwar history: Facts arent your strong point are they ? Korea: stalemate South Korea was saved from the invading forces of the DPRK and now a prosperous democracy and ally. Meanwhile the DPRK moulders in a prison of its own making. Cuban Missile Crisis: stalemate Nope, the Soviet missiles were withdrawn as the US demanded. And the Jupiters from Turkey as Russia demanded, along with assurances that US would not invade Cuba. Stalemate. Older missiles already planned for removal--we had a new program coming online about that time which you may have heard of...Polaris? We also removed the Thors from the UK at about the same time, and for the same reasons--they were liquid fueled and had been made superfluous. Are you disputing the fact that missiles in turkey were removed on the insistence of the soviets? Then you are utterly wrong. If you read the account by Andrei Gromyko you will find that the Kennedy administration did indeed agree to eventually remove the Jupiters from Turkey, as a sop to Khrushchev. Interestingly, that subject is not even mentioned in notes from participants in the closed door Kremlin meetings regarding how to wiggle out of the dilemma the Soviets found themselves in: millercenter.virginia.edu/resources/ print/kremlin/kremlin_two_views.pdf On the other hand, notes from high level US meetings at the same time indicate: "The President recalled that over a year ago we wanted to get the Jupiter missiles out of Turkey because they had become obsolete and of little military value. If the missiles in Cuba added 50% to Soviet nuclear capability, then to trade these missiles for those in Turkey would be of great military value." www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/diplomacy/ forrel/cuba/cuba090.htm So we gave away missiles we had already been planning on removing--big deal. More interesting is the fact that the Kennedys wanted to keep the Jupiter removal portion of the deal secret (which is about par for the Kennedy clan). The fact that the removed system was obsolete and due for removal anyway is immaterial. All you can claim is that the soviets could have bartered de-nuclearization of Cuba for some more useful concession - not that there was no concession. Is it a "concession" when it agrees with your own internal desires and plans? I think not. I'd call that more in the line of a bargain (and be aware that my views on this have changed over the past year or two, after this subject was previously discussed and I had reason to peruse Gromyko's book, followed by a bit of reading on where the Jupiter program was going at the time). I am not a big Kennedy fan, to put it mildly--but in this case he gave up what we already wanted to rid ourselves of and in the process swecured what we *wanted*, namely the removal of those SS-4's from Cuba. snip Afghanistan: attack on another unworthy adversary. Taliban and Osama escape into Pakistan. International force needed again. Failure. Success , Afghanistan is no longer a safe haven for terrorist groups Terrorists out, drug lords in. And I suppose all those reports of Taliban resurgence in the Pashtun areas are all propaganda. Uhmmm... the key at this point is,as Keith pointed out, it is no longer serving as an open bazaar and training ground for terrorists-- If Taliban comes, can Osama be far behind? "If 'ifs and buts' were candy and nuts..." It appears that the majority of Afghanis are quite happy to be rid of the Taliban leadership; deposing them from power was a *good* thing. AQ is not able to use Afghanistan as a free-movement area and training base--that too is a good thing. and that a few other nations took note and became a bit less receptive of other terrorist operations. This is undoubtedly true. And certainly a good achievement. Considering the fact that the opposing cost, in terms of casualties and even reconstruction aid/support to Afghanistan, has not been very high, OEF has been a significant success. snip Germany had a larger population than any 10 states combined LOL! Tell us more. Uhmmm...the total population of Germany in 1940 was some 80 million, the US population was about 130 million, with the top four states (NY, PA, TX, CA) only accounting for some 34 million--so you can run the numbers further if you like, but it appears Keith's statement is in fact correct. www.ciaonet.org/book/schweller/appendix.html and controlled the combined industries of western europe and couldnt even beat Britain. Before the War Germany was a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Today it still is a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Thank goodness for the Marshall Plan, huh? Before the war Britain was a major world power with a globe spanning empire - today it is a mere lackey to the US. That's not correct. The UK remains an independent nation; There are degrees of independence. And I never said UK is not independence, merely a US lackey. Uhmm..in most peoples minds, the two terms are sort of opposites. The UK remains capable of determining its own course. In fact, Blair has reportedly had some success in steering our own policy in a slightly different direction at times over the past few years. Most USians still have a great deal of respect for the UK, and while it cannot any longer muster the level of economic or military power that the US can wield, it is considered to be a partner as opposed to a "lackey". Common language (for the most part) and a lot of common history makes for a pretty strong relationship between the two nations. that it has happened to agree with the US in more cases than it disagrees is as much a product of common values than anything else. ummm. I dare say you could be right. Both seem to value oil over life, No. That would be your rather infantile characterization. We *do* value stability in a region that controls such a significant portion of a commodity vital to most of the rest of the world. You act as if this is some sort of colonial conquest--but in fact we are trying to disengage from Iraq just as quickly as we can, and let the Iraqi people get back to running their own government and affairs. That would be another one of those "good things", when compared to what they have had to endure over the past thirty years or so. propaganda over facts. It would appear that you are the one valuing propaganda over facts, since you have bought into the "US wants the Iraqi oil" whacky conspiracy theory. You seem to accept the propaganda put out by the former Iraqi regime without question. Reading anything further into it merely indicates a degree of paranoia on your part. Perhaps reading anything less indicateds a degree of myopia on your part? No. And why in the world would anyone be afraid of the UK? I doubt the UK's goal is to be feared. But I can't think of any nation, other than the US, that could contemplate going toe-to-toe with the UK in a military confrontation without coming out of it hurting a hell of a lot worse than when it went into it, and most would outright lose. Fear of US is understandable - its rich, powerful Yep, we are. snip inane whining But why would US+UK be particularly more frightful. It is like arguing that you are afraid of the gorilla because a chipmunk is backing it up. That "chipmunk" has some of the best light infantry troops in the world. It has an extremely professional and capable (despite its diminished size) naval force. The RAF is likewise very professional, on a par with the USAF. During OEF the RAF offered some capabilities that were rather handy to our CENTCOM folks--additional ISR assets, including the venerable Canberra PR9 and IIRC their SIGINT Nimrods, and a very valuableaerial refueling contribution that was especially of value to our USN assets. Their SOF are truly world class. That is one mean little chipmunk you have there. Germany might not have won, No, there is no doubt--she did not win. Thank goodness for that, huh? You feel very grateful, perhaps with cause. I dont have any particular reason to feel happy or unhappy about the German loss. Really? Very few folks in this world can claim to be ambivalent about the spectre of Nazism being triumphant in that war; those that do have a serious morality flaw. To me it is a story of distant land in a distant time. Personally it is as emotionally immediate to me as Napoleans loss in Russia or Roman razing of Carthage; I dont grit my teeth at massacres of the assyrians, the golden horde, nazis or the bomber command. It is just sad but engrossing history to me. My, it must be nice (or should i just say naive?) to be able to ignore the gas chambers, the ovens, the Einzatsgruppen, etc., or to consider that the defeat of the regime that championed those developments during our parents lifetime (for many of us) was "no big deal", so to speak. I have seen sufficient bad stuff in my own life time - I dont need to weep for generations long past. Learning from them is enough. Despite the untold tragedy and suffering the second world war wrought, there is atleast one shining bright point about that whole tragic affair. Thanks in large measure to Hitler and Roosevelt, the British Empire is now history. One has to wonder what your nationality and background is to have all of this pent-up hostility towards the British that you demonstrate. Odd that you are so forgiving, or uncaring, regarding the cause of Nazism, yet so willing to cling to your own archaic hatred of the "British Empire". snip but Britain sure seems to have lost. Lost what? Are you sure you are not confusing the UK with *France*? I am talking about the fortunes of nations on a larger scale, not battles and wars. Think big (if at all possible). France was crushed in the first world war. It is yet to recover from that beating. UK was smashed in the second world war, not as badly as france, but smashed non the less. Odd, in that they were on the winning side. The disintegration of their former "empire", in the real sense of the word, was well underway before the war. And I note that the Brits did not put a great deal of effort into retaining control of its old colonial holdings. Time marches on and the world changes; the UK accepted that and has maintained a rather important place in the greater scheme of world order. That would be another "good thing", by the way, especially when you consider the alternative had they not been on the winning side during WWII. Now France *did* lose, just like Germany eventually lost... Indeed Germany lost. But it seemed to have bounced back pretty much to the same stature it had before the war. Cant say the same for France or UK can you? In the case of the UK, yes I can. Brooks sorry if that all upsets you, but them's the facts. So nice of you to be concerned about my happiness Grofaz. Thanks. Brooks Keith |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ...
"Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... "Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "robert arndt" wrote in message m... The US postwar history: Facts arent your strong point are they ? Korea: stalemate South Korea was saved from the invading forces of the DPRK and now a prosperous democracy and ally. Meanwhile the DPRK moulders in a prison of its own making. Cuban Missile Crisis: stalemate Nope, the Soviet missiles were withdrawn as the US demanded. And the Jupiters from Turkey as Russia demanded, along with assurances that US would not invade Cuba. Stalemate. Older missiles already planned for removal--we had a new program coming online about that time which you may have heard of...Polaris? We also removed the Thors from the UK at about the same time, and for the same reasons--they were liquid fueled and had been made superfluous. Are you disputing the fact that missiles in turkey were removed on the insistence of the soviets? Then you are utterly wrong. If you read the account by Andrei Gromyko you will find that the Kennedy administration did indeed agree to eventually remove the Jupiters from Turkey, as a sop to Khrushchev. Interestingly, that subject is not even mentioned in notes from participants in the closed door Kremlin meetings regarding how to wiggle out of the dilemma the Soviets found themselves in: millercenter.virginia.edu/resources/ print/kremlin/kremlin_two_views.pdf On the other hand, notes from high level US meetings at the same time indicate: "The President recalled that over a year ago we wanted to get the Jupiter missiles out of Turkey because they had become obsolete and of little military value. If the missiles in Cuba added 50% to Soviet nuclear capability, then to trade these missiles for those in Turkey would be of great military value." www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/diplomacy/ forrel/cuba/cuba090.htm So we gave away missiles we had already been planning on removing--big deal. More interesting is the fact that the Kennedys wanted to keep the Jupiter removal portion of the deal secret (which is about par for the Kennedy clan). So you do agree after all that the Americans missiles were removed on Soviet insistence. It was merely a happy coincidence that the jupiter was not worth its keep. The americans also pledged not to attempt to invade Cuba again (a pledge I understand still stands) - this was a non-trivial political concession. The fact that the removed system was obsolete and due for removal anyway is immaterial. All you can claim is that the soviets could have bartered de-nuclearization of Cuba for some more useful concession - not that there was no concession. Is it a "concession" when it agrees with your own internal desires and plans? I think not. It is a concession because you give the other chaps what they demand - it is secondary weather the concession happens to be quite agreeable to you. I'd call that more in the line of a bargain yes, I can go with that. The Cuban missile affair ended in a bargain, with concessions being made by both sides to accomodate the other. Hence my original contention, a stalemate. (and be aware that my views on this have changed over the past year or two, after this subject was previously discussed and I had reason to peruse Gromyko's book, followed by a bit of reading on where the Jupiter program was going at the time). I am not a big Kennedy fan, to put it mildly--but in this case he gave up what we already wanted to rid ourselves of and in the process swecured what we *wanted*, namely the removal of those SS-4's from Cuba. snip Afghanistan: attack on another unworthy adversary. Taliban and Osama escape into Pakistan. International force needed again. Failure. Success , Afghanistan is no longer a safe haven for terrorist groups Terrorists out, drug lords in. And I suppose all those reports of Taliban resurgence in the Pashtun areas are all propaganda. Uhmmm... the key at this point is,as Keith pointed out, it is no longer serving as an open bazaar and training ground for terrorists-- If Taliban comes, can Osama be far behind? "If 'ifs and buts' were candy and nuts..." It appears that the majority of Afghanis are quite happy to be rid of the Taliban leadership; deposing them from power was a *good* thing. As the standard of living there has taken a plunge since the war on afghanistan and a bad government has been replaced with no government, religious fundamentalists have been replaced by drug lords, free road traffic been replaced by tolls to local warloads holding the cross-roads etc. I am not certain that it was such a "good" thing after all. Had you mananged to install a government representative of the people, and which is supportive of *their* interests, built up the infrastructure bombed in the war, *then* it would indeed have been a good thing. As things stand it is not. AQ is not able to use Afghanistan as a free-movement area and training base--that too is a good thing. I believe the Taliban is moving quite freely in most parts. Osama never had a problem moving around in the North West Frontier area of pakistan. And the terrorists dont need extensive training facilities - they are typically very small in number and can be quite easily trained covertly and unobstrusively. US presence in a small fraction of the country does not inhibit their training in any significant fashion. and that a few other nations took note and became a bit less receptive of other terrorist operations. This is undoubtedly true. And certainly a good achievement. Considering the fact that the opposing cost, in terms of casualties and even reconstruction aid/support to Afghanistan, has not been very high, OEF has been a significant success. I disagree. The cost has been very high (as it has mostly been afghans killed and remnants of afghan infrastructure destroyed I dont think it matters greatly to the US). But I do agree with you that reconstruction aid to afghanistan has been a pittance. There have been no significant success other than the general change in the world wide political climate of lessened overt support to a *certain* class of terrorist activities. So I'd say that overall the OEF has been a dismal failure. snip Germany had a larger population than any 10 states combined LOL! Tell us more. Uhmmm...the total population of Germany in 1940 was some 80 million, the US population was about 130 million, with the top four states (NY, PA, TX, CA) only accounting for some 34 million--so you can run the numbers further if you like, but it appears Keith's statement is in fact correct. www.ciaonet.org/book/schweller/appendix.html and controlled the combined industries of western europe and couldnt even beat Britain. Before the War Germany was a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Today it still is a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Thank goodness for the Marshall Plan, huh? I am not an american so I hope you will understand if I am not as wildly gleeful as you are about a plan that helped develop and sustain markets for US industries. But I can quite understand you enthusiasm for the plan. I am fairly certain that a sizeable fraction of the western europeans also share your approval for the plan. Before the war Britain was a major world power with a globe spanning empire - today it is a mere lackey to the US. That's not correct. The UK remains an independent nation; There are degrees of independence. And I never said UK is not independence, merely a US lackey. Uhmm..in most peoples minds, the two terms are sort of opposites. Good thing then that my english is slightly better than that of most people then. Lackey: A person who tries to please someone in order to gain a personal advantage Independent: Free from external control and constraint You could be independent as well as a lackey - for instance UK and its relationship with the US. The UK remains capable of determining its own course. Of course. Its just that the best course its leadership sees is to ride on US coat-tails. It agrees on the pound and pretends to vociferously disagree on the penny to maintain an apperance on independence. In fact, Blair has reportedly had some success in steering our own policy in a slightly different direction at times over the past few years. 'Slightly' is the key word. Necessary to maintain a facade of independent thought. Most USians still have a great deal of respect for the UK, So do I. Just not for the current political leadership. and while it cannot any longer muster the level of economic or military power that the US can wield, it is considered to be a partner as opposed to a "lackey". That is very polite on your part and I am sure much appreciated by our British friends. Common language (for the most part) and a lot of common history makes for a pretty strong relationship between the two nations. I dont disagree. But that is not the cause for the surprising degree of synchronization of geo-political objectives and means to achieve them that we are seeing. that it has happened to agree with the US in more cases than it disagrees is as much a product of common values than anything else. ummm. I dare say you could be right. Both seem to value oil over life, No. That would be your rather infantile characterization. We *do* value stability in a region that controls such a significant portion of a commodity vital to most of the rest of the world. Oh, right! The US is actually doing it for us (the ungrateful unwashed of the rest of the world)! Oil production and distribution was not impeded by Saddam, he was pretty keen to sell oil - plenty of oil. Maybe it is just my bad memory, but my distinct impression was that the war was all about the non-existant WMD. You act as if this is some sort of colonial conquest-- Well the problem is that it is a colonial conquest - you just acknowledged it in your last sentence. You want to control the oil (stability was the euphemism used). Colonialism being the use of a weaker countries resources to enrich the stronger one. but in fact we are trying to disengage from Iraq just as quickly as we can, and let the Iraqi people get back to running their own government and affairs. The Iraqis will not be able to have an independent foreign policy - specifically those relating to its immediate neighbours and the State of Isreal. The Iraqis will not be able to have sovereign control of its natural resources (specifically oil). Large number of foreign troops will continue to hold and occupy bases within its territory. Its armed forces will be critically dependent on one certain nation for material and training. Other than that Iraq will be a 'completely' free country. That would be another one of those "good things", when compared to what they have had to endure over the past thirty years or so. propaganda over facts. It would appear that you are the one valuing propaganda over facts, since you have bought into the "US wants the Iraqi oil" whacky conspiracy theory. You seem to accept the propaganda put out by the former Iraqi regime without question. First, ad hominem circumstantial: The argument is false because saddam said it was true? Second, Well atleast Saddam told atleast one truth (that he had no WMD). That was a hell of a lot more truthful then Bush. Reading anything further into it merely indicates a degree of paranoia on your part. Perhaps reading anything less indicateds a degree of myopia on your part? No. Well then neither does it indicate paranoia on my part then. And why in the world would anyone be afraid of the UK? I doubt the UK's goal is to be feared. But I can't think of any nation, other than the US, that could contemplate going toe-to-toe with the UK in a military confrontation without coming out of it hurting a hell of a lot worse than when it went into it, and most would outright lose. Same could be said for half a dozen other nations. So? Fear of US is understandable - its rich, powerful Yep, we are. snip inane whining But why would US+UK be particularly more frightful. It is like arguing that you are afraid of the gorilla because a chipmunk is backing it up. That "chipmunk" has some of the best light infantry troops in the world. It has an extremely professional and capable (despite its diminished size) naval force. The RAF is likewise very professional, on a par with the USAF. During OEF the RAF offered some capabilities that were rather handy to our CENTCOM folks--additional ISR assets, including the venerable Canberra PR9 and IIRC their SIGINT Nimrods, and a very valuableaerial refueling contribution that was especially of value to our USN assets. Their SOF are truly world class. That is one mean little chipmunk you have there. Its a first class chipmunk - biggest, baddest chipmunk if it pleases you. It remains a chipmunk backing the gorilla. Germany might not have won, No, there is