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  #46 (permalink)  
Old 05-04-2008
Fidei Defensor's Avatar
Fidei Defensor Fidei Defensor is offline
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Re: Obama's "Change"

Quote:
Originally Posted by TSGracchus View Post
Technically, the U.S. has never been at war with Iraq, since neither of the two wars fought was ever declared by either party.
Technically, they were at war since they were fighting a war.

Quote:
Non-technically, the Gulf War ended in 1993, and we were at peace with Iraq for 10 years thereafter.
There was no peace treaty, but rather a cease fire -- a cease fire that was haltingly adhered to.
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  #47 (permalink)  
Old 05-04-2008
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mudwhistle mudwhistle is offline
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Re: Obama's "Change"

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fidei Defensor View Post
Technically, they were at war since they were fighting a war.

Quote:
Originally Posted by TSGracchus


Quote:
Non-technically, the Gulf War ended in 1993, and we were at peace with Iraq for 10 years thereafter.


There was no peace treaty, but rather a cease fire -- a cease fire that was haltingly adhered to.
The Gulf War ended in 91'. We were in Somalia in 93'.

Quote:
The Gulf War or Persian Gulf War (2 August 1990 – 28 February 1991)[8][9] was a conflict between Iraq and a coalition force from 34 nations[10] authorized by the United Nations (UN) and led primarily by the United States in order to return Kuwait to the control of the Emir of Kuwait. The conflict developed in the context of the Iran-Iraq War and in 1990 Iraq accused Kuwait of stealing Iraq's oil through slant drilling.[11]. The invasion of Kuwait by Iraqi troops was met with immediate economic sanctions against Iraq by some members of the UN Security Council. The expulsion of Iraqi troops from Kuwait began in January 1991 and was a decisive victory for the coalition forces, which took over Kuwait and entered Iraqi territory. Aerial and ground combat was confined to Iraq, Kuwait, and bordering areas of Saudi Arabia. Iraq also launched missiles against targets in Saudi Arabia and Israel in retaliation for their support of the invading forces in Kuwait.

Gulf War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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  #48 (permalink)  
Old 05-04-2008
TSGracchus TSGracchus is offline
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Re: Obama's "Change"

Quote:
Originally Posted by Fidei Defensor View Post
Technically, they were at war since they were fighting a war.
I was answering an argument by legalism. By any common-sense evaluation, we fought the Gulf War against Iraq, then had peace for years, then attacked Iraq in 2003. Legalistically, you could argue that we were "at war" the whole time, but then, legalistically, you could argue that we were never at war at all. Which was my answer.

Quote:
There was no peace treaty, but rather a cease fire -- a cease fire that was haltingly adhered to.
Since a state of war was never declared, a peace treaty would have been impossible. A cease fire, under those circumstances, means peace.

Mudwhistle: thanks for the date correction. 12 years, then, not 10.
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  #49 (permalink)  
Old 05-05-2008
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hairballxavier hairballxavier is offline
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Re: Obama's "Change"

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Originally Posted by TSGracchus View Post
Considering how much Osama bin Ladin and Saddam Hussein despised each other,
What makes you think that they despised each other?

Could you explain the reasoning you used to come to that conclusion?
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Last edited by hairballxavier; 05-05-2008 at 04:53 PM.
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  #50 (permalink)  
Old 05-05-2008
TSGracchus TSGracchus is offline
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Re: Obama's "Change"

Quote:
Originally Posted by hairballxavier View Post
What makes you think that they despised each other?

Could you explain the reasoning you used to come to that conclusion?
Sure, and since you asked for reasoning, I won't go look up quotes. I'm prepared to do that if necessary, though.

Osama bin Ladin is a Muslim fanatic who likes Islamic republics, the stricter the better. The Taliban was a government that met his favor. He does not like secular governments, self-interested despotic tyrants (except when they're being despotic in proper service to God), or rulers that collaborate and cooperate with the U.S.

Saddam Hussein was a secular tyrant. He was widely perceived as a lax Muslim. He was also, in more normal terms, cruel, despotic, and generally a bad man -- and in service only to himself, not to God. And, finally, he collaborated and cooperated with the U.S. on many occasions, receiving American aid during the Iran-Iraq war, until he fell afoul of the U.S. by invading Kuwait.

