WMD in iraq.

Re: uh...

Boobies said:
I can understand where Doody is coming from.

The cop analogy is a bit off if look into magnitude of the matter and given conditions.

Cop, under the law, has rights to protect themselves if dangerous situation arised. Whereas, Iraq is not the US and it is a foreign country. You can't just attack a foreign country under uncleared presumptions. Eventually, it is upto the UN to determine who need/must be toppled by sheer force.


No it's not up to the UN to decide. Do we really have to go thru that again. Nations do not need permisson from the UN to defend their National interests or National Security.
 
Oh...

so, it is ok to invade other nations or regions for your own national interest. Bully, no? Another version of manifestation of destiny, no?

Hmm, then China and Russia should drum up the plans (and nothing wrong with it) of invasion under the US definition of national interests. If the US can get away with it, why can't anyone else?
 
Didn't say invade I said Defend. Two different things. And you need to remember the US and UK asked for the UN 's approval to enforce UN Resolutions the UN would not even back their own rhetoric ( maybe because some member Nations had been violating the embargo?). So why would any Nation depend on them for approval of anything.
 
Basically when a governing body fails to even back things like this... it's like having the courts IGNORE law. When you pass a resolution, that thing is not just a good idea to toy around with, that is a legally binding document. If that body which WRITES the document laughs it off, then it has made its own words mean absolutely zip. When their words mean nothing, why do you need their permission?
 
Re: uh...

03USMC said:
Boobies said:
I can understand where Doody is coming from.

The cop analogy is a bit off if look into magnitude of the matter and given conditions.

Cop, under the law, has rights to protect themselves if dangerous situation arised. Whereas, Iraq is not the US and it is a foreign country. You can't just attack a foreign country under uncleared presumptions. Eventually, it is upto the UN to determine who need/must be toppled by sheer force.


No it's not up to the UN to decide. Do we really have to go thru that again. Nations do not need permisson from the UN to defend their National interests or National Security.

It is if you are claiming to have UN backing for your actions.
Using your argument about a nations Security and Interests the US/UK actions are no different than Saddams invasion of Kuweit after all he felt that was in Iraqs best interests as well.

Didn't say invade I said Defend. Two different things. And you need to remember the US and UK asked for the UN 's approval to enforce UN Resolutions the UN would not even back their own rhetoric ( maybe because some member Nations had been violating the embargo?). So why would any Nation depend on them for approval of anything.

Have you ever stopped to think that the reason the UN didnt approve the action was that they didnt believe Iraq was a threat?.
Really you have to accept that if you are going to be part of a UN then you are going to have to look at nations saying "No" once in a while and in this case in particular they have been proven right as there is no WMD program, there is no Al Queada link and there is no nuclear threat.

So please stop the "UN didnt do what we want therefore they are useless" argument it really doesnt wash anymore, and lets be realistic if the US wanted out of the UN then there is nothing stopping it.
 
the_13th_redneck said:
Basically when a governing body fails to even back things like this... it's like having the courts IGNORE law. When you pass a resolution, that thing is not just a good idea to toy around with, that is a legally binding document. If that body which WRITES the document laughs it off, then it has made its own words mean absolutely zip. When their words mean nothing, why do you need their permission?

The UN is not a governing body and it doesnt have a military mandate, the role of the UN is to rationally solve problems as they arise, your argument seems very reliant on a notion that if the US/UK roll up and say someone is in breach of a resolution the UN will whip out an invasion permit and say "here ya go, try not to blow up too many buildings on the way".
Well believe it or not if you are going to use the UN as weapon of war then you need to prove to them (Them=rest of world) that you are right.

Now to use the "Cop" analogy everyone seems to love, think of it as a cop seeing a guy crawling through a house window, rather than pulling a gun and shooting the guy most police will investigate to find out if the is robbing the house or just a guy thats locked out of his house.

In this case you have the investigation team (Hans Blix and co) saying we he says he is locked out and we cant find any keys, the cop then shooting him anyway and then the crime scene investigators saying well thats his name on the letterbox so we think he probably lived here as well at which point the cop suddenly decides well he was a bad man and I was freeing his family.
 
I never said the UN backed it. They didn't have the stomach too

The comparison between the invasion of Kuwait and OIF is crap and you know it. Iraq's invasion was a power play that Saddam thought he could get away with.

Apparently the UN thought it was enough of a threat to draft resolutions, employ an embargo and attempt to dispatch Inspection teams. As late as 1991 after the Gulf War there were NBC capable facilities in Iraq. Many of these facilities had an unk status at the beginning of the war.

