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| Non Diving Posts: Discuss The French and Iraq in the Non-Diving Related Forums forums: :redbite: Congo Brazeville early 60's Cuba 62 Czechoslovakia 68 Cyprus 74 Afghanistan 79 Poland 1981 - Troops in Polish uniform, ... |
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| Imported post Agree with that one John. Right this is the way I see it Jay. Get Saddam to admit he intends to invade Poland and everybody is our friend start the war tomorrow and will be sorted by the weekend. All Middle Eastern dive holidays can be booked with no worries. That’s dive related in’ it. Bob |
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| Imported post Err....sorry, John.....I'm just looking for that box of cigars! Well said that man. Why is there so much diffence between the US and Europe? Because the US can speak, nominally at least, with one voice. Europe, on the other hand, is so divided on its own 'domestic' policy (languages, currency, national characteristics and interests etc.) that trying to get them all to agree on any given point can be (as is proving to be the case here - albeit with masked intent) a hopeless task. That, and they are so used to having their countries' criss-crossed by invading armies that they've developed a national 'shrugged-shoulders' attitude. Not good enough, I'm afraid. The US press media managed to keep coverage of the Holocaust down to a 2 inch article on page 17 during WW2; but when they entered the war that changed. I could care less about oil, my conscience tells me that I can not agree with letting Saddam off the hook. And allowing him 'exile' is a further insult that compacts an already outrageous situation. We sent SAS hit squads into the Balkans (still there actually) to round up those deemd to have committed War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity. Saddam too fits that bill. Strangley enough, in all the sectors the French covered, the guys that were being sought always managed to be 10 steps ahead of the posse - as it later came out that elements of the French High Command were sending signals to them so they wouldn't get caught. How can we trust the French in the current script with such recent cowardice and double-dealing still fresh on the table? And to anyone saying that we have to take the same approach with Chile, North Korea, Zimbabwe et al, all I'll say is that day aint over yet. I'd prefer discourse in democracy to reign (albeit sometimes chaotic and ill-informed) rather than some countries (the West) enjoy it exclusively whilst other 'less happy breeds' go to #### in a hand-cart or worse. To those that might blanche at the prospect of war, all I can say is thank God there are those willing to get in amongst it and make a difference for the common-good; the common-good including reducing the number of countries and despots that might actively seek to remove both mine and their own people's freedom and ability to disagree; those despots that might seek to provide succour, shelter, encouragement and the raw materials to allow the extremists to spread their twisted sense of how they have corrupted the tenets of a once noble religion (Islam). They seek to hurt me and others for no good or rationale reason and I'm not happy with that. What other justification do I need? Next question? |
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| Imported post Bottom line Jay and all is I think we all agree he should go, for his crimes against his own people alone but its just the manner in which its done that stinks. So what we gonna chat about during the Anglesey nosh break? Matt (Edited by MATTBIN at 8:47 am on Feb. 12, 2003) |
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| Imported post So, given all the above, why is it sooooo hard for Bush'n'Blair to show us the proof? That is all anyone wants. Give us the justification. If a bunch of guys on a diving website can come up with more reasons than our leader managed on an hour of primetime tv, then something is very wrong. |
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| Imported post </span> Quote:
New Labour? Just tell you the truth? HA! HA! |
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| Imported post Anyone see the Rory Bremner Iraq special. V amusing and full of interesting facts. Turns out a lot of it is our fault in the way we carved up Mesopotamia. The reason the Kurds, Marsh Arabs and ruling Iraqis have issues is that they aren't a natural country. C.F. Yugoslavia and the same problems. We also really fancied using chemical weapons on the 'unruly' locals in Mesopotamia, but unfortunately didn't have the technology - Mr Churchill signed the order though. Lots of the worlds problems stem from the way the British and to a lesser extent the Americans carved up the world for their own benefit. India and Pakistan, Korea, Lots of the Middle East and particularly Israel/Palestine. America isn't going to do anything about North Korea militarily because they have Nukes. Ditto India/Pakistan (Kashmir). Besides Pakistan's oppressive, non-democratic government has been helping out with Afghanistan. Realpolitik. Saudi Arabia is a particularly oppressive state but strategically important and therefore no problem for the Americans. Turkey's record ain't much better but they are a strategic member of NATO - game of Risk anyone? We set up the artificial state - Israel after the second world war, kicking out lots of the 'unruly locals' in the process. Fifty years on its still an intractable problem, and since Israel has many friends in the American government, they will not deal with that either. China's human rights