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12/25 |
2010/2/11-18 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:53704 Activity:kinda low |
2/11 Iran declares itself a nuclear nation today: http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20100211/ts_afp/iranrevolutionanniversary \_ Hurry up Kim Jun *THE THIRD*, you're way behind! \_ Iran also packed tens of thousands of rural poor onto buses, drove them into Tehran, and had them pose for pro-gov't. rallies by promising food, drink, and prizes, then declared themselves a popular, democratic country. And I declare myself king of the moon. Doesn't make it so. \_ Nuke it. |
2009/8/11-19 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:53262 Activity:nil |
8/10 http://csua.org/u/osg "If the Iranians were to successfully mine these waters, the disruption to 40 percent of the world’s oil flow would be immediate and dramatic. The nastiest part of the equation would be that in mine warfare, it is very hard to know when all the mines have been cleared. It is the risk, not the explosions, which causes insurance companies to withdraw insurance on vastly expensive tankers and their loads. It is insurance that allows the oil to flow. " |
2009/7/24-29 [Transportation/Airplane, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:53194 Activity:low |
7/24 Another plane crash in Iran in two weeks. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090724/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_iran_plane In both times the planes were Russian-made, and in both times they blamed U.S. sanctions. Why don't they blame the Russian govt for cutting funding for manufacturers that make spare parts (as mentioned at the end of the article) that would have actually made a difference to the planes in the crashes? \_ Is this a serious question? \_ Has anyone noticed there's been an US carrier plane crash about one month since Jan. Wtf? Why no OUTRAGE. \_ What does this mean? |
2009/3/2-5 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:52665 Activity:nil |
3/2 Iran arrested a US journalist on Feb 10. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/middle_east/article5831812.ece |
2008/11/12 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:51945 Activity:nil |
11/2 http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSTRE4AB1WG20081112 megalolz. |
2008/9/26-10/1 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:51317 Activity:low |
9/26 Russia's a democracy. Iran's a democracy. Wouldn't they be members of McCain's League of Democracies? \_ Russia is definitely not a democracy. Any decision may be arbitrarily changed by Putin. Iran is not a democracy, at least no the US version. any decision by the democratically elected not the US version. any decision by the democratically elected leadership can be overruled by the chief cleric. \_ And yet they both hold reasonably free and fair elections, which makes them democracies, at least by definition. What McCain is proposing (and you are agreeing with) is an arbitrary club of countries we like. We currently call this NATO. \_ I still don't think you can really say Iran and Russia are democracies. It stretches the bounds of credibility to say that Russia has free and fair elections. The country is controlled by Putin. Few would disagree with this. Absolutely any decision in Iran can be modified by the Supreme Ruler I mean head cleric. |
2008/7/9-11 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:50522 Activity:nil |
7/9 Iran photoshops missle launch photos http://littlegreenfootballs.com/article/30597_Irans_Photoshopped_Missile_Launch \_ Bush and Ahmadi-Nejad should really be friends, not foes. They both like to exaggerate Iran's military capabilities. |
2008/6/7-10 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:50180 Activity:nil |
6/6 Ehud Olmert threatens Israeli attacks on Iran http://www.reuters.com/article/wtMostRead/idUSL0625195820080606 Of course, given the Olmert's circumstances, this seems a bit 'wag the dog'. \_ Olmert has a single digit approval rating. He has no political future. This is unlikely wagging. The real concern is his gvt will micromanage any strikes on Iran like they did with Hamas and make things even worse (if that's possible). |
2008/6/4-10 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:50155 Activity:moderate |