no doubt--she did not win. Thank goodness for that, huh? You feel very grateful, perhaps with cause. I dont have any particular reason to feel happy or unhappy about the German loss. Really? Very few folks in this world can claim to be ambivalent about the spectre of Nazism being triumphant in that war; those that do have a serious morality flaw. I am not ambivalent. Merely disinterested. Nazism lost. Communism, which was nearly as bad (if not quite) was trimphant in that war. Preciously little difference it would have made to me if had happened the other way around - with one ******* winning instead of the other. To me it is a story of distant land in a distant time. Personally it is as emotionally immediate to me as Napoleans loss in Russia or Roman razing of Carthage; I dont grit my teeth at massacres of the assyrians, the golden horde, nazis or the bomber command. It is just sad but engrossing history to me. My, it must be nice (or should i just say naive?) to be able to ignore the gas chambers, the ovens, the Einzatsgruppen, etc., or to consider that the defeat of the regime that championed those developments during our parents lifetime (for many of us) was "no big deal", so to speak. Fallacy here is that you consider being dispassionate is equivalent to lacking moral fiber or judgement. I was bitterly pained by the apathy with which the world treated the holocost in Rwanda. I am glad to say that I have now been cured of such finer sentiments now. That was a coming of age experiance for me and purged me of such virses like idealism or belief in truth, justice and equality on the international scale. And really, do you weep when you read about the sack of Bagdad by the mongols? Or the razing of Carthage? Or the hundred thousand killed in the firebombing of Tokyo? Why not? What did you (or your government) do about the genocide in East Pakistan? Or Rwanda? Actively Supported one and precious little in the other case. Forgive me if I am singularly unimpressed with American claims of fighting the holocost or the genocide in world war two. They fought for their own carefully calculated, coldly weighed reasons. I have seen sufficient bad stuff in my own life time - I dont need to weep for generations long past. Learning from them is enough. Despite the untold tragedy and suffering the second world war wrought, there is atleast one shining bright point about that whole tragic affair. Thanks in large measure to Hitler and Roosevelt, the British Empire is now history. One has to wonder what your nationality and background is to have all of this pent-up hostility towards the British that you demonstrate. As with any other person my nationality and background has a lot to do with my attitudes to views. I did write "To me it is a story of distant land in a distant time", it should have been fairly obvious to anyone that from my background the second world war is not exactly a very emotive issue for me. I have no hostility to the British - for instance I am quite partial to its cricket team. I am certainly critical of the current British government (as is a very sizeable fraction of the British populace itself). You have a rather unfortunately tendency to jump to conclusions and generalizations. Odd that you are so forgiving, or uncaring, regarding the cause of Nazism, yet so willing to cling to your own archaic hatred of the "British Empire". This utter lack of comprehension on such issues is not an uncommon problem amongst Americans. I think it can be atleast partially attributed to the insularity and ignorance of what happens to and what makes the rest of the world tick. snip but Britain sure seems to have lost. Lost what? Are you sure you are not confusing the UK with *France*? I am talking about the fortunes of nations on a larger scale, not battles and wars. Think big (if at all possible). France was crushed in the first world war. It is yet to recover from that beating. UK was smashed in the second world war, not as badly as france, but smashed non the less. Odd, in that they were on the winning side. Yeah, war's a funny business. Just because you win doesnt mean that you are better off than before. Contact Bush jr for details. The disintegration of their former "empire", in the real sense of the word, was well underway before the war. Yes, But it would have persisted a lot longer if the WW2 hadnt happened as and when it did. Hence for a very large fraction of the world the spat between Germany and Britain and the US/Japan was, while tragic, ultimately very welcome. And I note that the Brits did not put a great deal of effort into retaining control of its old colonial holdings. The fact is that they were literally too exhausted to hang on to their possesions. Due credit to them to make a virtue out of necessity. Time marches on and the world changes; the UK accepted that and has maintained a rather important place in the greater scheme of world order. Oh yes, UK is still important in world affairs - thanks to its large economy. My argument is that it was a preeminent power before, and is now a decidedly second/third rung power. That would be another "good thing", by the way, especially when you consider the alternative had they not been on the winning side during WWII. They would have been worse off if they lost. Your point in reiterating the obvious? Now France *did* lose, just like Germany eventually lost... Indeed Germany lost. But it seemed to have bounced back pretty much to the same stature it had before the war. Cant say the same for France or UK can you? In the case of the UK, yes I can. Very well. What was the relative economic/military standing of the UK in 1913, 1938 and 2000? Brooks sorry if that all upsets you, but them's the facts. So nice of you to be concerned about my happiness Grofaz. Thanks. Brooks Keith |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... "Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... "Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "robert arndt" wrote in message m... The US postwar history: Facts arent your strong point are they ? Korea: stalemate South Korea was saved from the invading forces of the DPRK and now a prosperous democracy and ally. Meanwhile the DPRK moulders in a prison of its own making. Cuban Missile Crisis: stalemate Nope, the Soviet missiles were withdrawn as the US demanded. And the Jupiters from Turkey as Russia demanded, along with assurances that US would not invade Cuba. Stalemate. Older missiles already planned for removal--we had a new program coming online about that time which you may have heard of...Polaris? We also removed the Thors from the UK at about the same time, and for the same reasons--they were liquid fueled and had been made superfluous. Are you disputing the fact that missiles in turkey were removed on the insistence of the soviets? Then you are utterly wrong. If you read the account by Andrei Gromyko you will find that the Kennedy administration did indeed agree to eventually remove the Jupiters from Turkey, as a sop to Khrushchev. Interestingly, that subject is not even mentioned in notes from participants in the closed door Kremlin meetings regarding how to wiggle out of the dilemma the Soviets found themselves in: millercenter.virginia.edu/resources/ print/kremlin/kremlin_two_views.pdf On the other hand, notes from high level US meetings at the same time indicate: "The President recalled that over a year ago we wanted to get the Jupiter missiles out of Turkey because they had become obsolete and of little military value. If the missiles in Cuba added 50% to Soviet nuclear capability, then to trade these missiles for those in Turkey would be of great military value." www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/diplomacy/ forrel/cuba/cuba090.htm So we gave away missiles we had already been planning on removing--big deal. More interesting is the fact that the Kennedys wanted to keep the Jupiter removal portion of the deal secret (which is about par for the Kennedy clan). So you do agree after all that the Americans missiles were removed on Soviet insistence. Actually, no. Soviet insistence had darned little to do with it--we were already planning on removing those missiles, and when Gromyko presented the proposal to have the US do so the White House jumped on it. From reading Gromyko's comments (it has been a year or so, but I think I have the gist right), it is apparent that the Soviets were going to cave on the missiles in Cuba, and our agreement to *eventually* remove the missiles from Turkey was more of a sop to keep Khrushchev to save some face when he presented the plan to his cronies. It was merely a happy coincidence that the jupiter was not worth its keep. You must have missed that comment regarding the desire to remove the missiles from Turkey being expressed "over a year ago", huh? The americans also pledged not to attempt to invade Cuba again (a pledge I understand still stands) - this was a non-trivial political concession. The only time we ever came close to conducting an invasion with US military forces was during the crisis itself. Why would we have wanted to invade otherwise? Hell, Cuba has been a great posterchild for the "why you DON'T want your nation to go communist" cause. The fact that the removed system was obsolete and due for removal anyway is immaterial. All you can claim is that the soviets could have bartered de-nuclearization of Cuba for some more useful concession - not that there was no concession. Is it a "concession" when it agrees with your own internal desires and plans? I think not. It is a concession because you give the other chaps what they demand - it is secondary weather the concession happens to be quite agreeable to you. Look up "concession"--the approriate definition of the root word (concede) is "to yield". Which means to forego your own desired result. We GOT our own desired results on both fronts--no Soviet missiles in Cuba, and we pulled the Jupters that we already wanted to remove. That does not equal a "concession". I'd call that more in the line of a bargain yes, I can go with that. The Cuban missile affair ended in a bargain, with concessions being made by both sides to accomodate the other. Again, when you give up what you already are trying to get rid of, that is not a "concession". I am guessing that english is not your native tongue; nothing wrong with that, of course, but if you are going to start arguing the nuances of the wording, you might want to freshen up your vocabulary. Hence my original contention, a stalemate. Not really. snip "If 'ifs and buts' were candy and nuts..." It appears that the majority of Afghanis are quite happy to be rid of the Taliban leadership; deposing them from power was a *good* thing. As the standard of living there has taken a plunge since the war on afghanistan It has? H'mmm...those folks the Taliban executed outright on a rather routine basis might have argued that their "standard of living" could not have gotten any worse. The Afghani women would also likely tell you that their standard of living today is better than it was. What guage are you going to use to measure the changes? Television ownership maybe? ISTR that under the Taliban the reported number of privately owned TV's would have been a big zero--it has now mushroomed, apparently... ![]() and a bad government has been replaced with no government, Well, not just bad, but inherently *evil*; blasting those Buddhist reliefs was indicative of that. They now have a constitution ready for approval, IIRC; only what, two years after the Taliban was removed from power? heck, here isn the US it took us fourteen years after the British signed the peace treaty before we had our constitution in hand. snip more whining AQ is not able to use Afghanistan as a free-movement area and training base--that too is a