record is a nightmare - the consensus though seems to be contructive engagement rather than war, perhaps because they have quite a lot of guns. SO where is all this rambling going then? I guess that since we caused a lot of the problems, the British have a duty to try and sort it out. For me, the scary thing would be another country getting nukes. If a war stops that then count me in. America is the new empire, becoming fat (literally) and arrogant from their position of unassailable power. A single dominant world power is a potential problem, but does anyone want to go back to the cold war of the early eighties with enough live and targeted nuclear weapons to reduce the entire world to cinders 50 times over? America spends a massive amount on defence (offense) and until Europe spends an equivalent amount, we will be seriously disadvantages when we want a seat at the table. All countries (governments) will act in the manner they feel is in their best interests. This includes ignoring things that they dislike if it is in their strategic interests to do so. The Americans are doing that now, but at least their ideals align approximately with ours. Is war a good thing - No. Is it necessary - possibly. Is it going to happen - Yes. |
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| Imported post Thinking about nukes, I recently read a report the new Republic of South Africa has been sending some ship loads of armaments to Jordan. By S.A. standards its been handled with great secrecy the weapons have been transported and loaded at night. People think it is a blatant sactions busting sale to Iraq and the Jordan end users certificate is fooling nobody, you probably won't of read about it because information the newspapers don't print is also carefully controlled and at present the SA government is one that the powers that be, apparantly wish to whitewash, so the news stories of the on going murder of some thousand ethnic European farmers since Africanisation and the blatant anti ethnic European legislation and policies doesn't get published. Considering the penchant for corruption is so great amongst African governments one can only expect it is just a matter of time that some of nukes S.A. had before Mandela get sold. Who knows maybe they were sold long ago. P.S. Maybe we should replace the Euro parliament with a British Governer general (Edited by budgy at 10:26 pm on Feb. 14, 2003) |
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| Imported post Hi Budgy Got to hand it to the South Africans for being even handed and playing the right cards at the right time - I remember 1973 - Thousands of tonnes of bicycle spares despatched to Ashdod in Israel - there arent enough people in Israel to use that amount over 10 years!!. But, the British government had just publicly refused to supply Israel with tank spares which were part of a long standing arms contract. In 1982, the old RN base at Simonstown was used to provide info on Argentinian naval movements to the British, albeit via the Yanks who I think were occupying the base at the time. Given the abuse thrown at Israel and USA at separate conferences in South Africa over the last year or so it wouldn't surprise me at all if the South African government wasn't busy stirring things up in the Iraq situation. Shame about Africa at the moment. I didn't have much time for "hero" Mandela, he murdered many Africans in his days as a "freedom fighter" and richly deserved his life sentence. However, putting aside personal feelings, I did think he had got South Africa back on the road to recovery etc..etc.. But that seems to be going by the board over the last few years. They were implicated several times in unrest in Nigeria (their economic competitor/enemy) and seem to be backing Mugabe to the hilt in Zimbabwe, another tragedy in a country that at one time could have provided food for a good part of Africa but now has hundreds of farms taken over, destroyed and burnt to the ground (and in many cases the farmers murdered, after having been asked to stay and help with economic recovery from the late 1970's) while half the population starves. I do hope Tony Blair manages to turn his attention to this little problem was Saddam Hussain is sorted out, or perhaps as you say Budgy the word has gone out to the Press barons (queuing up to receive their honours from Tony) that what goes on in Africa is to be kept as low key as possible??!! Cheers John |
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| Imported post :offtopic: Hi John, South Africa developed a very good military manufacuring infrastructure, not in the same league as British Aerospace, but Armscor and Atlas aircraft, once manufactured some good military hardware. Many overseas designs manufactured under license. The Mirage fighter, F.N. small arms, armoured cars, there were some air craft rocket missiles, (I believe a join developement with Israel) and a stalin organ type artillery rocket launcher, the heavy artillery G5 and self propelled version the G6 cannon, their attack helicopter, had a quite advanced helmet sighting system were the weapon system would align automatically with the pilots line of sight. I don't suppose they are manufacturing much any more, because millions of qualified ethnic Europeans voted with their feet. Strange but there are far more ex South Africans living outside Africa than there were anti apartheide refugee's. These people are welcome because of skills and are classed as immigrants and no western government has officialy acknowledged they are refugee's. Log on http://www.censorbugbear.com if you want to know more. |
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