- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 410
Wow, Strawman Much?
Thanks sarge, I actually had a half-ass intention to read his book, because he touts it as an "even handed" overview, giving both Liberals and Conservatives a fair shake. Well, scratch that Idea.
The CIA, Saudi, and ISI efforts were all loosely connected. Whether the CIA was to blame for bin Laden is a matter of opinion, but it would be disingenoious to claim that there was absolutely no connection.
Really? You mean he denies that he was funded by his avowed enemy? Who woulda thunk it? :
Yah, and in Vietnam , the enemies were Vietnamese, and in Iraq, they are Iraqis. Whoope-di-doo. Of course, the fact that both involve a small insurgent force, with sanctuaries across foreign borders, fighting a superior invading western army has no relevence at all.
Really?
I assume <a href=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A7967-2004Oct28.html>this</a> is the report he is talking about.
This is the dumbest thing I've read all week. The leaders of the French revolution were all rich too, so the French Revolution had NOTHING to do with social-economic difficulties either, right? Succesful insurgencies are NEVER led by poor peasants. The point is that terrorism is a RESULT of social-economic circumstances in general among Arab and Middle Eastern countries, the failure of secular-nationalist regimes in Egypt and Syria, and many many other factors, but, of course, attempting to address THOSE issues is just showing weakness. :
Maybe they should tell the Border patrol to keep a lookout for any suspicious looking Arabs driving gun tractors towing 152mm howitzers trying to cross the border? This is a strawman again. We KNOW the Iraqis have chemical weapons, they used a whole bunch of them against Iran 20 years ago. I don't think we are talking about the same "WMD"s here.
But Iraq and Vietnam are completely different!
And this is the GOOD news? So if all the terrorists were in Saudi Arabia, why was IRAQ invaded? I thought the whole point of invading Iraq was to, you know, hunt terrorists? so where are all those Iraqi terrorists?
Never mind, my liberal mind was just never meant to do these kind of twists.....
Of course, for you youngsters who are still unclear, The National Review is a fairly well established conservative wank-rag. take it with a few bushels of salt, mmkay?
Thanks sarge, I actually had a half-ass intention to read his book, because he touts it as an "even handed" overview, giving both Liberals and Conservatives a fair shake. Well, scratch that Idea.
Miniter: I guess '80s music has made a comeback, but memories of 1980s history are fading fast. Yes, the CIA funded Afghans fighting for their country against the Soviets, but virtually all of that CIA money went through the ISI, Pakistan's feared intelligence service. The money was earmarked for seven different factions of the resistance â †all of them Afghan. Meanwhile, the Saudis funded a separate and parallel program for Muslim radicals drawn from across the Muslim world. Bottom line: Bin Laden was funded by the Saudis, not by us. I interviewed all three of the CIA station chiefs responsible for managing the Afghan war. All denied that any CIA money went to any Arabs, let alone bin Laden. I also pored over every bin Laden interview conducted in any language from the 1980s to today.
The CIA, Saudi, and ISI efforts were all loosely connected. Whether the CIA was to blame for bin Laden is a matter of opinion, but it would be disingenoious to claim that there was absolutely no connection.
In every single instance bin Laden is asked about CIA money, he denies it.
Really? You mean he denies that he was funded by his avowed enemy? Who woulda thunk it? :
Miniter: There are so many differences between the Vietnam War and the Iraq war that I had to write a 10,000-word chapter just to present all of the evidence. Basically, Iraq is Vietnam in reverse. Vietnam began with a small but growing insurgency and ended with tanks and division-strength infantry assaults on our forces.
In Iraq, we destroyed the tanks and vanquished the army in a few weeks. The insurgency in Iraq is estimated today at 20,000 men. In 1966, Viet Cong and North Vietnamese regulars had combined troop strength of 700,000. By 1973, they had 1 million men under arms. North Vietnam had two superpowers supplying cutting-edge weapons; the most the insurgents in Iraq can hope for is car-bomb expertise from Iran and Syria. Ho Chi Minh was a compelling leader whose propaganda promised a better life for peasants. Al-Zarqawi is a Jordanian street thug who gets no respect in Iraq and offers no vision of a better life. I could go on and on about all of the important differences. Once you read this chapter, you will be able to shoot down liberals at cocktail parties for the next 20 years.
