Ogami said:
So your argument is we should take Iran at their word, shouldn't we?
No, that is not my argument but it's interesting that you. Is it your stance that nations should be accused of doing [x] with no evidence presented that they are doing it, that their word shouldn't be believed?
What would you like? Inspections? Because Iran has fully complied with them, something Iraq didn't do.
Bush spoke clearly when he placed Iran, Iraq, and North Korea in an axis of evil.
A rare instance of him being intelligible, yes, but what does that have to do with it?
???? No one will try and stop you, but understanding you may be the problem. I don't know if Tony Snow is cleaner than the Iranian president, what does that matter?
Ok, why should we believe Bush over the President of Iran?
I'm beginning to wonder if your posts are just a rib.
No, you don't get that luxury. You've been extremely close-minded since you showed up (Something you know wish to claim of others here). You're ass has been consistently whipped when it comes to little things like 'facts' and reality, and now you attempt to assert some authority on their part. Remember your little meltdown? "Worship Bush" or something to that effect?
Watching Israel and Iran turn their respective countries into blackened glass is not something I'd care to see.
My taxes should fund this why?
This was the precise message Bill Clinton sent to every dictator in the world when he bombed Serbia with impunity for two solid months. He wouldn't do that with someone with nukes.
And Bush won't attack any nation which has nukes. China has been violating human rights for quite a while now, and on a much larger scale than Saddam dreamed of. Why isn't Bush after them? It's been stated that Saddam had to go regardless of whether or not he had WMDs. And if it weren't, why would we need to hear about the abuses in Iraq?
Slobodan, the most feared man in the region, was powerless in the face of a superpower. Humiliated, he was driven from power. That is a fate no dictator wants to share, no mullahs, either. It's natural that rogue states like Iran would seek out an equalizer, even if just for bluffing and posturing.
Ah, 'Rogue State.' Something I haven't read in a bit now.
Russia and China are getting along fine with Iran, and the EU is attempting to find a middle ground. Perhaps they are all rogue states as well?
It's telling that you 1) automatically believe any claim made by Saddam Hussein's Iraq i.e the slant drilling claim, yet you 2) automatically disbelieve any claim made by Kuwait.
Can we back up our claims?
Claim #4: One of our radio ads claims our government was told in advance by Hussein that he might invade Kuwait in 1990, but we did nothing to deter him. Can we support this claim?
This story is well established. It was widely reported by major newspapers, magazines, and TV networks at the time, but was rarely mentioned again after the first wave of publicity. Some of the details are also discussed in a number of books, including Iraq by Dilip Hiro and A World Transformed, by the former National Security Advisor under Bush, Sr., Brent Scowcroft.
Hussein had three problems with Kuwait:
- A border dispute dating back to Great Britain's artificial drawing of the lines after World War I.
- Kuwait was allegedly slant drilling into Iraq's oil fields and stealing its oil.
- Kuwait was violating its OPEC production agreements in order to drive down the price of oil and bankrupt Iraq.
This last point is interesting because it was essentially a strong-arm tactic Kuwait was using to win concessions from Iraq. Iraq was vulnerable to this tactic because it had borrowed money from Kuwait and Saudi Arabia to wage war against Iran in the 1980s. Kuwait and Saudi Arabia had loaned this money because they too were afraid of the revolutionary regime in Iran. The U.S., Iraq, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia, were all complicit in the war against Iran, and all of them hoped to benefit from it. But now Kuwait was using the loans it had made to Iraq as leverage to win profitable concessions from Hussein with regard to the border dispute and their slant drilling. And Kuwait was turning up the heat by also violating its production agreement. This reduced oil prices generally, and Iraq's oil income in particular.
http://www.truthaboutwar.org/claim4.shtml
Why is that? Shouldn't you be equally suspicious of both sides?
Except when Bush accuses Iran of wanting nukes. Then we only need be suspicious of the latter, don't we?
Why does Saddam get a free pass by you? Kuwait didn't conquer Iraq, yet you automatically take Saddam's side.
Don't burst into tears just yet... I point one instance out of Saddam's Iraq being wronged, and now I'm taking 'Saddam's side?'
Interesting choice you made there.
I made no choice such as the one you speak of. Is this more of your 'logic' ?
We already know that in 2006 Iran is seeking nuclear weapons, despite their protests to the contrary.
"But the fact that it's there is no question, where, we don't know, but we know they got it."
It's a simple enough thought exercise for you, Messenger, to ask yourself whether a reigning Saddam Hussein would sit there and do nothing as Iran enriched uranium, or would he want his own nuclear program?
You mean currently? IIRC your last scenario had Iran building bombs, and now it's energy? He would build bombs in response to their energy program? If the sanctions against Iraq were lifted, he'd have no need to build them under the excuse of building a power plant. Please clarify you're scenario.
I thought you'd be afraid to answer that, because it doesn't fit in with your irrational Bush-hating.
Afraid? I'm simply reluctant to entertain fantasy scenarios of a proven fool so as to reinforce his delusional and uninformed worldview in front of a groaning audience. But by all means, clarify your scenario.
Thanks for proving me right.
I find it amusing that you're suddenly concerned with 'proof,' 'logic,' this late in the game.
Bush-hating? I hate a lot of things. Bush hating is more like a joke about his latest insane verbal fuck-up.
What possible reason would Iran need an atomic bomb for, and why would we even care, before the USA invaded Iraq?
Haven't you said yourself because we invaded Iraq? A neighbor of Iran, imagine that, sharing a common border.
I'm asking you.
Just like Afghanistan, another country Iran shares a border with, a country that all involved say was a necessary step after 9/11.
The Taliban refused to build the pipeline for the US. Now it's being built. Spoils of war, eh?
Yet apparently in your view, which you have not thought out, Middle Eastern countries are only driven to desire nuclear weapons because of our invasion of Iraq, but not because of our invasion of Afghanistan. Crystal clear, Messenger.
No, kiddo, I said Iran
might be interested in a clandestine nuclear program because of the invasion of Iraq, and because of the bellicose manner in which the US is behaving towards it. 'Rogue states,' enemies of Israel, all those 'bad guys' have gotten it in their heads that if they don't do something fast to stop the White House's goosestepping over their sovereignty, they won't be around much longer. Iran has played a supurb game of international chess, and has made the USA look like a bully.
That enough 'contribution' for you, bucko?