As far as other Nations telling the US, UK, Mexico , Peru, or whoever no. That doesn't wash whether it's the much Vaunted UN or Trinidad. Each Nation makes it's own decisions. No one. Let me repeat that. No one. Is beholding to the UN.

As far as Blix goes the Iraqi's managed to hide their Nuke weapons program from him until the end of the 1st Gulf War :roll:

I never said the UN was useless. They are good at diaster relief and food distribution and thats about the extent of their prowess. Oh and Food for Oil. Other than that well ................................
 
never said the UN backed it. They didn't have the stomach too

Has nothing to do with not having the stomach to do it, a majority simply didnt accept the US case sorry about that but its reality whether you choose to accept it or not is irrelevant.

The comparison between the invasion of Kuwait and OIF is crap and you know it. Iraq's invasion was a power play that Saddam thought he could get away with.

And it can be easily said that the invasion of Iraq was GWB's power play that he thought he could get away with and indeed he has but he also has a really big clean up bill that world nations so far are refusing to pay.

As far as other Nations telling the US, UK, Mexico , Peru, or whoever no. That doesn't wash whether it's the much Vaunted UN or Trinidad. Each Nation makes it's own decisions. No one. Let me repeat that. No one. Is beholding to the UN.

See this I think is the major point for the first time in recent history people said no to the almighty US, this combined with an administration that only seems to respect strength was a kick in the nuts so rather than simply pulling their heads in they decided follow their current course of action. Fortunately the UN (rest of the world) has left you to it with a resounding "you broke it you buy it" response which means you wont be attacking anyone else in the near future.

I never said the UN was useless. They are good at diaster relief and food distribution and thats about the extent of their prowess. Oh and Food for Oil. Other than that well ................................

And all because they didnt back the poor USA its sad day when peoples opinions vary from what they are told is right.
 
WMD in iraq

My humble opinion is that the UN (The Rest of the World) thingy whisper of sour whipcream. Apperently the UN have been a healthy organisation for a very long time through history. The UN have done alot of good things in the world, but unfortunately this organisation have IMHO rotten from the inside out when it comes to more offensive actions towards evil leaders that kills their own ppl and threaten others just to stay in power.

With what I recognize amongs the UN nations different agendas -I can only see what they have become. A nest of corrupted and sarcastic smiling diplomats and experts that doesn`t want to act but serve their own national interests and political agendas rather then act and help ppl from Tyranny and massmurder beacause it doesnt serve their interests. Just look at Africa and the ethnic-cleansing that is going on,"that is not an ethnic-cleansing". If US and the U.K are so called hypocrites just tell me what the heck the U.N is today?

I dont find any words for that shadow organisation anymore to be honest, It is a club of powerful men/women that would not lift a finger if their own country was attacked, I hardly believe they would act even then, they would do like Spain-scare the hell out of their ppl, and let the villians continue to terrorise the country, with threats of even more attacks if Spain continue to support the war against terrorism. Clearly Iraq had something to do with the terrorism, otherwise they wouldn´t have attacked spain in the first place.This is a good example of how Europe and the U.N today are playing on the grand chessboard.

The WMD question in Iraq is something that destroyed alot of the profits for them that lived of the black oil for food BS story. And when they were threaten to loose their profits they simply refused to carry out their airship resulotion. Talking about WMDs (weapons of mass-destruction) that can kill hundreds of thousands of innocent ppl is nothing you should bring forward to the UN ppl today if you want to save your own ppl´s neck thats for sure.

My trust in the UN is simply forfeit. I would never trust a theif with my keys if I did know he would rob me off when it suited his agendas. This is my opinion, whatever the U.S or the U.K or other allies may have done aginst Iraq, because no matter how you turn it, there is only one winner in this destructive war, and that is the Iraqi ppl in the end of the line. And that is what counts in my eyes.

Doc.S
:viking:
 
MontyB said:
The UN is not a governing body and it doesnt have a military mandate, the role of the UN is to rationally solve problems as they arise, your argument seems very reliant on a notion that if the US/UK roll up and say someone is in breach of a resolution the UN will whip out an invasion permit and say "here ya go, try not to blow up too many buildings on the way".
Well believe it or not if you are going to use the UN as weapon of war then you need to prove to them (Them=rest of world) that you are right.

Now to use the "Cop" analogy everyone seems to love, think of it as a cop seeing a guy crawling through a house window, rather than pulling a gun and shooting the guy most police will investigate to find out if the is robbing the house or just a guy thats locked out of his house.

In this case you have the investigation team (Hans Blix and co) saying we he says he is locked out and we cant find any keys, the cop then shooting him anyway and then the crime scene investigators saying well thats his name on the letterbox so we think he probably lived here as well at which point the cop suddenly decides well he was a bad man and I was freeing his family.

