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IRAQ nuke attack

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  • I Itanium

    Joe Woodbury wrote US has even followed arms treaties its Senate hasn't ratified What about CTBT? sorry for my bad English.

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    pankajdaga
    wrote on last edited by
    #18

    CTBT is a big farce. It only extends the two-faced nature of nuclear capable countries. They have developed the nuclear technology and have enough data to create nuclear weapons. They want the other countries to sign the CTBT. This is why France finished its nuclear tests and then later signed the CTBT. Without struggle, there is no progress

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    • B Brian Azzopardi

      Bangerman wrote: You cant demand that your "enemies" dont develope the weapons that you have stated you intend to use. Of course this is two-faced. And even more, when it comes to international relations it is perfectly normal and acceptable behviour. Don't be naive. Bangerman wrote: I think SH is a threat to peace, but I kinda think that of Bush as well. You are effectively implying moral equivalency here between a democracy and a murderous tyrant. This either shows that you don't really know what you're talking about or that you're one of those soft-headed, bleeding heart liberals who think that all the world's problems are the West's fault. Frankly, until you know the difference between Richelieu and Woodrow Wilson you're just another uninformed poster trying to look intelligent. Brian Azzopardi. bibamus, edamus, cras moriemur

      [eat, drink, for tomorrow we die]

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      Gabriel 2
      wrote on last edited by
      #19

      I'm sorry to disagree with you, of course there's a difference with democracy and tyranny, but don't be so simplistic to believe only because you have an elected president that will stop him from doing terrible things. If you’d only read a little more, you’d discover that, even if in democracy power use is much more controlled, many so called “democracies” committed such crimes as well. I believe Peterchen's response is excellent, let repeat it: A rose is a rose by it's smell, not by it's name.

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      • B Bangerman

        Brian Azzopardi wrote: You are effectively implying moral equivalency here between a democracy and a murderous tyrant. This either shows that you don't really know what you're talking about or that you're one of those soft-headed, bleeding heart liberals who think that all the world's problems are the West's fault. Oooooo. I'm not implying equivilence. I'm observing that the current US administration wishes to apply rules to other countries, not just IRAQ, that it will not follow for itself. It is not can can never be right to develop nuke weapons to attack none nuke states. Nukes should always be held on a none first use principle. Given a position of none first use you have the moral high ground to argue that IRAQ and other states should not have Nukes. But if you decide that you are happy to go for first use you lose the high ground and become another bully. Dont forget that the US wanted to invade IRAQ without UN approval. So dont give me any of that US flag waving, Nuke the bastards garbage and look at the wider imnplications of first use nukes. ;P

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        Gabriel 2
        wrote on last edited by
        #20

        Brilliant!!!:):):):):)

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        • M Michael A Barnhart

          Bangerman wrote: They dont want any verifiable arm control placed on them, You apparently are ignoring history here. The US wanted no restricted air zones (post WW2) so each country was free to keep survalence on each others military areas. It was the European goverments that refused to agree with this. "I will find a new sig someday."

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          Gabriel 2
          wrote on last edited by
          #21

          Are you sure about this? It sounds really strange US or any nation accepting anyone flying over the country with no restrictions. Anyway, this has nothing to do with arm control. All images adquired from a plane flying over the country could be perfectly taken from a satelite. Arm control means revealing all weapon development (biological, quimical, etc), which of course no country in the world would accept, if not forced to. This can't be revealed by a plane flying over a country.

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          • B Bangerman

            So the US wants to make sure SH doesnt make any nuke weapons cos he cant be trusted not to use them. They want the world to be a safer place without them. BUT They dont want any verifiable arm control placed on them, and they want to use first strike bunker busting Nukes. Isn't this a little two faced. You cant demand that your "enemies" dont develope the weapons that you have stated you intend to use. Dont misunderstand me I think SH is a threat to peace, but I kinda think that of Bush as well.