Yah, and in Vietnam , the enemies were Vietnamese, and in Iraq, they are Iraqis. Whoope-di-doo. Of course, the fact that both involve a small insurgent force, with sanctuaries across foreign borders, fighting a superior invading western army has no relevence at all.
The 100,000 dead civilians claim is provably false.
Really?
I assume <a href=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A7967-2004Oct28.html>this</a> is the report he is talking about.
The estimate is based on a September door-to-door survey of 988 Iraqi households -- containing 7,868 people in 33 neighborhoods -- selected to provide a representative sampling. Two survey teams gathered detailed information about the date, cause and circumstances of any deaths in the 14.6 months before the invasion and the 17.8 months after it, documenting the fatalities with death certificates in most cases.
The project was designed by Les Roberts and Gilbert M. Burnham of the Center for International Emergency, Disaster and Refugee Studies at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore; Richard Garfield of Columbia University in New York; and Riyadh Lafta and Jamal Kudhairi of Baghdad's Al-Mustansiriya University College of Medicine.
Based on the number of Iraqi fatalities recorded by the survey teams, the researchers calculated that the death rate since the invasion had increased from 5 percent annually to 7.9 percent. That works out to an excess of about 100,000 deaths since the war, the researchers reported in a paper released early by the Lancet, a British medical journal.
The researchers called their estimate conservative because they excluded deaths in Fallujah, a city west of Baghdad that has been the scene of particularly intense fighting and has accounted for a disproportionately large number of deaths in the survey.
"We are quite confident that there's been somewhere in the neighborhood of 100,000 deaths, but it could be much higher," Roberts said.
A lot of what we think about as liberal bias is really just poor editing.
The notion that terrorism is caused by poverty especially. It turns out that the average al-Qaeda member is from an intact family, has at least a college degree, is more likely to be married than not, and was not particularly religious until he joined a terror cell.
This is the dumbest thing I've read all week. The leaders of the French revolution were all rich too, so the French Revolution had NOTHING to do with social-economic difficulties either, right? Succesful insurgencies are NEVER led by poor peasants. The point is that terrorism is a RESULT of social-economic circumstances in general among Arab and Middle Eastern countries, the failure of secular-nationalist regimes in Egypt and Syria, and many many other factors, but, of course, attempting to address THOSE issues is just showing weakness. :
Another surprise was that we did find some WMDs in Iraq. Okay, no stockpiles, but artillery shells loaded with sarin gas as well as other chemical weapons. The antiwar crowd always says "no evidence" â †nada, zip, zero â †and they are provably wrong.
Maybe they should tell the Border patrol to keep a lookout for any suspicious looking Arabs driving gun tractors towing 152mm howitzers trying to cross the border? This is a strawman again. We KNOW the Iraqis have chemical weapons, they used a whole bunch of them against Iran 20 years ago. I don't think we are talking about the same "WMD"s here.
The press simply doesn't play up allied victories; they save that precious air time for the next car bomb. Consider the recent campaign in a place called Tall Afar, near the Syrian border. An Iraqi-American force (with more Iraqis than Americans) took on dug insurgents in A series of battles in September 2005. The enemy was quickly beaten and more than 100 terrorists were taken prisoner. Tall Afar was important because it cut a key enemy supply route from Syria to Baghdad and drove the enemy out of its desert strongholds. Or consider that the al-Zarqawi master bomb-maker was recently captured in Northern Iraq, as well as a bomb factory. And so on.
But Iraq and Vietnam are completely different!
Nor has it escaped the notice of Iraqis that most of the victims of the insurgency are civilians and most of suicide bombers are foreigners, some 60 percent hail from Saudi Arabia according to the death notices posted on jihadist websites.
And this is the GOOD news? So if all the terrorists were in Saudi Arabia, why was IRAQ invaded? I thought the whole point of invading Iraq was to, you know, hunt terrorists? so where are all those Iraqi terrorists?
Never mind, my liberal mind was just never meant to do these kind of twists.....
Of course, for you youngsters who are still unclear, The National Review is a fairly well established conservative wank-rag. take it with a few bushels of salt, mmkay?