So Saddam was exactly the sort of leader of a Muslim nation that finds himself on bin Ladin's hit list. Also, bin Ladin has explicitly said that in the past, if I'm not mistaken.
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  #51 (permalink)  
Old 05-05-2008
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hairballxavier hairballxavier is offline
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Re: Obama's "Change"

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Originally Posted by TSGracchus View Post
Just as obviously we were not at war with them. Military operations designed to enforce a no-fly zone do not constitute war.
Irrelevant. No-fly zone or not, obviously it is war when they are shooting at each other

I'd say that when opposing military forces are attacking each other with missiles, bombs and artillery, it's reasonable to say they are at war with each other.

Do you disagree with that?
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  #52 (permalink)  
Old 05-05-2008
TSGracchus TSGracchus is offline
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Re: Obama's "Change"

Quote:
Originally Posted by hairballxavier View Post
I'd say that when opposing military forces are attacking each other with missiles, bombs and artillery, it's reasonable to say they are at war with each other.

Do you disagree with that?
As an absolute statement, yes, I do disagree. The scale of the attacks matters, as does the intention of the governments involved. There were border skirmishes between the Soviets and the Chinese all through the 1970s, but the two countries were never at war. Our troops at Guantanamo occasionally traded fire with the Cubans, but the U.S. and Cuba were never at war. The crew of a U.S. spy boat was captured by North Korea some time after the Korean War ended and treated rather badly, but the U.S. and North Korea were not at war.

This is a pretty common occurrence in history when two countries have an uneasy peace but neither is willing to initiate full-scale war.
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  #53 (permalink)  
Old 05-06-2008
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DGG DGG is offline
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Re: Obama's "Change"

Quote:
Originally Posted by TSGracchus View Post
...
Since a state of war was never declared, a peace treaty would have been impossible. A cease fire, under those circumstances, means peace.
...
Declaration of war is not necessary for there to be a war. War in itself is not an absolute necessity for a peace treaty to be signed. Your statement is just strange.

Of course, an agreement on cease fire or other kinds of agreements can substitute a peace treaty. There has, for example, never been a peace treaty signed between Germany and the Allies after WWII, but the war is undoubtedly over and the borders settled through other means. Germany and Poland have signed a special treaty about recognition of the present borders, but this was not a peace treaty as such.
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  #54 (permalink)  
Old 05-06-2008
TSGracchus TSGracchus is offline
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Re: Obama's "Change"

Quote:
Originally Posted by DGG View Post
Declaration of war is not necessary for there to be a war. War in itself is not an absolute necessity for a peace treaty to be signed. Your statement is just strange.
Declaration of war is not necessary for there to be a war (in some sense), but war IS necessary for a peace treaty to be signed, and moreover it must be a DECLARED war. We never had a peace treaty with North Vietnam, for example. We did have one with Nazi Germany and with Imperial Japan. We were at war with all three countries, but in a declared war (requiring a formal peace treaty to end it) only with the latter two.

This isn't terribly meaningful except in response to the claim that we were still at war with Iraq between the two wars because there was no peace treaty. Since we were never formally in a declared war with Iraq at all, the lack of a peace treaty is meaningless.

Yes, you can have a war without a declaration of war. You can also have a peace without a peace treaty. That was my point.
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  #55 (permalink)  
Old 05-07-2008
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The Greek The Greek is offline
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Re: Obama's "Change"

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Originally Posted by chassisman View Post
Simple question Obamites..........realistically, what do you think Obama can "change" in four years if he is elected, and more importantly, by what means?
Realistically, Look at the changes being made (or attempting to be made) by Pelosi and the current Democrats in government and you will pretty much have your answer. Obama does not have the experience or the political clout to drive the changes he is talking about, only to support the changes that the Democartic Leadership presents to him. If you are happy with what the Democartic leadership is selling then support Obama, otherwise beware.

When you get past all of the great talk, you have another John Kennedy without the political power of the Kennedy family to back him up. Obama may have great ideas, but that doesn't mean he has any more political influence or experience that any other citizen to bring them to reality.
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