good thing. I believe the Taliban is moving quite freely in most parts. Well, lucky for us, *your* beliefs don't hold much water, right? Osama never had a problem moving around in the North West Frontier area of pakistan. He does now. And the terrorists dont need extensive training facilities - Actually, they do if they want to have major "successes" like 9-11. What, you think the fact that there have been major terrorist training facilities (in a number of nations) over the past few decades was just due to some kind of "terrosist bureaucracy" at work, building infrastructure they did not *need*? they are typically very small in number Don't confuse their operational methodology with their training requirements. and can be quite easily trained covertly and unobstrusively. Really? Kind of hard to train guys to effectively conduct demolitions operations without making things go "boom" at some point; likewise, training people to effectively engage targets with small arms requires some kind of training area. Want to run rehearsals for a major operation? Again, you need somewhere safe to do it. US presence in a small fraction of the country does not inhibit their training in any significant fashion. Right...sure. Care to show us any evidence that the AQ training programs (which they did have running in Afghanistan, whether you thought they were needed or not) are back up and running in that country? and that a few other nations took note and became a bit less receptive of other terrorist operations. This is undoubtedly true. And certainly a good achievement. Considering the fact that the opposing cost, in terms of casualties and even reconstruction aid/support to Afghanistan, has not been very high, OEF has been a significant success. I disagree. The cost has been very high (as it has mostly been afghans killed and remnants of afghan infrastructure destroyed I dont think it matters greatly to the US). How many Afghans were killed during OEF to date? Of that many, how many were fighting on the Taliban/AQ side? But I do agree with you that reconstruction aid to afghanistan has been a pittance. But it represents a virtual waterfall of largesse compared to the amount of aid they were receiving under the Taliban leadership. How much reconstruction had the Taliban completed? There have been no significant success other than the general change in the world wide political climate of lessened overt support to a *certain* class of terrorist activities. So I'd say that overall the OEF has been a dismal failure. Thank goodness what you say again has no relevance to the actual outcome or its assessment by more logical individuals. Germany had a larger population than any 10 states combined LOL! Tell us more. Uhmmm...the total population of Germany in 1940 was some 80 million, the US population was about 130 million, with the top four states (NY, PA, TX, CA) only accounting for some 34 million--so you can run the numbers further if you like, but it appears Keith's statement is in fact correct. www.ciaonet.org/book/schweller/appendix.html I note you backed off of your sarcastic comment to Keith's statement above-- acknowledgment that he was indeed right? and controlled the combined industries of western europe and couldnt even beat Britain. Before the War Germany was a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Today it still is a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Thank goodness for the Marshall Plan, huh? I am not an american so I hope you will understand if I am not as wildly gleeful as you are about a plan that helped develop and sustain markets for US industries. LOL! Yeah, and did not do a darned thing for the standard of living of all of those European nations that took advantage of it, huh? One wonders why the nations that could (and did) partake of it had robust economies in the sixties, seventies, and eighties, while those that could not (ie., Warsaw Pact members) were (economically) crawling when the Wall came tumbling down, huh? But I can quite understand you enthusiasm for the plan. I am fairly certain that a sizeable fraction of the western europeans also share your approval for the plan. Indeed they did. Had it not existed there is little doubt that the economic staus of those nations would not be where it is today. Before the war Britain was a major world power with a globe spanning empire - today it is a mere lackey to the US. That's not correct. The UK remains an independent nation; There are degrees of independence. And I never said UK is not independence, merely a US lackey. Uhmm..in most peoples minds, the two terms are sort of opposites. Good thing then that my english is slightly better than that of most people then. Lackey: A person who tries to please someone in order to gain a personal advantage Independent: Free from external control and constraint Your definitions kind of make my point. Again, english is not your native tongue, is it? You could be independent as well as a lackey - for instance UK and its relationship with the US. Not really. The UK remains capable of determining its own course. Of course. Its just that the best course its leadership sees is to ride on US coat-tails. It agrees on the pound and pretends to vociferously disagree on the penny to maintain an apperance on independence. In fact, Blair has reportedly had some success in steering our own policy in a slightly different direction at times over the past few years. 'Slightly' is the key word. Necessary to maintain a facade of independent thought. Obviously you are going to let your paranoia rule your interpretation of all things British, so the above is hardly a surprising comment coming from you. Most USians still have a great deal of respect for the UK, So do I. Just not for the current political leadership. So you think only the current British government is the source of this alleged "lackey" state, huh? One has to wonder when you point to as the start of this "lackeydom", and where it has manifested itself over the past few decades. and while it cannot any longer muster the level of economic or military power that the US can wield, it is considered to be a partner as opposed to a "lackey". That is very polite on your part and I am sure much appreciated by our British friends. Well, its also true, but I realize you can't recognize that fact. Common language (for the most part) and a lot of common history makes for a pretty strong relationship between the two nations. I dont disagree. But that is not the cause for the surprising degree of synchronization of geo-political objectives and means to achieve them that we are seeing. I detect the first indications of another GCT (Great Conspiracy Theory) being fomented here... that it has happened to agree with the US in more cases than it disagrees is as much a product of common values than anything else. ummm. I dare say you could be right. Both seem to value oil over life, No. That would be your rather infantile characterization. We *do* value stability in a region that controls such a significant portion of a commodity vital to most of the rest of the world. Oh, right! The US is actually doing it for us (the ungrateful unwashed of the rest of the world)! No, for *all* of us--you included. No need to express your appreciation, however. Oil production and distribution was not impeded by Saddam, Yeah, it was. Had he folded his cards in a timely manner and met all of the requirements set forth, Iraq could have been back to selling its oil to whomever it chose to in any amount it so chose. But his refusal to do what he was required to do kept that from happening. he was pretty keen to sell oil - plenty of oil. Maybe it is just my bad memory, but my distinct impression was that the war was all about the non-existant WMD. Then you have a bad memory, or the wrong impression. His WMD efforts, and his refusal to comply with the related requirements he agreed to meet as part of the cease fire agreement, were significant reasons, but not the only ones. The US had established regime change as its goal (and made it public law) for a number of reasons, and it did so well before the current administration entered into power. There were quite a few observations of his tendancy to conduct mass murder of those he did not like, for example, that went into those decisions to officially sanction regime change. And we have found quite a few mass graves tied to those detestable actions by Saddam. We have also found that his compliance with the WMD requirements was lacking, as we suspected; what we have not found (yet) are any final products of those WMD progrmas that he did indeed maintain, at whatever level, in direct violation of the terms imposed upon him. And not just in the "WMD" area--you will recall that his missile programs were also determined to be in violation of the allowable maximum range, something he continually denied up until the very eve of the beginning of OIF. You act as if this is some sort of colonial conquest-- Well the problem is that it is a colonial conquest - you just acknowledged it in your last sentence. No, I did not. You want to control the oil (stability was the euphemism used). No, now you are just plain lying. I did not say we want to control the oil. Period. Regional stability is NOT equivalent to "controlling the oil". Period. These are not complex statements, nor are they unduly complex theories, so your attempt to twist my statement to suit your own purpose is just a case of fabrication on your part. Colonialism being the use of a weaker countries resources to enrich the stronger one. The UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, etc., would disagree with your definition that sees them as "colonial possessions" because the sell oil to the highest bidder in whatever quantities they so choose, IAW with the guidelines of the cartel (OPEC) that they themselves formed and operate. but in fact we are trying to disengage from Iraq just as quickly as we can, and let the Iraqi people get back to running their own government and affairs. The Iraqis will not be able to have an independent foreign policy - specifically those relating to its immediate neighbours and the State of Isreal. Once they have reassumed complete control of their own governance they can. The Iraqis will not be able to have sovereign control of its natural resources (specifically oil). Yes, they will. Large number of foreign troops will continue to hold and occupy bases within its territory. Really? "Will continue" for how long, and what is your supporting evidence for this claim? Its armed forces will be critically dependent on one certain nation for material and training. Of their choosing once they are running their own government--not that it matters much, being as history is rife with examples of independent nations obtaining such materiel and training from a single foreign source. Other than that Iraq will be a 'completely' free country. Yes, it will be. That would be another one of those "good things", when compared to what they have had to endure over the past thirty years or so. propaganda over facts. It would appear that you are the one valuing propaganda over facts, since you have bought into the "US wants the Iraqi oil" whacky conspiracy theory. You seem to accept the propaganda put out by the former Iraqi regime without question. First, ad hominem circumstantial: The argument is false because saddam said it was true? No, just an example of your buying into propoganda, as you claimed I was. Does the US covet and plan to control Iraqi oil resources? No. If you want to claim otherwise, provide some actual proof. Second, Well atleast Saddam told atleast one truth (that he had no WMD). Well, he actually said he had no WMD *programs*...which was not correct, as even Hans Blix and the latest US investigation chief