6/4 Obama promises to eliminate Iran http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSWAT00959220080604 Nevermind, Obama is ok with me now. -motd ex-Obama hater \_ Where in the article does it mention eliminating Iran? \_ "The danger from Iran is grave, it is real, and my goal will be to eliminate this threat" \_ Eliminating the threat, not eliminating the country. \_ So, he's just going to eliminate all their military capabilities? \_ Eliminating a threat does not always mean bombing back to the stone age. In fact, bombing back to the stone age often doesn't eliminate a threat, see Iraq. \_ So, he's going to give them WTO membership and they'll learn to love the Jews and stop promising to "wipe them off the map"? \_ I didn't realize that was the only other choice. Silly me. \_ It is this kind of binary thinking that got us into the mess we are in in the first place. \_ Exactly! We should just talk with them. Use the power of diplomacy and negotiate. The pen is mightier than the sword. After Obama has a chance to talk with Iran's leadership, they'll come around and see this was all just a big misunderstanding and it'll be just like Nixon going to China. We don't need binary thinking. We need Obama's fuzzy thinking. \_ The world is more complex than you are capable of imagining. \_ I'm capable of quite a lot, thanks. Are you saying we should not talk to anyone? It is hard to tell what you're trying to say since you said so little. \_ Your snarkiness does not really indicate a desire for a serious reply. If you are actually interested in a serious conversation about how International Diplomacy works (when not run by arrogant boobs, like the current Admin) I will be happy to have one with you. But you might be better off picking up a copy of Foreign Affairs first. \_ My snarkiness? I made a statement. Your only replies were to insult me. You have still added nothing to this thread. Why did you even bother to post if you had nothing to add? \_ "We need Obama's fuzzy thinking" is a statement? Do you really believe that? is a non-snarky statement? Do you really believe that? The whole paragraph was snarky. \_ "Obama also vowed to vigorously support Israel's right to defend itself ......". See, I told you, Obama is not black. Only a day after he secured the Democratic nomination using support from black people, he's already letting out his 50% whiteness. \_ Black people hate Israel? I didn't know that sterotype. \_ Yeah, and Latinos hating blacks is just another stereotype, too. Yeah, really. \_ And a politician *never* goes back on his promises, right? \_ If we're going to go with this assumption, then I'm voting for Obama because I like him better, no other reason. \_ You are insane aren't you? \_ Didn't Hillary dominate the Hispainc vote because of racial tension between Lations and blacks? \_ In this country, you cannot win the presidency if you don't support the Jews. It's as simple as that. \_ Or any other group with more that accounts for 5% or more of the people. I'm sure you didn't intend to sound racist when you said that. \_ The GOP routinely wins office with less than 10% support from Blacks, a voting block much larger than 5% of the population. Not to detract from your main point though. \_ This has been based, traditionally, on voter apathy among blacks. See if this changes this year. \_ Hello mr. clueless! |
2008/4/24-5/2 [Science/GlobalWarming, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:49818 Activity:nil |
4/24 Oops, Mumbai caught supplying Iran with A-bomb material http://www.newindpress.com/NewsItems.asp?ID=IEP20080423103959&Page=P&Title=Nation&Topic=0 \_ Really? A Bangalorian newspaper was the only place you could find \_ Really? A Chennaian newspaper was the only place you could find this story? \_ http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=us&q=iran+graphite+&btnG=Search+News |
12/25 |
2007/11/15-17 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Health/Women] UID:48645 Activity:low |
11/15 Santas warned 'ho ho ho' offensive to women - Yahoo News! http://www.csua.org/u/k0a Oh, c'mon! Gee. \_ MERRY NON-DEMONATIONAL COMPLETELY-SECULAR INOFFENSIVE WINTER EVENT! \_ "MERRY"? Did I just hear "Marry"? How dare you discriminate against people who prefer single lives! \_ Management sincely apologises for any offense and/or distress and/or suffering our inexcusable and rude use of the "M"-word may have caused. \_ That's what the politically-correct "Happy Holidays!" is for. Sucks. I prefer "Merry Christmas!" even though I'm atheist. \_ BABY KILLER! Don't you know that "Holiday" is derived from "Holy Day"?!?@!111 |
2007/10/24-26 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:48434 Activity:low |
