red baron wrote on Sep 18
th, 2014 at 2:45pm:
Karnal, I do think we got it wrong in Nam.
However, I don't think we got it wrong in Iraq. Let's not forget Saddam Hussein was committing genocide too. Chemical attacks against the Kurds and more.
I also think that our exit strategy was shocking, premature, totally not thought out and created the climate for ISIL to grow strong and successfully attack Iraq.
You're right there. We backed Saddam gassing the Kurds. Uncle vetoed a UN resolution against Saddam's attacks on the Kurds on the Security Council, and Australia has a policy of supporting Uncle on the UN every step of the way.
The gassing of the Kurds did not even become an issue until Kuwait brought it up after Saddam's invasion of them. And after we went into Iraq the first time, there was a deliberate policy to leave Saddam in place. When the Iraqis themselves armed up to fight Saddam, US troops allowed them to be captured by Saddam's Republican Guard in the territories the US held.
Quote:I also believe that there is considerable support amongst Moslems at large for the ISIL movement.
Uncle himself supported ISIL in 2012. How quickly things change. When Syrians armed to fight Assad, Uncle thought all his Christmases had come at once. Now, it seems, the policy is to leave Assad where he is - the way the US backed Saddam, and after Saddam, Gaddafi.
Well, we first backed Saddam, then not Saddam. Then not Gaddafi, then Gaddafi, then not Gaddafi again.
In Syria, it was not Assad, then tacit approval of Assad. In Iran, it's still not the Mullahs - there are still sanctions in place - but Uncle's starting to rely on Iran in his war against Sunni terrorism. In Iraq, Uncle supports the Shi'ah regime that is starting to look a bit like Saddam, only different, so it makes sense that he'll soften towards the Mullahs in Iran, who are the enemies of his enemies enemies. Confused?
How do you think local populations feel?
And how do you expect all those Australians to know which groups are listed as terrorist organizations? Many wouldn't even know which organizations they're fighting for or sending money to.
This is a problem, sure. But if you've got relatives in Syria or Iraq who's lives are being threatened by the regimes in those countries, what do you do? Do you stay calm and hope Uncle sorts it out?
Uncle doesn't even know which side he's on.
You're making a big mistake to assume that Syrian or Iraqi nationals support head-hacking extremists for the pure head-hacking extremism of it all. Syria is at war. The Islamic State is a by-product of that war. I don't know what the percentage is - 10%? 20%? 99.9%? - but many Australians sending funds or fighting in that war are there to defend friends and family from the Assad regime. Many just want to topple that axis-of-evil villain, Bashar al Assad.
You know, like Uncle once did.
How oculd you NOT make mistakes in your analysis of the situation in Syria and Iraq? Even the Central Intelligence Agency makes mistakes. The White House, in particular, has been known to make a few mistakes itself - Saddam's mysterious WMDs, for example, have never been found. Those nuclear fuel rods disguised as pipes?
They turned out to be pipes.
And every single regime backed by Uncle in the Middle East over the past 30 years or so - ALL have been guilty of some form of genocide, violations of human rights including torture, terrorist support, or corruption on the grandest of scales. Hosni Mubarak, for example, is believed to have been one of the richest men in the world. No one knows how much still sits in those numbered Swiss bank accounts.
It seems to me that the perpetrators of the incidents you're describing - genocide, gassing, terrorism - need to be brought to justice based on one set of criteria only: which ones AREN'T backed by Uncle.
We can pick a country at random, based on whomever we like or don't like at a random point in time. Like our last invasion of Iraq, we can take out more than 200,000 civilians. We won't call it genocide, but "collateral damage". And when the boss we put in charge turns out to be as big a bastard as the last one, we can go in again - only we won't call it invasion, but "humanitarian support".
Yes Red, we got in wrong in Nam, we got in wrong in Iraq, and we will, most likely, get it wrong next time too.
Quote:What is left to say Karnal is that the U.S. if they did support ISIL got it horribly wrong.
This only heightens the onus on those that f.....d it up to go in and put things to rights.
Don't you ever get tired of trying to put things right?