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            Dy
            wrote on last edited by
            #22

            Bangerman wrote: Dont misunderstand me I think SH is a threat to peace, but I kinda think that of Bush as well Both are undemocratically elected leaders, both are dangerous, and one of them openly admits to having weapons of mass destruction. Who's the enemy again?


            Dylan

            "In meetings, the person who is least competent usually does the most talking. Talking is a direct substitute for competence, at least in the minds of other people. Five minutes after you leave a meeting, you won't remember what anyone said but you will remember who did most of the talking. Withing a day your mind will translate that into a notion that the talker was unusually knowledgeable" - Scott Adams, Dilbert and the way of the weasel

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            • M Michael A Barnhart

              Shamoon wrote: remember USA was the first to throw nuclear cake on Japan.. And have you ever seen figures on how many lives were expected to be lost in an invasion of the Japan mainland? The usage at that time saved millions on Japanese lives. "I will find a new sig someday."

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              Jason Gerard
              wrote on last edited by
              #23

              Yeah, with about Nagasaki and Hiroshima, the war probably would've have lasted a few more years with many many many more causalties on both sides. Jason Gerard "This almost never matters, except quite often."

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              • D Dy

                Bangerman wrote: Dont misunderstand me I think SH is a threat to peace, but I kinda think that of Bush as well Both are undemocratically elected leaders, both are dangerous, and one of them openly admits to having weapons of mass destruction. Who's the enemy again?


                Dylan

                "In meetings, the person who is least competent usually does the most talking. Talking is a direct substitute for competence, at least in the minds of other people. Five minutes after you leave a meeting, you won't remember what anyone said but you will remember who did most of the talking. Withing a day your mind will translate that into a notion that the talker was unusually knowledgeable" - Scott Adams, Dilbert and the way of the weasel

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                KaRl
                wrote on last edited by
                #24

                Dylan Kenneally wrote: Who's the enemy again? The one who has still gazed thousands of Kurds and probably also Iranians. (BTW, what is the score of GW with the death penalty in Texas ?)


                I hurt so bad inside I wish you could see the world through my eyes It stays the same I just wanna laugh again

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                • D Dy

                  Bangerman wrote: Dont misunderstand me I think SH is a threat to peace, but I kinda think that of Bush as well Both are undemocratically elected leaders, both are dangerous, and one of them openly admits to having weapons of mass destruction. Who's the enemy again?


                  Dylan

                  "In meetings, the person who is least competent usually does the most talking. Talking is a direct substitute for competence, at least in the minds of other people. Five minutes after you leave a meeting, you won't remember what anyone said but you will remember who did most of the talking. Withing a day your mind will translate that into a notion that the talker was unusually knowledgeable" - Scott Adams, Dilbert and the way of the weasel

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                  Alvaro Mendez
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #25

                  C'mon, you know the answer. The one who lies and tells you he has no WMD when he does. The one who has used such weapons to kill his own people. The one who's in power indefinetely, because his people won't dare to depose him for fear of their lives. The one who invaded Kuwait 10 years ago. SADDAM HUSSEIN Get a brain! Regards, Alvaro


                  Well done is better than well said. -- Benjamin Franklin (I actually prefer medium-well.)

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                  • A Alvaro Mendez

                    C'mon, you know the answer. The one who lies and tells you he has no WMD when he does. The one who has used such weapons to kill his own people. The one who's in power indefinetely, because his people won't dare to depose him for fear of their lives. The one who invaded Kuwait 10 years ago. SADDAM HUSSEIN Get a brain! Regards, Alvaro


                    Well done is better than well said. -- Benjamin Franklin (I actually prefer medium-well.)

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                    Dy
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #26

                    Don't get me wrong, SH is clearly an evil man, and something has to be done to help the people of Irag. But bombing helps nobody. Alvaro Mendez wrote: The one who lies and tells you he has no WMD when he does Maybe he does. But I live in a democracy, which cleary states that you are inocent until proven otherwise. Care to show me some evidence? Alvaro Mendez wrote: Get a brain! Get a grip, and have a word with yourself. Really, come on... On the issue of war with Iraq: Why him? Why now? What next?