10/24 so how is ISLAMO FACISM AWARENESS WEEK going? \_ David Horowitz would make the ultimate Motd troll. \_ http://www.newsweek.com/id/57346 "Here is the reality. Iran has an economy the size of Finland's and an annual defense budget of around $4.8 billion. It has not invaded a country since the late 18th century" \_ Does financing and supporting internation terrorism count as invasion? \_ Since the primary victims of Iranian funded terrorism are Israeli jews, no it doesn't count, because as we all know Hamas, Fatah (once headed by the democratically elected Nobel Peace Prize winner, Arafat), and the rest are all just Freedom Fighters working hard to liberate their homeland from oppressive racist invaders. <sarcasm off> |
2007/10/11-15 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:48293 Activity:nil |
10/11 Man, why didn't I hear about this sooner? We're sending bionic squirrels to Iran! http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7007906268 \_ You missed a zillion rocky n bullwinkle jokes. Most of them were lame. |
2007/7/23-26 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:47386 Activity:nil 88%like:47382 |
7/23 Why aren't we just bombing this country already? http://urltea.com/11o5 (news.yahoo.com) \_ Yeah I bet those young women are just begging to be bombed. |
2007/7/23 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:47382 Activity:nil 88%like:47386 |
7/23 Why aren't we just bombing this country already? http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20070723/wl_mideast_afp/iranwomenfashion_070723175421 |
2007/6/7-10 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:46879 Activity:low |
6/7 Iran caught red-handed arming the Taliban http://blogs.abcnews.com/theblotter/2007/06/document_iran_c.html \_ By "red-handed" you mean "senior white house officials" leaked some "intelligence." \_ I hear Saddam had WMDs \_ No, NATO officials, not white house officials. And Richard Clarke is no friend of the Bush administration. -emarkp \_ Iran has every incentive to keep America busy because once US is done with Iraq and Afganistan, Iran will be next. Having said that, you obviously have absolutely no sense of history. Taliban was one of the biggest national security threat to Iran, and Iran is actually glad that US toppled Taliban. |
2007/5/22-24 [Health/Women, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:46728 Activity:nil 88%like:46724 |
5/22 Iran beating their women: http://urltea.com/lyp (gatewaypundit.blogspot.com) \_ Obviously we must invade them and convert them to Christianity. |
2007/5/22 [Health/Women, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:46724 Activity:nil 88%like:46728 |
5/22 Iran beating their women: http://gatewaypundit.blogspot.com/2007/05/my-god-theyre-beating-their-women-to.html \_ Obviously we must invade them and convert them to Christianity. |
2007/3/29-4/2 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:46146 Activity:nil |
3/29 My analysis of the Iran UK hostage situation: Iran was conducting war games. UK rubber boats were close to border but did not cross. Iranian navy commander orders capture of UK guys because he had orders to detain observers. Iran calculates UK/U.S. won't do shit -- good. Iran calculates even if UK/U.S. do something, it will drive up oil prices -- good. Any way you look at it, win/win for Iran. Predicted end game: Prisoner swap. UK rules of engagement revised. \_ The UK isn't holding any Iranians that we know of. They also import 40% of their gasoline, which is somewhat ironic being one of the world's largest oil exporters, so a simple blockade would devastate their economy. Not so win/win for Iran if things turn ugly. \_ http://www.csua.org/u/id7 Iran grabbed the hostages in retaliation for American attempt to snatch Iranian senior intelligence officials. |
2007/3/25-29 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iraq, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:46088 Activity:kinda low |
3/25 http://www.csua.org/u/ib9 Iran says they have signed confessions from the Brit soldiers to "to aggression into the Islamic Republic of Iran's waters" and that they'll trade them for Iranian spies captured in Iraq. Will this be an Archduke Ferdinand moment? \_ This situation is beyond crazy. Has anyone seen analysis that clearly shows whose territorial waters these sailors were caught in? \_ No, Bush would clearly love to "double down" in Iran, but his hands are tied now. Two years ago, this would have meant war. \_ These are british soldiers, not americans. \_ And? \_ And? \_ British->NATO->US, says Bush. \_ Who exactly is "Iran" and what did they say? \_ Wonder how the Brits'll react? Freeze Iranian funds? The Iranians are pretty clearly in the wrong. \_ how about grabbing an iranian vessell from iranian waters, taking the crew prisoner, and claiming they are all spies with signed confessions. \_ Are you sure that the Brits were not in Iranian waters? All I have seen are "he said - she saids" claims. I assume the Brits \_ Are you sure that the Brits were