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  1. #626
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pol the Pot View Post
    The US and NATO never target civilians. It's in the ROE. Prove me wrong.
    I'm not so sure about that.

    The Taliban they catch aren't given 'prisoner of war' status, so they pretty much are civilians.
    Never heard that. I'll check with the Troops. The major prob they tell me is that other "villagers" take the guns/explosives/ammo away from the men, women, and children who were attacking, so it appears that these attackers were civilians. The left-wing and the mozzies suck up that sh*t.

  2. #627
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    If they were given PoW status they'd have to be let go at some time or other via a third country, they'd have to be treated as proper combatants, the regular RoE as set down by the Geneva conventions and the Haag Landwarfare Rules. They aren't though, wouldn't work for the coalition.

    I think in Germany they don't even call it 'war', I don't know whether they're still using their old 'commissar order' or what. They should be kicked out of the inner circle, never know when they'll start rounding up the Jes in Afghanistan or something, then the coalition will have a real problem explaining

  3. #628
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    Direct bombs probably aren't the main cause of civilian deaths in Iraq (and that includes suicide bombs). Most of the civilian deaths were due to UN sanctions before the war and the large amount of depleted uranium used in the weapons, and the resulting cancers from it. There was a lot of "collateral damage" from the bombs as well. The coalition has outdone Saddam by a long way.

  4. #629
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    Quote Originally Posted by pickel View Post
    Direct bombs probably aren't the main cause of civilian deaths in Iraq (and that includes suicide bombs). Most of the civilian deaths were due to UN sanctions before the war and the large amount of depleted uranium used in the weapons, and the resulting cancers from it. There was a lot of "collateral damage" from the bombs as well. The coalition has outdone Saddam by a long way.
    Its difficult to separate and attribute the "direct cause of civilian deaths" against "indirect causes". Sanctions certainly caused a lot of deaths and suffering among the civilian population in Iran, as they were intended to do in the hope of stirring an internal civilian revolt. Just as they are intended to stir up internal dissent in Iran and North Korea. A strategy that has proven to be a hopeless failure in removing particular strong arm governments deemed to be a threat to US interests. All it does is to punish civilians and drive such governments to devote more of their countries resources towards military defence against outside pressure. Which of course means a ramping up of security against internal dissent and resources diverted towards the military in order to fend off the threat of foreign invasion. All of which leaves the civilian population as the meat in the sandwich being squeezed from both outside sanctions and a domestic government preoccupied with survival against both internal and external threats.

    Re the depleted uranium left laying around in Iraq, -- sure the Yanks knew the long term consequences to the Iranian people. They knew it was going to cause immense suffering to the civilian population with birth defects for years to come.
    How many US voters really give a shit how many Iranian kids are born with gross birth defects, or die of cancer before they have a chance to grow up?
    If that kind of toxic stuff was left spread around the ground in USA there would be massive public voter outrage. But this is somebody elses country, so I guess it doesnt matter to the US public at large, --- so long as they get a quick fix to the problem of body bags coming home.

    Same with cluster bombs and land mines. US land mines and unexploded cluster bombs are still killing and maiming civilians in Laos and Cambodia 40 years after the Vietnam war. The US knew the long term consequences of their actions when they laid the mines and dropped the cluster bombs. But hey, they could afford to sacrifice a few sub-human gooks in a far away land for the benefit of the US global empire. Interestingly, USA, along with their global competitors China and Russia are the only countries not to agree to ban land mines and cluster bombs.

    Perhaps if the people of USA had to live with depleted uranium fragments spread around their communities, or land mines and unexploded cluster bombs in the fields where their kids play, oh an lets not forget agent orange;-- perhaps, just perhaps, they might have a different perspective on what they are expecting other people around the word to accept as "acceptable", in US interests of course. ?

  5. #630
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    I've just found a large building in New York designed using Islamic principles but now removed. I assume Jet will be supporting the action of removing it.

    LINK

  6. #631
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    Quote Originally Posted by mr Fred View Post
    I've just found a large building in New York designed using Islamic principles but now removed. I assume Jet will be supporting the action of removing it.

    LINK
    I'm not sure that you quite understand what you've posted.

    Good Lord.


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    Not sure about the similarity myself.

    Nice photo, shame it doesn't look like that now.

    Oh fuck, sorry, but I have to ask, was the demolition too carried out according to "Islamic Principles"?
    Last edited by Stalking Tosser; 09-09-2010 at 10:17 PM.

  7. #632
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    Quote Originally Posted by pickel View Post
    Direct bombs probably aren't the main cause of civilian deaths in Iraq (and that includes suicide bombs). Most of the civilian deaths were due to UN sanctions before the war and the large amount of depleted uranium used in the weapons, and the resulting cancers from it. There was a lot of "collateral damage" from the bombs as well. The coalition has outdone Saddam by a long way.
    Not that I don't believe you, Professor, but can we have some sources?

