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#61
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![]() Fred J. McCall wrote: wrote: : :Fred J. McCall wrote: : : ... : : 2) If guilty, they'll wind up tried and convicted and in the military : prison in Leavenworth (if they don't draw a death penalty, which is : pretty unlikely in a military court). : :So far, every man convicted of contributing to the murders at :Bagram has returned to duty. That does not inspire much :confidence. Circumstances alter cases, no matter how much you might dislike it. In these cases the circumstances seem to be that there were photos of the abuses at Abu Ghraib, but none from Bagram, and so there was more publicity about the lesser crimes at Abu Ghraib. That's the fault of the media, and I blame them for being irresponsible. The sentences handed down appear to have depended more on the publicity surrounding the cases, than on the severity of the crimes. That I blame on the people running our courts-martial. : 3) They're being held in a military brig here in the States, with : conditions probably worse than those in Cuba. : :Held in a brig, sure. Worse than in Cuba, not likely. Don't know much about either military brigs or Cuba, do you? I haven't been to either, have you? -- FF |
#62
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Fred J. McCall wrote:
[snip] South Korea is an independent, relatively free nation. South Vietnam is what? Full of exploited proletariat living under a feudal system straight out of the early middle ages. Andrew Swallow |
#64
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Andrew Swallow wrote:
:Fred J. McCall wrote: :[snip] : : : South Korea is an independent, relatively free nation. South Vietnam : is what? : :Full of exploited proletariat living under a feudal system straight out ![]() "Exploited proletariat"? snicker -- "Some people get lost in thought because it's such unfamiliar territory." --G. Behn |
#65
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![]() Fred J. McCall wrote: wrote: : :Fred J. McCall wrote: : wrote: : : : : :Fred J. McCall wrote: : : : : ... : : : : 2) If guilty, they'll wind up tried and convicted and in the military : : prison in Leavenworth (if they don't draw a death penalty, which is : : pretty unlikely in a military court). : : : :So far, every man convicted of contributing to the murders at : :Bagram has returned to duty. That does not inspire much : :confidence. : : Circumstances alter cases, no matter how much you might dislike it. : :In these cases the circumstances seem to be that there were photos ![]() :was more publicity about the lesser crimes at Abu Ghraib. That's :the fault of the media, and I blame them for being irresponsible. : :The sentences handed down appear to have depended more on the ![]() :That I blame on the people running our courts-martial. And you are familiar with all the facts of all the cases, No one is familiar with all the facts of all the cases. -- FF |
#66
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On Sat, 24 Jun 2006 22:05:23 +0100, "Paul J. Adam"
wrote: From a military point of view, that's like complaining about geography: why do the enemy never let you assault them downhill, over dry ground with good going yet plenty of nice concealing folds and tussocks, on a day not so hot you sweat to death during the assault nor so cold that certain important bits froze off waiting for H-Hour? There is a larger issue about the extent to which the military perspective is influenced by external social and cultural issues. Geography is (largely) beyond human agency to inform or alter, at least in the short term. The meejah issue is more malleable - my parallel would be to ask why are the Blue forces required to attack uphill, in poor weather, against prepared Red defences while their own supporting arms are curtailed? Why is the behaviour of Red Forces to kidnap, multilate and murder civilians and combatants alike not subjected to the same level of "war crimes" scrutiny? This is the problem for the military in places like Iraq - the subjective application of double-standards and the perpetuation of assumptive judgements formed and supported b the meejah. In many cases they reflect the assumptions of the host culture, but while that explains them, it does not legitimise them. "The meeja" exist as they are, just as the weather and the ground and the enemy do. Good commanders do what they can to gain benefit from them (like, making sure 'Our Story' is better TV than 'Their Story') while limiting the damage they can do. Not easy, but that's why good commanders are to be cherished. Indeed, but even without counter-propaganda, the doublethink, groupthink and downright hypocrisy of normal meejah coverage should not pass without question or challenge. This is a meejah problem in the first instance, as the meejah have as much responsibility to police each other as they do to bring politicians and generals down. Their failure to do this makes the problem a larger cultural and social one. Gavin Bailey -- I have enough of Windows error message which say "Intelligent life not detected at keyboard." You hear me good Bill! Not mess Eastern devil warrior. Yeah like Jackie Chan. Worse Bart Kwan-En. - Bart Kwan En |
#67
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Fred J. McCall schrieb:
Vince wrote: :I was inside the beltway all through the Vietnam War. ... Yes. And so you know more than the folks who were there doing the fighting. Or so you think. :I remember the skillful means by which the vast majority of the "rich, :well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies. Yes, well everyone wasn't like you, Vinnie. I find it funny that you hate George Bush and try to smear him with claims that he 'dodged the draft' by going in the National Guard, while at the same time you love Clinton and make statements like the preceding. Feh! -- "Der Fiege droht nur, wo er sicher ist." --Johann Wolfgang von Goethe I´m quite sure Goethe wrote "Der Feige droht nur, wo er sicher ist." ;-) |
#68
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Moritz Wünsch wrote:
:Fred J. McCall schrieb: : : Vince wrote: : : :I was inside the beltway all through the Vietnam War. ... : : Yes. And so you know more than the folks who were there doing the : fighting. Or so you think. : : :I remember the skillful means by which the vast majority of the "rich, : :well born OR emphasize OR able" avoided the Jungles and rice paddies. : : Yes, well everyone wasn't like you, Vinnie. I find it funny that you : hate George Bush and try to smear him with claims that he 'dodged the : draft' by going in the National Guard, while at the same time you love : Clinton and make statements like the preceding. : : Feh! : : -- : "Der Fiege droht nur, wo er sicher ist." : --Johann Wolfgang von Goethe : :I´m quite sure Goethe wrote "Der Feige droht nur, wo er sicher ist." ;-) Damned keyboard has a mind of its own.... -- "The way of the samurai is found in death. If by setting one's heart right every morning and evening, one is able to live as though his body were already dead, he gains freedom in The Way. His whole life will be without blame, and he will succeed in his calling." -- "Hagakure Kikigaki", Yamamoto Tsunetomo |
#69
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![]() Fred J. McCall wrote: wrote: : :Fred J. McCall wrote: ... : : Along about 1964 we should have sunk everything in Haiphong Harbor, : leveled Hanoi and put a million men in the country marching north. : :Because that strategy worked so well in Korea? South Korea is an independent, relatively free nation. South Vietnam is what? Your point is well made. The Russian threat to use nuclear weapons should we send ground forces North of the DMZ was NOT widely published (to say the least) at the time. How well established is that? Assuming it was true, keep in mind the perception that it was the Cuban missle crisis that knocked Kruschev out of power. In another article in this thread, (direct replies via Google have expired) Ed Rasimus wrote: ... That canard about who went to war and who went to the Guard has been discussed at length in R.A.M. Flying single seat, single engine tactical jets for 4.5 years trumps driving a fishing boat upriver for six months and then calling everyone you served with a war criminal in the balance of most of the folks I deal with. A great many men served on the Swift Boats. Refering to them as "fishing boats" denigrates the service of all of those men, not just the one whom you dislike. As to why he chose fighter jets, GWB (who flew for a bit less than four years but that's a nit) said he enlisted in the Texas AFNG as a alternative to service in Vietnam. -- FF |
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