not in Iranian waters? All I have seen are "he said - she said" claims. I assume the Brits will escalate until the Iranians back down. We shall see. \_ There is concensus. They were in Iraqi waters. \_ 3/27 Update: http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20070327/wl_nm/iran_dc "Blair's spokesman said the next step London could take would be to publish proof, in the form of global satellite positioning (GPS) records, that the sailors had not entered Iranian waters." But of course Iran could claim that the GPS records are fake. BTW, if Margaret Thatcher were still the PM, the Brits would be planning to nuke Iran by now. \_ At least sending the fleet in that direction, but Briton doesn't have much of a fleet anymore. |
2006/12/29-30 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:45509 Activity:moderate |
12/29 Man, Germans are STUPID. They don't know the difference between Sydney Australia and Sidney Montana in US of A. http://www.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/europe/12/29/germany.tourist.reut \_ http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16389973 \- E_RATCHET \_ I wonder how many American people think the Sydney Opera House is in Austria, the capital of classical music; Thai is the language spoken in Taiwan; there are grand casinos in the Principality of Morocco; etc. \_ I've met tons of people who think Taiwanese restaurants serve Thai food, and that Taiwanese is the language spoken in Thailand. I've also met tons of people who think Persians and Iranians are from different continents and that Iran and Iraq are the same. I do have to admit that over the past decade or so, people are slowly realizing that Iran and Iraq are not the same. This is from my experience in California of course. I wonder how much smarter/dumber people from other states are. \_ Since you mentioned Iran, here's another one: "Iran is an Arab country." -- PP |
2006/12/21-28 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Israel, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:45485 Activity:high |
12/21 Would you support selling Israel down the river if that helped solve the Iran and Iraq problems? \_ there are no problem in Iran. It's like trying to prevent your teenage daughter from having sex. You just have to accept the reality. \_ In this fantasy world, would I get a pony too? \_ No, I don't think I'd trade a low-intensity conflict for a full scale middle-east war + attempted re-enactment of the holocaust. How about you? \- just out of curiosity, who would go to "full scale war" against a nuclear israel? --psb \_ nuclear "wipe Israel off the map" Iran? \- dont be silly. pak and india arent going to exchange nukes, neither are iran and israel. what you should be much more concerned about is the pakistani state falling apart. i think taiwan may have more to fear from china than israel does from iran. \_ But when Iran does do what it's been promising to do, I'm sure I'll hear a lot of, "There's no way we could have seen THAT coming..." \- yeah and communism still hasnt been discredited ... it'll happen some day. \_ you have no idea what are you talking about. If Israel/Iran relationship is like mainland China and and Taiwan, the world will be a much better place. \- i am not comparing the relationship between, i am comparing "threat probabilities". the dynamics between who will win the rose bowl has nothing to do with will it rain tomorrow, but you certainly can say "it is more likely it will rain tomorrow than UMich will win the rosebowl". \_ that is exactly what I am saying. The "threat probabilities" between mainland China and Taiwan is next to zero unless Taiwan do something really stupid. \_ Appeasement of enemies only emboldens them. And how quickly you forget who originally supplied them with arms (hint : Not the U.S.) \_ Who? \_ The world is a lot more complicated than your little throw away one liner. Who are our "enemies" and who determines that? Do you have an "enemies" list and how can I get on it? Or off of it, for that matter, since it appears from your statement that there is no way. \_ [Discussion of Israel censored and restored.] |
2006/11/2-4 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:45106 Activity:nil |
11/02 November surprise? http://csua.org/u/hcz (SFGate.com article) link:csua.org/u/hd0 (Picture, jpg, Work Safe) \_ Iran fires Shahab-3 with 1250 mile range. No surprise. They've been working on this for a long time. You think Iran's missile test has something to do with the silly American mid-term elections? Tell us your theory. \_ /shrug. No theory, just asking. \_ Seriously, I doubt the Iranians are trying to change our elections with a missile test. If they nuked something or sent 200k soliders into Iraq or something that like it would have an effect but I don't think it would be predictable exactly *what* effect. Sometimes a missile test is just a missile test. Once they conduct a successful nuke test then there'll be something to worry about. |