                    Dylan

                    "In meetings, the person who is least competent usually does the most talking. Talking is a direct substitute for competence, at least in the minds of other people. Five minutes after you leave a meeting, you won't remember what anyone said but you will remember who did most of the talking. Withing a day your mind will translate that into a notion that the talker was unusually knowledgeable" - Scott Adams, Dilbert and the way of the weasel

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                    • B Bangerman

                      Brian Azzopardi wrote: You are effectively implying moral equivalency here between a democracy and a murderous tyrant. This either shows that you don't really know what you're talking about or that you're one of those soft-headed, bleeding heart liberals who think that all the world's problems are the West's fault. Oooooo. I'm not implying equivilence. I'm observing that the current US administration wishes to apply rules to other countries, not just IRAQ, that it will not follow for itself. It is not can can never be right to develop nuke weapons to attack none nuke states. Nukes should always be held on a none first use principle. Given a position of none first use you have the moral high ground to argue that IRAQ and other states should not have Nukes. But if you decide that you are happy to go for first use you lose the high ground and become another bully. Dont forget that the US wanted to invade IRAQ without UN approval. So dont give me any of that US flag waving, Nuke the bastards garbage and look at the wider imnplications of first use nukes. ;P

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                      Alvaro Mendez
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #27

                      I love it whenever people like you can only chant for peace and for being a good tolerant government and for not bullying others who are not exactly like us, but you never mention the people who live under those regimes! Have you ever given a single thought to the fact that maybe, just maybe the Iraqi people can't wait till their oppresive asshole leader is gone? Have you ever thought that many people migrate en masse to the US (and other nations) every year because they want to live in freedom? Have you ever thought that maybe 99% of sane people want to live in a society that respects their human rights and gives them the opportunity to grow as human beings? Have you ever thought that 99% of the sane people of Iraq just can't wait till the US goes in there and changes things 180 degrees? Why do I tell you this? Because I lived under an oppressive government for the first 10 years of my life and it could have all been avoided if the US govenment had not f*cked up their chance to take it out of power. So now, 44 years later, the people of that poor country are still living under the same oppressive asshole leader and can't do a god-damn thing about it. And the US doesn't care. Is this what you want for Iraq? Regards, Alvaro


                      Well done is better than well said. -- Benjamin Franklin (I actually prefer medium-well.)

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                      • G Gabriel 2

                        I'm sorry to disagree with you, of course there's a difference with democracy and tyranny, but don't be so simplistic to believe only because you have an elected president that will stop him from doing terrible things. If you’d only read a little more, you’d discover that, even if in democracy power use is much more controlled, many so called “democracies” committed such crimes as well. I believe Peterchen's response is excellent, let repeat it: A rose is a rose by it's smell, not by it's name.

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                        Richard Stringer
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #28

                        Gabriel 2 wrote: believe Peterchen's response is excellent, let repeat it: A rose is a rose by it's smell, not by it's name. A cheap ripoff of the Bard: A rose by any other name would smell as sweet. Hey If you are gonna steal do it right. Richard When I reflect upon the number of disagreeable people who I know have gone to better world, I am moved to lead a different life. Mark Twain- Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar

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                        • I Itanium

                          Joe Woodbury wrote US has even followed arms treaties its Senate hasn't ratified What about CTBT? sorry for my bad English.

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                          Joe Woodbury
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #29

                          Itanium wrote: What about CTBT? What about it? The US is currently following it even though the Bush administration disagrees with it. (For the record, so do I. The argument that you can simulate a nuclear blast on a super computer doesn't hold water--you need to verify you data periodically.)