OK I shouldn't have called it a governing body. But that's just a minor detail in this issue.
But if any party of any sort releases a contract, a legally binding document like a UN resolution. Let's drop the cop analogy for now.
The point that I'm making is, if an organization makes its own words mean nothing by laughing off something it decided on, then why does anyone need to hear "yes" or "no" from them to do anything if it obviously means nothing?
I don't think you answered my question at all.

Let me spell out my point:
- The UN Laughed off its own resolution. It was a legal agreement pact by the members who signed it.
- When you laugh off your own signed document, not a promise by word, but a promise by letter, you have relegated your writings to the level of toilet paper (with lousy texture).
-Contracts are terminated on a regular basis, but this requires all parties who signed to agree to terminate the contract and this clearly isn't the case here.
- When you've made it clear that your words or promises don't really mean a whole lot, then why does anyone have to get your written permission to do anything?
- Many countries signed 1441, but the US and the UK were the only ones who went ahead with it. Meaning those two are the only ones who actually ended up honoring it.


On that note, the UN should be given another chance in future as all organizations do have issues with keeping their promises from time to time but you cannot take them seriously on the very matter that they broke their promise for.
 
OK I shouldn't have called it a governing body. But that's just a minor detail in this issue.

No its not, you are acusing them of not following up on their word when the only power they have is to give a mandate to its member countries to carry out its resolutions and in order to give that mandate it requires a majority support from the security council.

- The UN Laughed off its own resolution. It was a legal agreement pact by the members who signed it.

I think you are trivialising things a bit here:
- It (It=the member states not the single entity as you have relegated the UN to) didnt laugh anything off it just didnt believe US claims that the situation was as bad it said it was and lets be perfectly honest the US wasnt an impartial bystander.


- When you laugh off your own signed document, not a promise by word, but a promise by letter, you have relegated your writings to the level of toilet paper (with lousy texture).

- Again you overlook the fact that the UN requires concensus and if the majority isnt backing an action it doesnt progress, if you like think of it as a government had GWB taken his proposal to congress/senate and they voted no would it have progressed further?.

-Contracts are terminated on a regular basis, but this requires all parties who signed to agree to terminate the contract and this clearly isn't the case here.

Yes but as you so rightly point out it requires ALL parties to agree not just one, and in this case the contract wasnt terminated as they were still looking to ensure the job was completed.

- Many countries signed 1441, but the US and the UK were the only ones who went ahead with it. Meaning those two are the only ones who actually ended up honoring it.

Bollocks.
The US and UK have done little more than weaken world security by showing you can ignore the UN and go off half cocked killing thousands in the process.

When it comes down to it my argument remains the same, it is the UN's responbility to determine whether a country is in breech of its resolutions and it is the UN's responsibility to approve any action from those resolutions it is not the responsibility of any single member country to make those decisions on behalf of the UN.

So far all your argument has shown is either a lack of understanding of the UN's purpose or a desire to alternate the role of the UN to suit yout argument.
Please remember:
1) The UN is not a government it is a collection of individual member states.
2) The UN requires majority concenus to progress any resolution.
3) The purpose of the UN was as a place for nations to meet and sort out their differences using other nations to inject impartiality.

On that note, the UN should be given another chance in future as all organizations do have issues with keeping their promises from time to time but you cannot take them seriously on the very matter that they broke their promise for.

You mean they need to be given another chance to agree with which ever state is the most powerful.
Once again the "promise" the UN made was that serious consequences would befall Iraq if they didnt comply with resolution 1441 but those consequences would only be acted on IF the case was proven that they were in breach of resolution 1441.
The US/UK decided they were in breach and took the case to the UN who began investigating the claims however before the investigation was complete the US/UK invaded and have since been proven wrong.

I disagree entirely the UN has been proven as effective as the League of Nations was and should be disbanded, it is obvious that the "powerful" members have no intention of abiding by it and therefore it shouldnt be used as a tool to keep smaller nations in check either.
 
Another headline grabbing news on CNN.com

http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/03/31/intel.report.ap/index.html

Report: Iraq intelligence 'dead wrong'

WASHINGTON (AP) -- In a scathing report, a presidential commission said Thursday that America's spy agencies were "dead wrong" in most of their judgments about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction before the war and that the United States knows "disturbingly little" about the threats posed by many of the nation's most dangerous adversaries.

The commission called for dramatic change to prevent future failures. It outlined 74 recommendations and said President George W. Bush could implement most of them without action by Congress.

It urged Bush to give broader powers to John Negroponte, the new director of national intelligence, to deal with challenges to his authority from the CIA, Defense Department or other elements of the nation's 15 spy agencies.