2006/9/15-19 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:44400 Activity:nil |
9/15 http://csua.org/u/gwl (Krauthammer, Wash Post) I hope the dunderheads in the White House aren't taking military advice from this wacko, and are taking it instead from veteran analysts in the Pentagon/CIA. There are overriding holes in Krauthammer's column. \_ Of course you don't mention any of those holes. Besides--overriding holes? I've never heard that phrase. \_ I thought it was a weird phrase too, but I stuck with it. -op \_ I usually find Krauthammer to be just this side of nuts. It's nice to see that even the nuts think this is a bad idea. |
2006/9/1-5 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:44230 Activity:kinda low |
9/1 Highly enriched uranium found in peace love electricity needing Iran. http://upi.com/NewsTrack/view.php?StoryID=20060901-070212-4100r \_ Why do you bother? I think it's clear they want a bomb, they're working towards a bomb, and that likely they'll get a bomb, the only thing up for discussion right now is whether or not they have any "right" to it, and how to deal with them once they succeed... -John \_ There is no such thing as a "right" to anything. They either have the tech, the resources and the will power to do it or they don't. The rest of the world has the tech, the resources and the will power to stop them or they don't. There is no such thing as international rights, international law or other similar fabrications. \_ hey, the freshmen are back in town. -tom \_ ad hominem. non-responsive. F. \_ Responding to a red herring is pointless. -tom \_ then don't respond if you feel it is a red herring. ad hominem is never the appropriate response. also, you might want to look up "red herring". \_ exactly which MOTD have you been reading? -tom \_ the same one as you. mine has tons of smart people talking about interesting stuff who often provide links to sites and info I wouldn't otherwise see, interspersed with a few non-contributors. what is on your motd? \_ apparently, mine has self-righteous anonymous cowards who love MOTD Boob Guy. -tom \_ mine also has a few mostly harmless people amusing themselves and a few others. nothing wrong with that. \_ Of course they have a right to it. They have a right to make a massive weapon that they can use to threaten their enemies with. And we have a right to do everything in our power to stop them from getting it. It's not about rights. It's about power. We have it and we don't want them to get it. \_ Agreed. \_ Kewl, so we can forget about all that UN silliness, or the WTO or any sense of obligation to honor treaties we sign, might makes right! W00t! -John \_ Welcome to the real world. If a long term treaty obligation is against a nation's interests they *should* break the treaty unless breaking it involves even worse consequences. Everything is about national interest and a nation's ability to enforce their will. The UN, WTO, and every other multi- national .org only exist at the whim of the member states who have decided that continuing the existence of these groups and sometimes following their rules is more valuable than scrapping the agreements and going alone. The UN isn't some magical creature that has some inherent right and power. Like the League of Nations it is likely to be swept aside by history only to be remembered by historians as an interesting footnote at best. Nations will continue on by some name. Powerless orgs will come and go. \_ So if there are no cops around, and I'm confident that I can kick your ass and take your lunch money, than I not only *can* kick your ass and take your lunch money, I have the historical mandate to do so. Could you please post how much lunch money you usually carry, where you eat lunch, and how you get there? Thanks! \- the lunch episode exists in a state of law ["the cops are not around"]. states exist in an anarchic system [anarchic = no hierarchy, not "it is random and chaotic"]. life for individual in the (anarhcic) state of nature is "nasty, brutish, and short" ... but a state can potentially survive [e.g. it doesnt have to sleep], but it needs to rely on itself. anayway, you cannot compare the possibility of cooperation under the rule of a soverign [who can enforce contracts, has monopoly on use of force etc], and the self-help system that characterizes the system of states. See: Hedley Bull: The Anarchical Society (not that