acknowledged. He also claimed that his disclosures were "full, final, and complete" each time he submitted one...and then when we (or the UN) found something new, he'd submit a revised "full, final, and complete" disclosure. Now that was not very honest, was it? Then there were his threats, delivered via his son Uday IIRC, of the drastic and fatal result (supposedly dwarfing 9-11 as he indicated at the time) that would accompany any coalition attack into Iraq; he wanted to play the "I've got WMD and will use them" game one time too many. But you think he was truthful, huh? Well, that's another reason not to take your acssessments with much seriousness. That was a hell of a lot more truthful then Bush. Nope, not really. Reading anything further into it merely indicates a degree of paranoia on your part. Perhaps reading anything less indicateds a degree of myopia on your part? No. Well then neither does it indicate paranoia on my part then. And why in the world would anyone be afraid of the UK? I doubt the UK's goal is to be feared. But I can't think of any nation, other than the US, that could contemplate going toe-to-toe with the UK in a military confrontation without coming out of it hurting a hell of a lot worse than when it went into it, and most would outright lose. Same could be said for half a dozen other nations. So? Care to name them? How many of them could match the ability of the UK to project power, and how many of them have any proven track record in doing so? Fear of US is understandable - its rich, powerful Yep, we are. snip inane whining But why would US+UK be particularly more frightful. It is like arguing that you are afraid of the gorilla because a chipmunk is backing it up. That "chipmunk" has some of the best light infantry troops in the world. It has an extremely professional and capable (despite its diminished size) naval force. The RAF is likewise very professional, on a par with the USAF. During OEF the RAF offered some capabilities that were rather handy to our CENTCOM folks--additional ISR assets, including the venerable Canberra PR9 and IIRC their SIGINT Nimrods, and a very valuableaerial refueling contribution that was especially of value to our USN assets. Their SOF are truly world class. That is one mean little chipmunk you have there. Its a first class chipmunk - biggest, baddest chipmunk if it pleases you. It remains a chipmunk backing the gorilla. But then by your definition, as the rest of the world is all inhabited solely by "chipmunks", then being the "biggest, baddest" chipmunk of them all does indeed merit significant respect. Germany might not have won, No, there is no doubt--she did not win. Thank goodness for that, huh? You feel very grateful, perhaps with cause. I dont have any particular reason to feel happy or unhappy about the German loss. Really? Very few folks in this world can claim to be ambivalent about the spectre of Nazism being triumphant in that war; those that do have a serious morality flaw. I am not ambivalent. Merely disinterested. Nazism lost. Communism, which was nearly as bad (if not quite) was trimphant in that war. Preciously little difference it would have made to me if had happened the other way around - with one ******* winning instead of the other. I guess you forgot that the "free world" was also a winner. To me it is a story of distant land in a distant time. Personally it is as emotionally immediate to me as Napoleans loss in Russia or Roman razing of Carthage; I dont grit my teeth at massacres of the assyrians, the golden horde, nazis or the bomber command. It is just sad but engrossing history to me. My, it must be nice (or should i just say naive?) to be able to ignore the gas chambers, the ovens, the Einzatsgruppen, etc., or to consider that the defeat of the regime that championed those developments during our parents lifetime (for many of us) was "no big deal", so to speak. Fallacy here is that you consider being dispassionate is equivalent to lacking moral fiber or judgement. I was bitterly pained by the apathy with which the world treated the holocost in Rwanda. I am glad to say that I have now been cured of such finer sentiments now. That was a coming of age experiance for me and purged me of such virses like idealism or belief in truth, justice and equality on the international scale. The world is not perfect. But it would have been an even less perfect world had the cause of Nazism prevailed. And really, do you weep when you read about the sack of Bagdad by the mongols? Or the razing of Carthage? Or the hundred thousand killed in the firebombing of Tokyo? Why not? As to Tokyo, no I don't. I just got back this evening from celebrating my father's eightieth birthday. Sixty-one years ago next month he was flying as a crewmember on one of the B-29's dropping those incendiaries over Japanese cities. That was the art of warfare during that era--not nearly as precise and clean as it is today. If the Japanese did not want to experience the bombing of their homeland, then all they had to do was refrain from attacking the US. They didn't. Too bad. What did you (or your government) do about the genocide in East Pakistan? Or Rwanda? Actively Supported one and precious little in the other case. Forgive me if I am singularly unimpressed with American claims of fighting the holocost or the genocide in world war two. They fought for their own carefully calculated, coldly weighed reasons. So you say. Again, your track record thus far is not adding up to a strong case for meriting your opinions. I have seen sufficient bad stuff in my own life time - I dont need to weep for generations long past. Learning from them is enough. Despite the untold tragedy and suffering the second world war wrought, there is atleast one shining bright point about that whole tragic affair. Thanks in large measure to Hitler and Roosevelt, the British Empire is now history. One has to wonder what your nationality and background is to have all of this pent-up hostility towards the British that you demonstrate. As with any other person my nationality and background has a lot to do with my attitudes to views. I did write "To me it is a story of distant land in a distant time", it should have been fairly obvious to anyone that from my background the second world war is not exactly a very emotive issue for me. I have no hostility to the British - for instance I am quite partial to its cricket team. I am certainly critical of the current British government (as is a very sizeable fraction of the British populace itself). You have a rather unfortunately tendency to jump to conclusions and generalizations. So, what is your background and nationality? Odd that you are so forgiving, or uncaring, regarding the cause of Nazism, yet so willing to cling to your own archaic hatred of the "British Empire". This utter lack of comprehension on such issues is not an uncommon problem amongst Americans. I think it can be atleast partially attributed to the insularity and ignorance of what happens to and what makes the rest of the world tick. Which does not say anything about the fact that you demonstrate a strong and irrational dislike of the UK, regarless of your thoughts in ragrds to their cricket team. snip but Britain sure seems to have lost. Lost what? Are you sure you are not confusing the UK with *France*? I am talking about the fortunes of nations on a larger scale, not battles and wars. Think big (if at all possible). France was crushed in the first world war. It is yet to recover from that beating. UK was smashed in the second world war, not as badly as france, but smashed non the less. Odd, in that they were on the winning side. Yeah, war's a funny business. Just because you win doesnt mean that you are better off than before. Better off? They were certainly better off than if they had lost, and they were better off than the losers. snip more whining The disintegration of their former "empire", in the real sense of the word, was well underway before the war. Yes, But it would have persisted a lot longer if the WW2 hadnt happened as and when it did. Hence for a very large fraction of the world the spat between Germany and Britain and the US/Japan was, while tragic, ultimately very welcome. And I note that the Brits did not put a great deal of effort into retaining control of its old colonial holdings. The fact is that they were literally too exhausted to hang on to their possesions. Due credit to them to make a virtue out of necessity. Time marches on and the world changes; the UK accepted that and has maintained a rather important place in the greater scheme of world order. Oh yes, UK is still important in world affairs - thanks to its large economy. My argument is that it was a preeminent power before, and is now a decidedly second/third rung power. LOL! Twenty years ago the Soviet Union was a "preeminent power"; now they are having problems paying the lighting bills for the military bases that house forces that are a mere shadow of their former beings. As I said, time marches on and the world changes--but the UK reamains as one of the more powerful nations. That would be another "good thing", by the way, especially when you consider the alternative had they not been on the winning side during WWII. They would have been worse off if they lost. Your point in reiterating the obvious? Now France *did* lose, just like Germany eventually lost... Indeed Germany lost. But it seemed to have bounced back pretty much to the same stature it had before the war. Cant say the same for France or UK can you? In the case of the UK, yes I can. Very well. What was the relative economic/military standing of the UK in 1913, 1938 and 2000? Who really cares? You already said yourself, "Oh yes, UK is still important in world affairs - thanks to its large economy." Economic power is vital--as much so or more so than military power. The Brits remain powerful. Mighty big "chipmunk" you got there, huh? Brooks |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ...
"Tuollaf43" wrote in message Facts arent your strong point are they ? Korea: stalemate South Korea was saved from the invading forces of the DPRK and now a prosperous democracy and ally. Meanwhile the DPRK moulders in a prison of its own making. Cuban Missile Crisis: stalemate Nope, the Soviet missiles were withdrawn as the US demanded. And the Jupiters from Turkey as Russia demanded, along with assurances that US would not invade Cuba. Stalemate. Older missiles already planned for removal--we had a new program coming online about that time which you may have heard of...Polaris? We also removed the Thors from the UK at about the same time, and for the same reasons--they were liquid fueled and had been made superfluous. Are you disputing the fact that missiles in turkey were removed on the insistence of the soviets? Then you are utterly wrong. If you read the account by Andrei Gromyko you will find that the Kennedy administration did indeed agree to eventually remove the Jupiters from Turkey, as a sop to Khrushchev. Interestingly, that subject is not even mentioned in notes from participants in the closed door Kremlin meetings regarding how to wiggle out of the dilemma the Soviets found themselves in: millercenter.virginia.edu/resources/ print/kremlin/kremlin_two_views.pdf On the other hand, notes from high level US meetings at the same time indicate: "The President recalled that over a year ago we wanted to get the Jupiter missiles out of Turkey because they had become obsolete and of little military value. If the missiles in Cuba added 50% to Soviet nuclear capability, then to trade these missiles for those in Turkey would be of great military value." www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/diplomacy/ forrel/cuba/cuba090.htm So we gave away missiles we had already been planning