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                          • B Bangerman

                            see: http://www.globalsecurity.org/org/news/2002/020523-nuke.htm and: http://www.ddh.nl/pipermail/wereldcrisis/2002-March/002777.html and: http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=nuclear+bunker+buster&spell=1 Bush - A man of few words (that make sense), Oil and big guns. After all he is a Texan :-)

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                            Joe Woodbury
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #30

                            So what? Surely you know the US already has weapons very similar to this. You have heard of artillery launched warheads? The bottom line is if you are going freak out over every proposal that comes out of the Pentagon, you're going to live a very dismal life.

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                            • D Dy

                              Bangerman wrote: Dont misunderstand me I think SH is a threat to peace, but I kinda think that of Bush as well Both are undemocratically elected leaders, both are dangerous, and one of them openly admits to having weapons of mass destruction. Who's the enemy again?


                              Dylan

                              "In meetings, the person who is least competent usually does the most talking. Talking is a direct substitute for competence, at least in the minds of other people. Five minutes after you leave a meeting, you won't remember what anyone said but you will remember who did most of the talking. Withing a day your mind will translate that into a notion that the talker was unusually knowledgeable" - Scott Adams, Dilbert and the way of the weasel

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                              Eddie Velasquez
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #31

                              Dylan Kenneally wrote: Both are undemocratically elected leaders What a load of BullS*it! Bush won the elections fair and square according to the current election laws. What can be more democratic than that? We as a country accept the results of a flawed law. And it can't be that bad after all, I don't see any democrats pushing for a change in the electoral laws.


                              There are only 10 kind of people in the world: those who understand binary and those who don't.

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                              • S Shamoon

                                Joe Woodbury wrote: Moreover, the US, Britain and France have multilayered safeguards on the use of their nuclear weapons. Iraq, North Korea and other rogue states have no such thing. Such safe guards are of no use because they are controlled by leadership, and once moron leadership decided to turn them, the result is destruction... remember USA was the first to throw nuclear cake on Japan..

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                                Joe Woodbury
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #32

                                Shamoon wrote: remember USA was the first to throw nuclear cake on Japan And did so only after careful consideration. Dropping the nuclear bombs on Nagasaki and Hiroshima saved both Japanese and American lives. The irony is that more people were killed in the bombing of Tokyo and other cities by conventional weapons than were killed by nuclear weapons. (Anticipating the use of the bomb, Nagasaki and Hiroshima were also two of several Japanese cities on allied "no-bomb" lists. Had they been fire bombed, both cities would have been as leveled as they were with nuclear bombs and the casualties would have been much higher.)

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                                • S Simon Brown

                                  Brian Azzopardi wrote: You are effectively implying moral equivalency here between a democracy and a murderous tyrant. This either shows that you don't really know what you're talking about or that you're one of those soft-headed, bleeding heart liberals who think that all the world's problems are the West's fault. Nope, just America's fault at the moment as has been repeatedly stated by Al Quaeda and other anti-US groups. The sooner Bush is put back in his box and the US is controlled by intelligent citizens and not the current crop of clowns the better it will be for everyone, especially the innocent bystanders. Old Simon HB9DRV

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                                  Joe Woodbury
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #33

                                  Simon Brown wrote: especially the innocent bystanders Would those include women executed for not wearing burkas? Or for reading? Would it include people arrested and executed without trial? Or imprisoned, tortured and murdered simply for saying even kinder words in opposition of their leaders than you have against Bush?

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                                  • B Bangerman

                                    see: http://www.globalsecurity.org/org/news/2002/020523-nuke.htm and: http://www.ddh.nl/pipermail/wereldcrisis/2002-March/002777.html and: http://www.google.co.uk/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&q=nuclear+bunker+buster&spell=1 Bush - A man of few words (that make sense), Oil and big guns. After all he is a Texan :-)

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                                    Emcee Lam
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #34

                                    If it makes you feel better, the intention is not to destroy major cities. This is not a traditional nuclear weapon. The US has been very leery about using any nuclear weapon. This would be no exception. I'm thinking that this is a weapon used to frighten, rather than something that would be used. Similar to how ICBM's are used to deter Saddam, this bomb would tell Saddam that bunkers aren't safe to hide in. The power of a nuclear weapon is not in the usage, but in the threat of usage.