great, but it is The Standard for background), and Waltz: Man, the State and War (excellent, not too hard going), and Waltz: Theory of Interntl Politics (some what involved read, but The Standard on IR). \_ Yes and no. If you're willing to deal with the consequences afterwards then yes you might get one day's worth of lunch money and then find yourself suspended from school or your knees broken the next day, etc. Cute analogy but doesn't fully apply since you and I aren't nations. The difference between personal conflict and national is that nations are more amorphous than people but can theoretically live on forever. Individuals are always subject to the consequences of their actions by the state, their neighbors, etc. Unless you're a super villain you can't get away with things a powerful nation can, or even a weaker nation within it's own regional sphere of influence. I'm sure you knew all this but I thought your cute reply deserved a response. \_ stop digging. -tom \_ uh whatever. \_ I bet you're one of these people who're surprised about being treated rudely as an American when abroad or when a bomb goes off in Manhattan. There are no "international cops", yes, but you know what, in the absence of law & order, vigilanteism arises. And guess what, if the response of the stronger is to go kick the ass of the weaker, the weaker won't hit back at the stronger's army, they'll hit back at his soft spot, i.e. you. -John \_ All part of national interest. Being treated rudely as a tourist has to be weighed against other interests. In my book that weighs quite low. Anyway, if I get treated rudely as a tourist it is much more likely because most people are just rude idiots or they simply hate all tourists than some grand geo-political statement and their small effort to Fight The Man. As far as soft vs. hard spots goes, that is another thing to be weighed. I'm sure the US would be safe from Muslim terrorists if we all converted to Islam, \_ If you really believe this, then you're an idiot. \_ If you really believe this, then you're an idiot. but I'm ok being a soft spot rather than join an ugly 8th century cult of death. I certainly agree that we're taking the wrong approach to the middle east's Islamic states. We should either just go home, leave a power gap and let it sort itself out or stomp them down for real instead of this namby pamby stuff. I'll bet the secular states in the region would much more quickly crush the extremist Islamic movements in their areas than us if their to their own devices. |
2006/9/1-5 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:44229 Activity:nil |
9/1 No, Iran and N.Korea, You can't do this, only -benign- power like USA is allow to test its nukes: http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200608/s1728616.htm May be USA should sign Nuclear Test Ban Treaty... May be we should impose economic sanction on those who violates NPT... which is... err... ourselves. \_ Well, we are neither importing from nor exporting to ourselves. \_ We should do whatever is in our national interest. Iran should do whatever is in their national interest. Any nation that does not do whatever is in their national interest will cease to be a nation and will be replaced by one or more entities that do whatever is in their own interest. \_ but they are axis of evil and we are doing everything defend democracy and human rights. \_ thanks for trolling the thread today. the rest of us will be having a discussion elsewhere that you're welcome to contribute to. \_ Acting in our interest does not necessarily translate into acting against the interests of other nations; the overlap of these interests is the basis of diplomacy. \_ I didn't specify what "interest" meant. For example, a tiny weak country may find it is in their interest to do whatever their larger neighbor wants a la "Findlandization" during the Soviet era. The Fins didn't like this policy but it was in their interests to knuckle under to avoid invasion and out- right take over. Had Finland told the Soviets to piss off that would have not been in their national interest because shortly after there wouldn't be a Finland. \- in general, the two behaviours are called "bandwagoning" vs. "balancing" [as in "balance of power"]. BTW, if you are interested in IR theory it is pretty amazing how much you can learn from Thucydides: History of the Peloponnesian War ... given that it is a 2400 yr old story and "only" involved a few greek city-states. \_ Read it. Great stuff. \_ Five countries are permitted under the NPT to possess nuclear weapons, by virtue of their having nukes at the time they signed the treaty. Notable countries w/nuke tech but w/o nuke weapons who have signed: Japan, Iran. Notable countries which produced nukes at signed: Japan, Iran. Notable countries which developed nukes at a time when they were not NPT signatories: India, Pakistan, Israel. Now guess which countries had nukes at the time they signed the NPT? Iran. Now guess which countries had nukes at the time they signed the NPT? |