on removing--big deal. More interesting is the fact that the Kennedys wanted to keep the Jupiter removal portion of the deal secret (which is about par for the Kennedy clan). So you do agree after all that the Americans missiles were removed on Soviet insistence. Actually, no. Soviet insistence had darned little to do with it--we were already planning on removing those missiles, and when Gromyko presented the proposal to have the US do so the White House jumped on it. From reading Gromyko's comments (it has been a year or so, but I think I have the gist right), it is apparent that the Soviets were going to cave on the missiles in Cuba, and our agreement to *eventually* remove the missiles from Turkey was more of a sop to keep Khrushchev to save some face when he presented the plan to his cronies. I know you are an ultra right winger - but it too much even for a right winger to say that Kenedy went out to his way to save old shoe-banger's face? It was merely a happy coincidence that the jupiter was not worth its keep. You must have missed that comment regarding the desire to remove the missiles from Turkey being expressed "over a year ago", huh? No. You are one of those people who think a loundly repeating the very same thing again and again constitutes an 'explanattion'. The americans also pledged not to attempt to invade Cuba again (a pledge I understand still stands) - this was a non-trivial political concession. The only time we ever came close to conducting an invasion with US military forces was during the crisis itself. Why would we have wanted to invade otherwise? Hell, Cuba has been a great posterchild for the "why you DON'T want your nation to go communist" cause. You are too ignorant (or in denial) for me to even begin to educate you. Look up the historical records. The fact that the removed system was obsolete and due for removal anyway is immaterial. All you can claim is that the soviets could have bartered de-nuclearization of Cuba for some more useful concession - not that there was no concession. Is it a "concession" when it agrees with your own internal desires and plans? I think not. It is a concession because you give the other chaps what they demand - it is secondary weather the concession happens to be quite agreeable to you. Look up "concession"--the approriate definition of the root word (concede) is "to yield". Which means to forego your own desired result. We GOT our own desired results on both fronts--no Soviet missiles in Cuba, and we pulled the Jupters that we already wanted to remove. That does not equal a "concession". Excellent spin. Maybe you should join the English Cricket side as a spinner. I'd call that more in the line of a bargain yes, I can go with that. The Cuban missile affair ended in a bargain, with concessions being made by both sides to accomodate the other. Again, when you give up what you already are trying to get rid of, that is not a "concession". I am guessing that english is not your native tongue; nothing wrong with that, of course, but if you are going to start arguing the nuances of the wording, you might want to freshen up your vocabulary. Hence my original contention, a stalemate. Not really. Really. snip "If 'ifs and buts' were candy and nuts..." It appears that the majority of Afghanis are quite happy to be rid of the Taliban leadership; deposing them from power was a *good* thing. As the standard of living there has taken a plunge since the war on afghanistan It has? H'mmm... Yes, it has. those folks the Taliban executed outright on a rather routine basis might have argued that their "standard of living" could not have gotten any worse. Yeah, look who is in town preaching! You did not have a problem with goverments murdering innnocents or repressing freedoms as long as they looked out for US interests. Saddam Hussain, Shah of Iran or the present Saudi Regieme to mention a few. The afghani women would also likely tell you that their standard of living today is better than it was. What guage are you going to use to measure the changes? Television ownership maybe? ISTR that under the Taliban the reported number of privately owned TV's would have been a big zero--it has now mushroomed, apparently... ![]() Lord you are so clueless! TV ownership for godsakes???!!! Was Mary Antoinette one of your ancestors? and a bad government has been replaced with no government, Well, not just bad, but inherently *evil*; blasting those Buddhist reliefs was indicative of that. Well one government blew up statues. Another made aggressive war on false pretenses and killed tens of thousands. You consider one evil and the other the milk of human kindness. It is just sicking that you value historical artifacts over living, breathing people. They now have a constitution ready for approval, IIRC; only what, two years after the Taliban was removed from power? heck, here isn the US it took us fourteen years after the British signed the peace treaty before we had our constitution in hand. AQ is not able to use Afghanistan as a free-movement area and training base--that too is a good thing. I believe the Taliban is moving quite freely in most parts. Well, lucky for us, *your* beliefs don't hold much water, right? I see it all an evil conspiracy to blacken the US hatched by the BBC, CNN etc. I guess for right wing nutters if it is not reported on Fox it never happened. Osama never had a problem moving around in the North West Frontier area of pakistan. He does now. You would know, how? And the terrorists dont need extensive training facilities - Actually, they do if they want to have major "successes" like 9-11. How many of the 9-11 hijackers learnt to fly planes in afghanistan? What, you think the fact that there have been major terrorist training facilities (in a number of nations) over the past few decades was just due to some kind of "terrosist bureaucracy" at work, building infrastructure they did not *need*? Al-Qaida is a very small and very select group. You are just buying into the propaganda that every person who looks sideways at you must be Al-Qaida. they are typically very small in number Don't confuse their operational methodology with their training requirements. OK exactly what are the training requirements Grofaz? We are all ears. and can be quite easily trained covertly and unobstrusively. Really? Kind of hard to train guys to effectively conduct demolitions operations without making things go "boom" at some point; likewise, training people to effectively engage targets with small arms requires some kind of training area. Want to run rehearsals for a major operation? Again, you need somewhere safe to do it. LOL! Small arms fire and demolitions would stand out like a sore thumb in an area awash with light and heavy infantry weapons and where people celebrate by firing whole magazines on automatic in the air. I suppose you believe the local afghan sound pollution board reports them to the authorities? LOL! US presence in a small fraction of the country does not inhibit their training in any significant fashion. Right...sure. Care to show us any evidence that the AQ training programs (which they did have running in Afghanistan, whether you thought they were needed or not) are back up and running in that country? My point is that the training needed is on such low scale that it would not have a large prominient footprint. The very fact that you ask for evidence indicates that you have no clue what you are talking about. and that a few other nations took note and became a bit less receptive of other terrorist operations. This is undoubtedly true. And certainly a good achievement. Considering the fact that the opposing cost, in terms of casualties and even reconstruction aid/support to Afghanistan, has not been very high, OEF has been a significant success. I disagree. The cost has been very high (as it has mostly been afghans killed and remnants of afghan infrastructure destroyed I dont think it matters greatly to the US). How many Afghans were killed during OEF to date? Of that many, how many were fighting on the Taliban/AQ side? Not enough to satify you obviously. But I do agree with you that reconstruction aid to afghanistan has been a pittance. But it represents a virtual waterfall of largesse compared to the amount of aid they were receiving under the Taliban leadership. How much reconstruction had the Taliban completed? About 45 million worth atleast in 2001. There have been no significant success other than the general change in the world wide political climate of lessened overt support to a *certain* class of terrorist activities. So I'd say that overall the OEF has been a dismal failure. Thank goodness what you say again has no relevance to the actual outcome or its assessment by more logical individuals. Germany had a larger population than any 10 states combined LOL! Tell us more. Uhmmm...the total population of Germany in 1940 was some 80 million, the US population was about 130 million, with the top four states (NY, PA, TX, CA) only accounting for some 34 million--so you can run the numbers further if you like, but it appears Keith's statement is in fact correct. www.ciaonet.org/book/schweller/appendix.html I note you backed off of your sarcastic comment to Keith's statement above-- acknowledgment that he was indeed right? I read states as nation states, not administrative subdivisions in a single nation. So it appears that Keith was indeed right. so I kept quite. Unlike you I dont twist and turn and argue sideways just to be argumentative. and controlled the combined industries of western europe and couldnt even beat Britain. Before the War Germany was a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Today it still is a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Thank goodness for the Marshall Plan, huh? I am not an american so I hope you will understand if I am not as wildly gleeful as you are about a plan that helped develop and sustain markets for US industries. LOL! Yeah, and did not do a darned thing for the standard of living of all of those European nations that took advantage of it, huh? One wonders why the nations that could (and did) partake of it had robust economies in the sixties, seventies, and eighties, while those that could not (ie., Warsaw Pact members) were (economically) crawling when the Wall came tumbling down, huh? OK, your point being? But I can quite understand you enthusiasm for the plan. I am fairly certain that a sizeable fraction of the western europeans also share your approval for the plan. Indeed they did. Had it not existed there is little doubt that the economic staus of those nations would not be where it is today. Well and true. Where have I contested this point Quixote? You seem to be in love with your own voice (or writing in this instance). Before the war Britain was a major world power with a globe spanning empire - today it is a mere lackey to the US. That's not correct. The UK remains an independent nation; There are degrees of independence. And I never said UK is not independence, merely a US lackey. Uhmm..in most peoples minds, the two terms are sort of opposites. Good thing then that my english is slightly better than that of most people then. Lackey: A person who tries to please someone in order to gain a personal advantage Independent: Free from external control and constraint Your definitions kind of make my point. Err, my definations kind of dont make your point. You claim Lackeydom and Independence are opposites - I say that they are distinct concepts. UK is independent, and it is a lackey. You could argue that UK is independent and not a lackey and you would merely run the risk of being considered a fool. But please dont try to redefine English to suit your needs. Again, english is not your native tongue, is it? No it is not. Not even my second or third language. But I seem to be a little better at it than you do. Is it just you or do you blame it on the education system? You could be independent as well as a lackey - for instance UK and its relationship with the US. Not really. Yes really. The UK remains capable of determining its own course. Of course. Its just that the best course its leadership sees is to ride on US coat-tails. It agrees on the pound and pretends to vociferously disagree on the penny to maintain an apperance on independence. Good to see you agree with this. In fact, Blair has reportedly had some success in steering our own policy in a slightly different direction at times over the past few years. 