  8. #633
    Thailand Expat MrG's Avatar
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    Re: post #129.

    A world-view that we could use a lot more of over here.
    Greens X10 if I could.

  9. #634
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    Quote Originally Posted by MrG View Post
    Re: post #129.

    A world-view that we could use a lot more of over here.
    Greens X10 if I could.
    Post # 129:

    Quote Originally Posted by Jet Gorgon View Post
    ^ *sob* Of course no Taleban killed any innocents. Oh, and please remind me, how many Kurds did Hussein kill?
    Why, thank you, mrG.

  10. #635
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    I really thought Jet would be happy that a symbol of the slow, discreet creep of Islam into western lives was demolished.
    Ho hum, I won't be trying to please her again.

  11. #636
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    When Saddam was in charge he only killed his enemies. Now the Yanks are in charge they are killing both their enemies and the innocents. Same same Afghanistan. In a competition to see who can kill the most people, I reckon the Yanks would be in front in both places. From one brutal, corrupt dictator to another. Only difference is the new dictator pretends to support democracy.

  12. #637
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    Once the excuse for WMD was trashed they bought out the excuse (for invading iraq) that Saddam was killing his own people.
    I wonder if you figured out how many of his own people he killed a year, and how many have died as a result of the war, how long Sadam could have stayed in power killing his own people before he reached the number that have been killed so far as a result.
    And while we're on the subject, I wonder what all his relatives are doing and how they're feeling and what they've been plotting since the septics murdered him.
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    There are few things more demoralising and psychologically demanding for an Officer cadre' than being pre-empted, because of an Oath they took, to provide Leadership for a Mission that they do not really believe in. Like many other Professions, that is handled via prefessional detachment and a certain esprit de corps. One has to be a bit detached when you know smart bombs are actually not that smart or selective, or that some of the men you command you are sending to their grave.
    It makes me think about the lack of choice a person has in quitting their job in the military. It's not easy to get out of duty once things start happening. It's not like leaving a job. In a time of real immediate threats to a nation a society wouldn't want anyone to leave but in cases like Iraq and Afghanistan the threat wasn't as imminent or as threatening. The oath itself is pre-emptive. It's used as a way to keep troops when the cause is controversial and the imminent threat really isn't there. The oath and all the propaganda stereotypes (unpatriotic, deserter, traitor, coward)connected to soldiers who don't want to go to 'war' work well to make keep soldiers in line who question the legitimacy of what they are about to be a part of.

  14. #639
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    Quote Originally Posted by PaulBunyon View Post

    It makes me think about the lack of choice a person has in quitting their job in the military. It's not easy to get out of duty once things start happening. It's not like leaving a job. In a time of real immediate threats to a nation a society wouldn't want anyone to leave but in cases like Iraq and Afghanistan the threat wasn't as imminent or as threatening. The oath itself is pre-emptive. It's used as a way to keep troops when the cause is controversial and the imminent threat really isn't there. The oath and all the propaganda stereotypes (unpatriotic, deserter, traitor, coward)connected to soldiers who don't want to go to 'war' work well to make keep soldiers in line who question the legitimacy of what they are about to be a part of.
    The troops out on the battle front are just cannon fodder for the politicans and their financial backers back in some safe air conditioned office. No point even pondering the lot of the boys at the cutting edge. They just do what they are told as they are trained to do. Soldiers aren't allowed to have an opinion on whats right or wrong, whats ethical or not. They sign up to get paid for following orders is all. Been the same all through out history and is not going to change now.

  15. #640
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    ^^
    This is things you have to consider before you sign up as a professional Soldier, you have to trust that you live in a society who's leaders by some considerable margin most likely would not ask you to do things where the legitimacy seen from your side could ever be questioned.

    You can not have Soldiers who hand pick what fights they want to be part of seen from their narrow subjective viewpoint, or Firefighters who will only fight certain fires, Police who will only follow certain personally handpicked laws ect, when you have sworn an oath you are stuck with it.

    In other words you are required to think before you sign on the dotted line, after that you have pretty much signed off your right to ask questions, thats why I probably would never myself sign up to be a soldier in any superpower, it sort of historically comes with the territory that questionable interventions is likely.

    In my home country you not only have to sign up as a soldier, but you also further more will be asked if you will sign up for international operations, so this way there is possibility to serve in the forces without being part of international operations on behalf of UN or in the case of Afghanistan the coalition forces, on the other hand once you have signed twice there really is no excuse and no easy way out.