2006/8/31-9/5 [Science/GlobalWarming, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:44219 Activity:low |
8/31 "There's simply no explanation for the range of Iranian behavior which we've seen over the years other than that they're pursuing a weapons capability" -UN Ambassador John Bolton \_ Stunning analysis! \_ If the Bush administration plans to bomb Iran regardless of what Iran does, what motivation does Iran have to listen to them? Where's the carrot? Does anyone think they're *not* going to attack Iran eventually, assuming that they can maintain control of the government, and that there is no impeachment? \_ I think it's extremely unlikely Dubya will bomb Iran. This is strategically not the best move for the U.S. \_ I haven't heard anyone (other than Iran) actually say they believe Iran _isn't_ going for nukes. I mean, it's the right thing to do, strategically. \_ It's one thing to say they're gunning for nukes, it's another thing to say they they want to conduct activity legal under the NPT which also puts them closer to breaking out to a nuke capability if they have to. \_ Plus the Iranians basically all but running around in their nuke-patterned underoos and "I'm with the other nuke powers" t-shirts, doing the "we've got nukes" dance while yelling LA LA LA WE HAVE NUKES AND YOU CAN'T STOP US. -John \_ hmm... Israel has the bomb, India has the bomb, Pakistan has the bomb. AND US/UK/Israel have the track record of overthrown Iranian government at their whim. And now 80% of US' deployable force is right across the border. Having a bomb is actually a sound, defensive policy! Further, our policy toward NPT is like a football game. Once you reach the goal line, you actually get rewarded. \_ Erm, Israel has overthrown the Iranian government when? \_ ok ok ok, Israel didn't overthrow Iranian government in 1953, but Israel worked closely with Shah. This pisses Iranian off even today. \_ Um, is it that or that they're all Jews. \_ Iran does best strategically not to go nukes now, but to go nuclear energy, and use the possibility of breakout as a deterrent. \_ Right, and this is where Bolton's statement falls apart. There _is_ another explanation for the range of Iranian behavior, and that is that this path is the same you'd need to follow to get utterly legal nuclear power. \_ Not quite utterly legal. I think the most recent UN resolution is legally binding, although I think it's quite explicit in having further discussions on punishment and not being an automatic sanction/war pass for member states. -breakout guy resolution is legally binding, although I think there are definitive clauses which say further discussions on punishment are needed, and not being an automatic sanction/war pass for member states. -breakout guy \_ A good point. Let me back up and say that this is a path to nuclear power that works within the NPT. \_ Not really.. they're best off to prove they already have them ASAP, like Pakistan. \_ I should say "best strategically and also best practically" \_ I should say "best strategically & also best practically" |
2006/7/28-8/1 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:43832 Activity:nil |
7/28 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,251-2290713,00.html Security Council agrees on UN resolution that gives Iran until end of next month to halt enrichment, and if they don't, they'll get another chance to comply, and if they don't, there may be sanctions ... or not (which, if actually implemented, will probably hurt the U.S and help China and Russia anyway). Morons. We need a new, robust NPT that restricts peaceful enrichment to select sites and makes guarantees on availability to those who aren't enriching. At least we're not bombing - our troops will be the first to pay in case that happens. \_ A new, robust NPT that will exempt the U.S., you mean. \_ what part of "makes guarantees on availability to those who aren't enriching" is hard to understand? \_ err... US is a violator of NPT, right? and you know Iran can \_ since when? easily withdraw from NPT and everything will be legal, right? \_ true. do you know US already have an economic sanction in place against \_ true. Iran so any UN sanction is not going to hurt US, while UN sanction \_ true. is going to hurt Russia/China and rest of the world who has huge bilateral ecnomic tie to Iran, right? \_ true but how