Satcomer
In Geostationary Orbit
Originally posted by dafuser
Europe seems to have forgotten the lessons history teaches us about giving in to dictators like Saddam. What happened when Europe tried to appease Hitler?
"Peace in our time"
Originally posted by dafuser
Europe seems to have forgotten the lessons history teaches us about giving in to dictators like Saddam. What happened when Europe tried to appease Hitler?
Originally posted by toast
War is a primitive, pre-Cold War means to win primitive domination. I understand African nations can still use war, but I don't understand post-industrial countries can still consider it as an option.
Instead, a more patient, peaceful solution to the Saddam problem was sought over more than 10 years.
You truly believe that this man, George Bush, is perverted enough to potentially kill thousands of innocent people, including many of his own, because he wants gasoline to be cheaper? I am sorry but I wholeheartedly disagree. Such is murder and is easy for the simplest mind to comprehend. This is a grown man who does comprehend the responsiblity laid upon his shoulders. I do not believe he is so calloused or evil as this.
Originally posted by Cat
Posted by jeb1138
The former war on Iraq made 200.000 victims among the Iraqis, mostly civilians. Millions of people will flee and be made homeless.
The daily briefings given by the allies used video footage and satellite pictures to show that military targets were being devastated and that every effort was being to avoid civilian casualties.
Terms like "collateral damage" and "surgical strike" were staples of the briefings which gave the bombing campaign the air of a computer game. In reality, the devastation on the ground was very messy.
Baghdad devastated
In the capital, military and communications installations were targeted, as well as the parliament, airport, defence ministry, and various palaces.
All over the country the major cities and military targets were hit, as were Iraqi forces in Kuwait.
Outside the Amirya shelter
The scene outside the Amirya bomb shelter in Baghdad
On 13 February what became known as the Amirya bombing shook the US-led alliance and brought home the human cost of Desert Storm.
A US stealth bomber dropped two laser-guided bombs on what the allies had pinpointed as an important command and control bunker.
The bombers had intended to drop the 900kg bombs into the ventilation shafts of the shelter. One missed and exploded nearby, blocking the only escape route.
The second plunged into the bunker and exploded in the middle of the largest room on the upper floor.
The effect was terrible: 314 people are believed to have died, 130 of them children.
Allied forces were unaware that hundreds of women and children had been routinely using the shelter since the start of Desert Storm.
The scenes of badly burnt bodies being pulled out of the devastated shelter and distraught relatives waiting outside shocked the world.
This study concludes that the child mortality rate today is at least
double and that at least 170,000 children will die in the coming year
from the delayed effects of the Gulf Crisis.
The most recent available estimate of Iraq's pre-Gulf Crisis child
mortality rate is 52 per thousand. United Nations Children's Fund and
World Health Organization, *1990 National Survey on Vaccination, Diarrhea
and Child Maternal Diseases in Iraq*, (1990). Doubling that figure
produces a post-Gulf War mortality rate of 104 per thousand.
Applying this derived mortality rate to the 3.3 million Iraqis under
five, this study estimated that 55,000 additional deaths of children
under five have already occurred. Applying this mortality rate for the
coming year, this study projects at least 170,000 additional child
deaths because of the delayed effects of the Gulf Crisis.
The conservative nature of this figure of 170,000 additional child deaths
can be understood by focusing on gastroenteritis. Before the Gulf
Crisis in 1990, about 50,000 children a year in Iraq died from
gastroenteritis. Current hospital data show a twofold to tenfold
increase in the number of children admitted with this disease. These
data also show more than a doubling of the rate of child death in
hospitals from all causes, including gastroenteritis.
In other words, at least twice as many children are admitted to
hospitals with gastroenteritis, and of those admitted, at least twice as
many die as before. Therefore, since there were 50,000 child deaths
each year from gastroenteritis before the Gulf War, four times as many,
or an additional 150,000 child deaths from this disease can be expected
in the coming year, unless conditions change.
To repeat, this figure of 150,000 additional deaths is for
gastroenteritis alone. This figure does not include deaths from
malnutrition, respiratory disease, or other common child illnesses.
Hence, the estimate of additional child deaths is probably low.
Originally posted by toast
Dafuser, what you wrote above makes no sense when applied to history after 1945, date of first nuclear deterrent use.
If you need more precise explanations, check what Samy Cohen means in his book "The Atomic Bomb, Strategy of Terror".
War is a primitive, pre-Cold War means to win primitive domination. I understand African nations can still use war, but I don't understand post-industrial countries can still consider it as an option.
Hence, your post is obsolete since 1946 . No offense, don't worry !
Originally posted by hulkaros
As for Hitler: He attacked other european countries... Correct me if I'm wrong: When exactly Sadam attacked US, Europe et al and the US MUST strike back? Or is it a matter of pre-strike? Then again european countries and US didn't pre-strike Hitler back then, did they?
Originally posted by Cat
Posted by jeb1138
I do not think Bush is evil, yet I think that the results of the war he is proposing are going to be 'evil'
The question in my mind is: Whence the greater evil, and what are the evils that may occur?
Originally posted by Cat
Killing people is evil.
Best reason ever to start a war.
However, in this case, involuntary evil has to fight voluntary evil.
There is no such thing as involuntary evil. For every bullet and every bomb, fingers press the trigger: there is a conscious and voluntary choice to kill and destroy.
We didn't volunteer to get attacked 9-11.
Terrorism isn't a random natural desaster, but a directed attack. The people who attacked the US wnated to attack the US. They were not simply mad and irrational, maybe manipulatd and misguided, but they had reasons for attacking the US. As atheist still I'd like to echo some wise words: Who is without sin (or guilt depending on translation) throw the first stone. Is the US really so innocent?
We want to protect ourselves and others.
Do you think to have the right to interfere with others for their own good? You assume quite a responsibility then... Why did the allied forces then did not at all supoprt the rebellion ensuing the Gulf War? Because of not so noble agreements with the neighboring countries? Where were our ideals then?
I am disappointed...
I couldn't have said the 'postmodernistic nonsense' bit better myself! Well put!Originally posted by Cat
There is evil and there is good.
Sure there is! Well simply have to nominate one persone judge of the world and let them point out what is good and what is evil! Everybody of course will agree, since good and evil are so easy to see and identify! And all those shades of grey is just postmodernistic nonesense.
Originally posted by Mr. Mohandas K Gandhi
The doctrine of Satyagraha works on the principle that you make the so called enemy see and realize the injustice he is engaged in. It can work only when you believe in God and the goodness of the people to see that they are wrong. As a satyagrahi, I do believe that non-violence is a potent weapon against all evils.