    Historically I do know of some examples where such very questionable orders where given, but then it would not just be a few walking out but a mass-exodus, like refusing to follow orders from a foreign occupation-force after a surrender, refusing to participate in coup's ect.

  16. #641
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    Quote Originally Posted by larvidchr View Post
    ^^
    This is things you have to consider before you sign up as a professional Soldier, you have to trust that you live in a society who's leaders by some considerable margin most likely would not ask you to do things where the legitimacy seen from your side could ever be questioned.

    You can not have Soldiers who hand pick what fights they want to be part of seen from their narrow subjective viewpoint, or Firefighters who will only fight certain fires, Police who will only follow certain personally handpicked laws ect, when you have sworn an oath you are stuck with it.

    In other words you are required to think before you sign on the dotted line, after that you have pretty much signed off your right to ask questions, thats why I probably would never myself sign up to be a soldier in any superpower, it sort of historically comes with the territory that questionable interventions is likely.

    In my home country you not only have to sign up as a soldier, but you also further more will be asked if you will sign up for international operations, so this way there is possibility to serve in the forces without being part of international operations on behalf of UN or in the case of Afghanistan the coalition forces, on the other hand once you have signed twice there really is no excuse and no easy way out.

    Historically I do know of some examples where such very questionable orders where given, but then it would not just be a few walking out but a mass-exodus, like refusing to follow orders from a foreign occupation-force after a surrender, refusing to participate in coup's ect.
    Larv, get real. Soldiers are not required to think. They get paid and trained to blindly follow orders without question. Thats just the way it works in the military. Always has and always will be. A big part of any soldiers basic training is not just to build up physical fitness, but also to break down any individualistic attitudes.
    The army does not need soldiers who think for themselves, they need individuals who will walk over a hill and get get mowed down by machine gun fire if ordered to do so.

    Carrying out questionable ethical duties away from the heat of battle is another matter where personal ethics might come into play. But the bottom line in any army is that soldiers are trained and expected to carry out orders without question.

    It all gets a little bit tricky when a soldier knows what he is doing is wrong. In which case such a soldier may be shot dead without much investigation if he refuses unethical orders. It aint main street with the same security of a justice system out at the cutting edge on the battle front.

    I feel for the soldiers who have bucked the system on moral grounds. The whistle blowers who expose atrocities and gross unethical military practices. But generally such people are painted as unpatriotic cowards and usually end up as victims rather than heroes.

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    Panda you will have to limit yourself to the things you know.

    In our military that form of training was abandoned many many years ago, we sent our special forces over to do, amongst other things the US Ranger course one of the hardest military training courses in the world, and they came back top of the class every time (I think one team was 1 and 3 place), foreigners kicking ass in the florida swamps Mate.

    The conclusions was that our training system where every single soldier is trained to think, and function as an independent unit if the chain of command is broken, trained to adapt and change objective if conditions change or make it necessary ect. ect. was much better in every way than the cadaver discipline system so prevalent in the US military, so it was decided that there was nothing to gain from sending anymore on those courses.

    We do not have the US stereo type screaming drill sergeants, and we do not do repetitive idiotic exercises just for doing something, neither do we hand out "bad points" for a crease on a pillowcase, and punish units collectively asking them to clean latrines with toothbrushes.

    We expect our soldiers to, want to do their absolute best and go beyond normal human endurance of their own accord, without threat's, violence or screaming as motivational factors, if they don't/won't/can't they are in the wrong line of work and are dismissed from the service.

    When you are fully aware that the training given is the difference between winning and surviving as opposed to dying, you really cant get any higher motivation, so brain-dead punishments for petty offenses, humiliations, and screaming spluttering NCO's is not really that necessary, in fact we know it is counterproductive.

    Likewise on Stanavforlant (standing Nato forces North atlantic) our Navy routinely beat the crap out of our Nato partners in exercises, because our Commanders are trained to think, evaluate, adapt and execute correctly whats necessary independently, rather than waiting for someone from above to tell them what to do every time the situation changes, and that goes right down the chain of command to the last man, so it is no coincidence that it is a Danish Royal Navy ship that normally are command and control for the International naval forces fighting the Somali pirates in the bay off Aden.

    Our professional soldiers in general are better educated before they join than most other countries, and we do not recruit from the dregs of society where the only choice is crime or the army.

    So we forinstance do not need Military Police armed with M16 with live ammo, on the open sea patrolling our vessels protecting us from ourselves and we don't remove the doors on the latrines, unlike for-instance on the US Destroyer Tattnall I once back in time had the dubious pleasure of shipping out on for a fortnight's exercises, because in our navy toilets are used for crapping on rather than drug shooting gallery's.