'Slightly' is the key word. Necessary to maintain a facade of independent thought. Obviously you are going to let your paranoia rule your interpretation of all things British, so the above is hardly a surprising comment coming from you. No, hardly surprising because it is true. I cant help you and your willfull myopia. Most USians still have a great deal of respect for the UK, So do I. Just not for the current political leadership. So you think only the current British government is the source of this alleged "lackey" state, huh? One has to wonder when you point to as the start of this "lackeydom", and where it has manifested itself over the past few decades. You are permitted to wonder. and while it cannot any longer muster the level of economic or military power that the US can wield, it is considered to be a partner as opposed to a "lackey". That is very polite on your part and I am sure much appreciated by our British friends. Well, its also true, but I realize you can't recognize that fact. No, I dont recognize your contrary-to-all-experiance assertion. We'll leave it at that. Common language (for the most part) and a lot of common history makes for a pretty strong relationship between the two nations. I dont disagree. But that is not the cause for the surprising degree of synchronization of geo-political objectives and means to achieve them that we are seeing. I detect the first indications of another GCT (Great Conspiracy Theory) being fomented here... And Pray tell Grofaz what the GCT is? Last time around it was about your fears about India invading Australia or something like that. Talk of paronia. that it has happened to agree with the US in more cases than it disagrees is as much a product of common values than anything else. ummm. I dare say you could be right. Both seem to value oil over life, No. That would be your rather infantile characterization. We *do* value stability in a region that controls such a significant portion of a commodity vital to most of the rest of the world. Oh, right! The US is actually doing it for us (the ungrateful unwashed of the rest of the world)! No, for *all* of us--you included. No need to express your appreciation, however. There is no danger of that. Now where did I hear this kind of reasoning before - oh yes, the colonial days! The argument being that the colonies exist for the benefit of the colonized. You must be so proud of caryying the White Man's Burden (release two, version 2004). Oil production and distribution was not impeded by Saddam, Yeah, it was. Had he folded his cards in a timely manner and met all of the requirements set forth, Iraq could have been back to selling its oil to whomever it chose to in any amount it so chose. But his refusal to do what he was required to do kept that from happening. he was pretty keen to sell oil - plenty of oil. Maybe it is just my bad memory, but my distinct impression was that the war was all about the non-existant WMD. Then you have a bad memory, or the wrong impression. His WMD efforts, and his refusal to comply with the related requirements he agreed to meet as part of the cease fire agreement, were significant reasons, but not the only ones. The US had established regime change as its goal (and made it public law) for a number of reasons, and it did so well before the current administration entered into power. There were quite a few observations of his tendancy to conduct mass murder of those he did not like, for example, that went into those decisions to officially sanction regime change. And we have found quite a few mass graves tied to those detestable actions by Saddam. We have also found that his compliance with the WMD requirements was lacking, as we suspected; what we have not found (yet) are any final products of those WMD progrmas that he did indeed maintain, at whatever level, in direct violation of the terms imposed upon him. And not just in the "WMD" area--you will recall that his missile programs were also determined to be in violation of the allowable maximum range, something he continually denied up until the very eve of the beginning of OIF. Well whose should I believe? That old fart Bush who runs the country or an anonymous apologist for the British Empire? No offense but I will go with the version Bush, incoherent though he is and changes his story every thrursday, as he was the one who planned, waged, authorised and conned the world into war. You act as if this is some sort of colonial conquest-- Well the problem is that it is a colonial conquest - you just acknowledged it in your last sentence. No, I did not. You want to control the oil (stability was the euphemism used). No, now you are just plain lying. I did not say we want to control the oil. Period. Regional stability is NOT equivalent to "controlling the oil". For the US it is. Get real! Period. These are not complex statements, nor are they unduly complex theories, so your attempt to twist my statement to suit your own purpose is just a case of fabrication on your part. Colonialism being the use of a weaker countries resources to enrich the stronger one. The UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, etc., would disagree with your definition that sees them as "colonial possessions" Yes the US supported undemocratic puppet regimes would vociferously support you, indeed. Great company you keep. because the sell oil to the highest bidder in whatever quantities they so choose, IAW with the guidelines of the cartel (OPEC) that they themselves formed and operate. You seem to have no clue how these things work. It is quantity of oil on the market, and the currency of exchange, not who is selling to whom that is important. but in fact we are trying to disengage from Iraq just as quickly as we can, and let the Iraqi people get back to running their own government and affairs. The Iraqis will not be able to have an independent foreign policy - specifically those relating to its immediate neighbours and the State of Isreal. Once they have reassumed complete control of their own governance they can. oh yes, I suppose they will be free to continue their war against Isreal if they choose to like most arabs, LOL! We just need to look at the firm, independent path Karzai has struck in Afghanistan as evidence. The Iraqis will not be able to have sovereign control of its natural resources (specifically oil). Yes, they will. So you say. It remains to be seen. Large number of foreign troops will continue to hold and occupy bases within its territory. Really? "Will continue" for how long, and what is your supporting evidence for this claim? US track record. Its armed forces will be critically dependent on one certain nation for material and training. Of their choosing once they are running their own government--not that it matters much, being as history is rife with examples of independent nations obtaining such materiel and training from a single foreign source. History also shows that such nations are typically dominated by that single source in matters economic, military and diplomatic. Other than that Iraq will be a 'completely' free country. Yes, it will be. Yes, I share that hope too. I'd say after another 50 years or when oil runs out or becomes irrelevant - whichever comes earlier. That would be another one of those "good things", when compared to what they have had to endure over the past thirty years or so. propaganda over facts. It would appear that you are the one valuing propaganda over facts, since you have bought into the "US wants the Iraqi oil" whacky conspiracy theory. Why is it whacky - what torpedoes the 'theory'? Lack of motive, means or intent? Or is it whacky just because you dont like the facts. You seem to accept the propaganda put out by the former Iraqi regime without question. First, ad hominem circumstantial: The argument is false because saddam said it was true? No, just an example of your buying into propoganda, as you claimed I was. Does the US covet and plan to control Iraqi oil resources? No. If you want to claim otherwise, provide some actual proof. What do you want - Secret video tapes of Bush and Cronies plotting to take over the world? LOL! Second, Well atleast Saddam told atleast one truth (that he had no WMD). Well, he actually said he had no WMD *programs*...which was not correct, as even Hans Blix and the latest US investigation chief acknowledged. He also claimed that his disclosures were "full, final, and complete" each time he submitted one...and then when we (or the UN) found something new, he'd submit a revised "full, final, and complete" disclosure. Now that was not very honest, was it? Then there were his threats, delivered via his son Uday IIRC, of the drastic and fatal result (supposedly dwarfing 9-11 as he indicated at the time) that would accompany any coalition attack into Iraq; he wanted to play the "I've got WMD and will use them" game one time too many. But you think he was truthful, huh? Well, that's another reason not to take your acssessments with much seriousness. That was a hell of a lot more truthful then Bush. Nope, not really. Yes, Really. Reading anything further into it merely indicates a degree of paranoia on your part. Perhaps reading anything less indicateds a degree of myopia on your part? No. Well then neither does it indicate paranoia on my part then. And why in the world would anyone be afraid of the UK? I doubt the UK's goal is to be feared. But I can't think of any nation, other than the US, that could contemplate going toe-to-toe with the UK in a military confrontation without coming out of it hurting a hell of a lot worse than when it went into it, and most would outright lose. Same could be said for half a dozen other nations. So? Care to name them? China, Germany, France, India, Japan, Sweden off the cuff. How many of them could match the ability of the UK to project power, Why this moving goal-post? Why is power projection suddenly thrust as the arbitary measure of military effectiveness. All of them do have the capability to go toe to toe with any nation, other than the US,and make them hurt like hell, which is what you claimed as the USP of the UK military. BTW, It might surprise you that atleast in some countries defense forces are structured and maintaned to do just that - defend the homeland. So power projection requirements are moot. and how many of them have any proven track record in doing so? I admit you have a point here. Fortunately some of the countries mentioned have been a little less blood thirsty lately than the US or UK. So not having a proven track record in war in not a bad thing - it is indeed a really good thing because the primary purpose of an armed force is to deter war and only if that fails does one fight. Fear of US is understandable - its rich, powerful Yep, we are. snip inane whining Bush = fruit cake. Tee hee hee! I love your pavlovian responce. But why would US+UK be particularly more frightful. It is like arguing that you are afraid of the gorilla because a chipmunk is backing it up. That "chipmunk" has some of the best light infantry troops in the world. Which you claimed, contrary to the experiance of the rest