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                                    • B Bangerman

                                      Brian Azzopardi wrote: You are effectively implying moral equivalency here between a democracy and a murderous tyrant. This either shows that you don't really know what you're talking about or that you're one of those soft-headed, bleeding heart liberals who think that all the world's problems are the West's fault. Oooooo. I'm not implying equivilence. I'm observing that the current US administration wishes to apply rules to other countries, not just IRAQ, that it will not follow for itself. It is not can can never be right to develop nuke weapons to attack none nuke states. Nukes should always be held on a none first use principle. Given a position of none first use you have the moral high ground to argue that IRAQ and other states should not have Nukes. But if you decide that you are happy to go for first use you lose the high ground and become another bully. Dont forget that the US wanted to invade IRAQ without UN approval. So dont give me any of that US flag waving, Nuke the bastards garbage and look at the wider imnplications of first use nukes. ;P

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                                      Joe Woodbury
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #35

                                      Bangerman wrote: Nukes should always be held on a none first use principle. And that IS and continues to be the US position. But we do have something called "freedom of speech" which allows us to discuss whether this is valid policy. Bangerman wrote: I'm not implying equivilence. I'm observing that the current US administration wishes to apply rules to other countries, not just IRAQ, that it will not follow for itself. But you are implying moral equivilance, since you are saying there is no difference in how the US and Iraq would use nuclear weapons. In the past twenty years Iraq has not used chemical and biological weapons against both Iran and its own people, the Kurds and has bragged about it. The US has not used such weapons (and if you're going to argue that innocent people being killed in testing is morally equivilant, you don't understand morality.) By contrast, during the war in Afghanistan, civilians have been killed and the Western allies has held inquests into why that has happened and soldiers have been punished.

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                                      • I Itanium

                                        Well said, Well said. 110% agreed. I will slap you.:suss: I will kick you.:suss: I will shoot you.:suss: I will use Nukes. :suss: I will use Carpet bombing.:suss: I can use WMD ...:suss: But Remeber you shouldnt have any thing to do the same. OK. Guess? who I am?:rolleyes: _________________________________________ sorry for my bad English.

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                                        Emcee Lam
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #36

                                        Itanium wrote: I will use Nukes. I can use WMD ... But Remeber you shouldnt have any thing to do the same. OK. This sounds like a justification that every nation should be allowed to possess nukes. There are reasons why the US doesn't want any other countries developing nuclear weapons. More nuclear proliferation will only mean more nuclear accessibility to Al Qaeda and bigger threats by Saddam Hussein. The world would not be a better place if every nation was allowed to have nuclear weapons.

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                                        • G Gabriel 2

                                          I'm sorry to disagree with you, of course there's a difference with democracy and tyranny, but don't be so simplistic to believe only because you have an elected president that will stop him from doing terrible things. If you’d only read a little more, you’d discover that, even if in democracy power use is much more controlled, many so called “democracies” committed such crimes as well. I believe Peterchen's response is excellent, let repeat it: A rose is a rose by it's smell, not by it's name.

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                                          Joe Woodbury
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #37

                                          Gabriel 2 wrote: don't be so simplistic to believe only because you have an elected president that will stop him from doing terrible things. I'm certainly not saying that, but all the NATO countries have processes in place to prevent such terrible things. Can they fail? Of course, but open democracies can deal with these failures. If Saddam Hussein, or another dictator, has a nuclear weapon or another weapon of mass destruction, he alone controls the use. There is no mechanism to check his control. There is no accountability for any of his actions save violence. Building on your "a rose by any other name..." argument (misquoted and taken entirely out of context) it appears that having sex with my wife is the same as the acts of a rapist. And that's only the beginning; if as long as there is a rough similarity between the actions of any two people or groups they are morally equivilant, there is no end to the comparisons we can make.

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