It also called for sweeping changes at the FBI to combine the bureau's counterterrorism and counterintelligence resources into a new office.

The report was the latest somber assessment of intelligence shortfalls that a series of investigative panels have made since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.

Numerous investigations have concluded that spy agencies had serious intelligence failures before the September 11 attacks against the United States.

The report implicitly absolves the Bush administration of manipulating the intelligence used to launch the 2003 Iraq war, putting the blame for bad intelligence directly on the intelligence community.

"The daily intelligence briefings given to you before the Iraq war were flawed," the report said. "Through attention-grabbing headlines and repetition of questionable data, these briefings overstated the case that Iraq was rebuilding its WMD programs."

The unclassified version of the report does not go into significant detail on the intelligence community's abilities in Iran and North Korea because commissioners did not want to tip the U.S. hand to its leading adversaries. Those details are included in the classified version.

The commission was formed by Bush a year ago to look at why U.S. spy agencies mistakenly concluded that Iraq had stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction, one of the administration's main justifications for invading in March 2003.

"We conclude that the intelligence community was dead wrong in almost all of its prewar judgments about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction," the commission said in a report to the president. "This was a major intelligence failure."

The main cause, the commission said, was the intelligence community's "inability to collect good information about Iraq's WMD programs, serious errors in analyzing what information it could gather and a failure to make clear just how much of its analysis was based on assumptions rather than good evidence.

"On a matter of this importance, we simply cannot afford failures of this magnitude," the report said.

But the commission also said that it found no indication that spy agencies distorted the evidence they had concerning Iraq's alleged weapons of mass destruction, a charge raised against the administration during last year's presidential campaign.

"This is not `politicization'," the panel said of its own report. "It is a necessary part of the intelligence process."

The commission gave Bush a specific suggestion about the daily intelligence briefings he receives -- traditionally delivered by the nation's most senior intelligence official. The panel said that Negroponte should not be the person who briefs the president, or even be in the room every day when the report is given.

"For if the DNI is consumed by current intelligence, the long-term needs of the intelligence community will suffer," the report said. Bush, however, expressly said he planned to give Negroponte responsibility for the daily briefings at the time the president introduced his choice to be the new director of national intelligence.

Overall, the report delivered a harsh verdict. "Our intelligence community has not been agile and innovative enough to provide the information that the nation needs," the commission said. It noted that other investigations have reached similar conclusions. "We should not wait for another commission or another administration to force widespread change in the intelligence community," the report said.

Looking beyond Iraq, the panel examined the ability of the intelligence community to accurately assess the risk posed by America's foes.

"The bad news is that we still know disturbingly little about the weapons programs and even less about the intentions of many of our most dangerous adversaries," its report said. The commission did not name any country, but appeared to be talking about nations such as North Korea and Iran.

"Our review has convinced us that the best hope for preventing future failures is dramatic change," the report said. "We need an intelligence community that is truly integrated, far more imaginative and willing to run risks, open to a new generation of Americans and receptive to new technologies."

The report urged Bush to give more authority to Negroponte, his new director of national intelligence, overseeing all of the nation's 15 spy agencies.

"It won't be easy to provide this leadership to the intelligence components of the Defense Department or to the CIA," the commissioners said. "They are some of the government's most headstrong agencies. Sooner or later, they will try to run around -- or over -- the DNI. Then, only your determined backing will convince them that we cannot return to the old ways," the commission told Bush.

On al-Qaida, the commission found that the intelligence community was surprised by the terrorist network's advances in biological weapons, particularly a virulent strain of a disease that the report keeps secret, identifying it only as "Agent X." The discovery of al-Qaida's work came only after the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan removed the Taliban from power.

"Al-Qaida's biological program was further along, particularly with regard to Agent X, than prewar intelligence indicated," the report says.

U.S. officials have previously said they found signs of al-Qaida's work in anthrax weapons in Afghanistan, but it was not clear if "Agent X" referred to anthrax. Al-Qaida had not yet "achieved a functioning biological weapon with this substance," the report noted.

The commission was unanimous in its report and recommendations.

The panel recommended that Bush demand more of the intelligence community, which has been repeatedly criticized for failures as various investigations have looked back on the Sept. 11 attacks.

"The intelligence community needs to be pushed," the report said. "It will not do its best unless it is pressed by policy-makers -- sometimes to the point of discomfort."

It said analysts must be pushed to explain what they don't know and that agencies must be pressed to explain why they don't have better information on key subjects. At the same time, the report said the administration must be more careful about accepting the judgment of intelligence agencies.

"No important intelligence assessment should be accepted without sharp questioning that forces the (intelligence) community to explain exactly how it came to that assessment and what alternatives might also be true," the report said.
 
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