of the military world, is useless a while back. It has an extremely professional and capable (despite its diminished size) naval force. The RAF is likewise very professional, on a par with the USAF. During OEF the RAF offered some capabilities that were rather handy to our CENTCOM folks--additional ISR assets, including the venerable Canberra PR9 and IIRC their SIGINT Nimrods, and a very valuableaerial refueling contribution that was especially of value to our USN assets. Their SOF are truly world class. That is one mean little chipmunk you have there. Its a first class chipmunk - biggest, baddest chipmunk if it pleases you. It remains a chipmunk backing the gorilla. But then by your definition, as the rest of the world is all inhabited solely by "chipmunks", then being the "biggest, baddest" chipmunk of them all does indeed merit significant respect. Perhaps it does and perhaps it doesnt. That is a side issue I dont care to go over with you. What I said was the US military + UK military doesnt make it any more powerful in any real terms than just US military (Gorilla backed by a chipmunk doesnt make the Gorilla any more fearsome). You dispute that, but are yet to justify how exactly. Germany might not have won, No, there is no doubt--she did not win. Thank goodness for that, huh? You feel very grateful, perhaps with cause. I dont have any particular reason to feel happy or unhappy about the German loss. Really? Very few folks in this world can claim to be ambivalent about the spectre of Nazism being triumphant in that war; those that do have a serious morality flaw. I am not ambivalent. Merely disinterested. Nazism lost. Communism, which was nearly as bad (if not quite) was trimphant in that war. Preciously little difference it would have made to me if had happened the other way around - with one ******* winning instead of the other. I guess you forgot that the "free world" was also a winner. Oh no, you lie. I did say that one of the positive benefits of the second world war did occuring as and when it did was that a lot of nations became free of their colonial oppressors. To me it is a story of distant land in a distant time. Personally it is as emotionally immediate to me as Napoleans loss in Russia or Roman razing of Carthage; I dont grit my teeth at massacres of the assyrians, the golden horde, nazis or the bomber command. It is just sad but engrossing history to me. My, it must be nice (or should i just say naive?) to be able to ignore the gas chambers, the ovens, the Einzatsgruppen, etc., or to consider that the defeat of the regime that championed those developments during our parents lifetime (for many of us) was "no big deal", so to speak. Fallacy here is that you consider being dispassionate is equivalent to lacking moral fiber or judgement. I was bitterly pained by the apathy with which the world treated the holocost in Rwanda. I am glad to say that I have now been cured of such finer sentiments now. That was a coming of age experiance for me and purged me of such virses like idealism or belief in truth, justice and equality on the international scale. The world is not perfect. But it would have been an even less perfect world had the cause of Nazism prevailed. Perhaps your world. But not mine. Germany was and remains a European problem. US, now, is a world wide problem. And really, do you weep when you read about the sack of Bagdad by the mongols? Or the razing of Carthage? Or the hundred thousand killed in the firebombing of Tokyo? Why not? As to Tokyo, no I don't. I just got back this evening from celebrating my father's eightieth birthday. Sixty-one years ago next month he was flying as a crewmember on one of the B-29's dropping those incendiaries over Japanese cities. Lucky for your father then that the US won. If the world were a fair place he would have been strung up from the nearest tree for being a war criminal that he is. What was his excuse? I vaz jhust vollowing oarders? That was the art of warfare during that era--not nearly as precise and clean as it is today. Great Scott alive - a closet Osama lover! I suppose you also think that Osama was justified in his murder of a few thosand innocent people because that was the best he could do now. If the Japanese did not want to experience the bombing of their homeland, then all they had to do was refrain from attacking the US. They didn't. Too bad. This is disgusting - murdering, burning and maiming of civilians is never justifiable. Weather they be Germans, Japanese, Americans or Afghans. People being inadvertantly killed due to collateral damage is one thing - but to support willfull targeting of cities amply demonstrates the kind of person you are - and it is not flattering. What did you (or your government) do about the genocide in East Pakistan? Or Rwanda? Actively Supported one and precious little in the other case. Forgive me if I am singularly unimpressed with American claims of fighting the holocost or the genocide in world war two. They fought for their own carefully calculated, coldly weighed reasons. So you say. Again, your track record thus far is not adding up to a strong case for meriting your opinions. What are you disputing really? The nature of US role in 1) East Pakistan or 2) Rwanda? Or are you indeed arguing that the the US fought to save the jews, slavs etc and against the holocaust? Or do you dispute that US participated in the european war for its own self interest? Or are you saying that the US government archives on the US role in the East Pakistan Genocide which were released about an year back under the freedom of information act are all commie/democrat/baathist propaganda? And I do note how you chickned out and ran the last time when I did post some corroborating evidence that refuted the silly military theories you were peddling, Grofaz. So I dont really expect you to follow up in any sensible fashion. I have seen sufficient bad stuff in my own life time - I dont need to weep for generations long past. Learning from them is enough. Despite the untold tragedy and suffering the second world war wrought, there is atleast one shining bright point about that whole tragic affair. Thanks in large measure to Hitler and Roosevelt, the British Empire is now history. One has to wonder what your nationality and background is to have all of this pent-up hostility towards the British that you demonstrate. As with any other person my nationality and background has a lot to do with my attitudes to views. I did write "To me it is a story of distant land in a distant time", it should have been fairly obvious to anyone that from my background the second world war is not exactly a very emotive issue for me. I have no hostility to the British - for instance I am quite partial to its cricket team. I am certainly critical of the current British government (as is a very sizeable fraction of the British populace itself). You have a rather unfortunately tendency to jump to conclusions and generalizations. So, what is your background and nationality? Not that it is any great secret, but what does it have to do with the discussion in hand. But I do admit that I am surprised (then again perhaps not) that you consider it surprising that people who sufferend and were enslaved under it did not like the British Empire. Odd that you are so forgiving, or uncaring, regarding the cause of Nazism, yet so willing to cling to your own archaic hatred of the "British Empire". This utter lack of comprehension on such issues is not an uncommon problem amongst Americans. I think it can be atleast partially attributed to the insularity and ignorance of what happens to and what makes the rest of the world tick. Which does not say anything about the fact that you demonstrate a strong and irrational dislike of the UK, regarless of your thoughts in ragrds to their cricket team. I wont lose any sleep that a closet talibani, a proud son of a war criminal and British Empire apologist thinks of me as irrational. snip but Britain sure seems to have lost. Lost what? Are you sure you are not confusing the UK with *France*? I am talking about the fortunes of nations on a larger scale, not battles and wars. Think big (if at all possible). France was crushed in the first world war. It is yet to recover from that beating. UK was smashed in the second world war, not as badly as france, but smashed non the less. Odd, in that they were on the winning side. Yeah, war's a funny business. Just because you win doesnt mean that you are better off than before. Better off? They were certainly better off than if they had lost, and they were better off than the losers. Sure. But how does that contradict what I am saying? The disintegration of their former "empire", in the real sense of the word, was well underway before the war. Yes, But it would have persisted a lot longer if the WW2 hadnt happened as and when it did. Hence for a very large fraction of the world the spat between Germany and Britain and the US/Japan was, while tragic, ultimately very welcome. And I note that the Brits did not put a great deal of effort into retaining control of its old colonial holdings. The fact is that they were literally too exhausted to hang on to their possesions. Due credit to them to make a virtue out of necessity. I note that you do not dispute my assertion. Time marches on and the world changes; the UK accepted that and has maintained a rather important place in the greater scheme of world order. Oh yes, UK is still important in world affairs - thanks to its large economy. My argument is that it was a preeminent power before, and is now a decidedly second/third rung power. LOL! Twenty years ago the Soviet Union was a "preeminent power"; now they are having problems paying the lighting bills for the military bases that house forces that are a mere shadow of their former beings. As I said, time marches on and the world changes--but the UK reamains as one of the more powerful nations. Again how does that contradict what I am saying. That would be another "good thing", by the way, especially when you consider the alternative had they not been on the winning side during WWII. They would have been worse off if they lost. Your point in reiterating the obvious? No point I see. Not unusual for you. Now France *did* lose, just like Germany eventually lost... Indeed Germany lost. But it seemed to have bounced back pretty much to the same stature it had before the war. Cant say the same for France or UK can you? In the case of the UK, yes I can. Very well. What was the relative economic/military standing of the UK in 1913, 1938 and 2000? Who really cares? If you dont then why you did you butt in at all, eh? You already said yourself, "Oh yes, UK is still important in world affairs - thanks to its large economy." Economic power is vital--as much so or more so than military power. The Brits remain powerful. Who contests the point you are belabouring here Quixote? Who says Brits are not powerful today? This is just another of your strawmen? Point of contention was the relative standing then and now. Mighty big "chipmunk" you got there, huh? Being a gorialla then and a chipmunk now is not really a great improvement as you make it sound. People who do not qualify as even the shortest of titans cosole themselves as being the tallest dwarf. Brooks |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Hey, Germany Invented It... Face It | Erich Adler | Military Aviation | 51 | February 20th 04 05:39 PM |
Lost comms after radar vector | Mike Ciholas | Instrument Flight Rules | 119 | January 31st 04 11:39 PM |
China in space. | Harley W. Daugherty | Military Aviation | 74 | November 1st 03 06:26 PM |
Soviet Submarines Losses - WWII | Mike Yared | Military Aviation | 4 | October 30th 03 03:09 AM |
Chirac lost | JD | Military Aviation | 7 | July 26th 03 06:38 PM |