    In Jugoslavia during the "sniper ally incidents" in Sarajevo, Danish special forces where called upon to help shutting down the sniper menace, after the still secret and little known actions behind Serbian lines, successfully shutting down and eliminating the snipers, it prompted the then Commanding US General to state publicly that the Danish special force soldiers where the best he had ever encountered in his whole career. Not that it surprised us as much as it surprised him.

    You see Panda you are "dead" wrong, in order to be an outstanding soldier, you are required to be an integrated part of a strong homogeneous team, but still have the ability to think and act correctly and independently when necessary, and under extreme psychological pressure physical stress and fatigue, you must be smart to increase your ability to achieve your objective, and still survive in an extremely hostile and challenging environment. And only intelligent, very mentally and physical strong soldiers can do that.

    And this is how we and several other country's train our armed forces, in a very small country we do not have unlimited human recourses, nor unlimited funds to throw at the armed forces, so we have to extract the best from our service personnel, and demand excellence from each and every one.

    Danish armed forces and special forces are still present in- Iraq (very few advisers today)- Afghanistan- bay of Aden- Former Yugoslavia (Kosevo)- Cyprus and Gaza, + "clandestine" joint special forces anti drug operations in various unspecified South American countries
    Last edited by larvidchr; 11-09-2010 at 03:44 AM.

  18. #643
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    Oh my god,….a Mosque in the Pentagon? Walter Reed?


  19. #644
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    Quote Originally Posted by Panda View Post
    Larv, get real. Soldiers are not required to think. They get paid and trained to blindly follow orders without question. Thats just the way it works in the military.
    Quote Originally Posted by larvidchr View Post
    Panda you will have to limit yourself to the things you know.
    Sorry, Larv, PandyBear is correct. A soldier's main job is to follow orders, whether he/she thinks them right or wrong.

  20. #645
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jet Gorgon View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Panda View Post
    Larv, get real. Soldiers are not required to think. They get paid and trained to blindly follow orders without question. Thats just the way it works in the military.
    Quote Originally Posted by larvidchr View Post
    Panda you will have to limit yourself to the things you know.
    Sorry, Larv, PandyBear is correct. A soldier's main job is to follow orders, whether he/she thinks them right or wrong.
    Good on ya Jet for sticking up for me. I hate it when hes right!

  21. #646
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    ^ You must admit, Larv is right most of the time, Pandy. In this case, I had to differ and *horror* back your opinion. Despite what most folks think, I don't follow a party/discipline/ideological line. I think fer meself. *hic*
    I expect a string of green jellybeans from you.

  22. #647
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jet Gorgon View Post
    ^ You must admit, Larv is right most of the time, Pandy. In this case, I had to differ and *horror* back your opinion. Despite what most folks think, I don't follow a party/discipline/ideological line. I think fer meself. *hic*
    I expect a string of green jellybeans from you.
    And he's right in this case as well.

    Training in European armies (not all but certainly in the Central and Northern European armies and the Benelux armies) does emphasize the individual responsibility of the individual soldier. I would also guess that most are told that they actually can disregard and ignore unlawful orders.

    This idea of breaking down and rebuilding individuals is something very American, not saying it's the wrong or the right way to do things.

  23. #648
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pol the Pot View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Jet Gorgon View Post
    ^ You must admit, Larv is right most of the time, Pandy. In this case, I had to differ and *horror* back your opinion. Despite what most folks think, I don't follow a party/discipline/ideological line. I think fer meself. *hic*
    I expect a string of green jellybeans from you.
    And he's right in this case as well.

    Training in European armies (not all but certainly in the Central and Northern European armies and the Benelux armies) does emphasize the individual responsibility of the individual soldier. I would also guess that most are told that they actually can disregard and ignore unlawful orders.

    This idea of breaking down and rebuilding individuals is something very American, not saying it's the wrong or the right way to do things.
    Soldiers thinking for themselves and disobeying unlawful orders. What will it be next? Smart bombs that only kill the baddies and leave the civilians untouched?

  24. #649
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    Quote Originally Posted by Pol the Pot View Post
    Training in European armies (not all but certainly in the Central and Northern European armies and the Benelux armies) does emphasize the individual responsibility of the individual soldier. I would also guess that most are told that they actually can disregard and ignore unlawful orders.
    You would guess? What is an unlawful order? Actually firing your gun and killing the enemy? OK, then I guess that's why most Euro nations don't have troops in NATO. (Should we forgive Spain, seeing as how the terrorists blew up their trains, so they promised not to fight?) Pussies. You disobey an order, you are court-martialled. End of story.

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    Yeah Jet, the Spanish are wankers.

    11 million took to the streests of Madrid to send a message to the terrorist that they were not going to bow down to terrorism.

    Then fuck me, 2 days later they did exactly what the terorists wanted a voted Zappatero into office.
    Twats.
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