smart is it to let a country like iran have nukes? Russia and China both have serious problems with Muslim terrorists. Maybe next time it won't be a Russian movie theatre but the whole city. Not now. Not in five years. But ten? What about 20 years from now? 30? \_ do you know what "sloppy sanctions" are? China and Russia won't give in to real sanctions. Trust me, any sanctions Iranian oil will get out in one way or the other. \_ Trust me, with "sanctions" applied, Iranian oil will get out in one way or the other. Let's say the oil isn't available to Western markets. Let's say China and Iran are getting all to Western markets. Let's say China and Russia are getting all the oil then. Then who is hurt MORE by UN sanctions on Iran? |
2006/7/12-18 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:43649 Activity:nil |
7/12 http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/12/world/12cnd-diplo.html "Russia and China Support Sanctions Threat for Iran" What I call "sloppy sanctions", as predicted six weeks ago, in an eventual deal that would benefit everyone but the U.S. \_ They support "sanctions threat" or actual sanctions? \_ threat. all i'm saying is, with all of their playing hard to get on sanctions, when we actually "get" them to apply sanctions, the terms of the sanctions will be so sloppy that they'll get everything they want. \_ remember, US has economic embargo against Iran already, so UN sanction is not going to hurt US any more. China and Russia, OTOH, has huge trade relationship with Iran and literally hundreds of millions at stake. Further, Iran supplies something like 15-18% of oil to China. China is not going to do anything against its oil supplier, just like US is not going to wage War on Terror against Saudi's. |
2006/6/1-4 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:43250 Activity:low |
6/1 EU3, U.S., Russia, and China reportedly agree on incentives, penalties package for Iran, what I call "sloppy sanctions". My prediction: (1) Iran will continue enrichment research. (2) Penalties will be imposed, but not necessarily by a vote from the Security Council. (3) The penalties are limited in scope: Blocking of financial transactions by Iranian govt officials by U.S. and most European banks, partial blocking of refined oil sold to Iran, visa blocks for govt officials for U.S. and most European countries. (4) China and anyone else who wants to get on board will cash in on: Financial transactions through unblocked instruments (through other banks, and partially by screens through private entities), continued favorable crude and refined oil contracts for China and Russia, limited arms sales from China and Russia, closer ties. (5) Iran will suffer only limited short-term effects economically. (6) In other words, everyone gets what they want except Dubya+Condi. (7) A new U.S. administration will come on board and try to figure out how to fix the Iran deal that benefits everyone but the U.S. \_ and the sanctions worked oh-so-well with IRAQ? \_ In a way, they did. They didn't _have_ WMDs... \_ Just because US occupation forces haven't found any doesn't mean they never had any. \_ they're either in Syria, Iran, or buried in the desert! \_ We know exactly where they are! \_ You don't sound like a desperate, pro-war republican at all ... nah, no way. \_ Somewhere to the north, east, and west... \_ Just FYI, Iran is not doing anything illegal right now. They have the right to enrich Uranium for peaceful purposes under NPT. And... FYI, USA is actively HINDERS international investigation on Mr. Khan of Pakistan and his nuclear black market for some reason. \_ Correction: Iran has not yet been caught doing anything overtly illegal as far as the public knows. URL for your Khan statement please. \_ the differences between civilian-grade and weapon-grade uranium is only in concentration. This is the problem of enforcing NPT, as one can claim refining to civilian-grade uranium and there is nothing we can do about. *FURTHER* 1. think IRAQ. This is dajavu all over again 2. USA is also a huge violation of NPT. 3. how about India? Pakistan? Israel? 4. Iran can ALWAYS withdraw from NPT. \_ !op, no idea what article s/he was referencing, but Google Newsing Abdul Qadeer Khan got this PDQ: http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/06/02/1414236 \_ Ok, I read the whole thing. Let's assume Albright is correct, these guys are CIA assets. Why would we help prosecute them? \_ how about selling nuclear technologies and some of the material to N.Korea, Iran, and Libya? |
2006/5/19-22 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:43105 Activity:nil |
5/18 Iran working on the Final Solution http://csua.org/u/fx2 \_ ...speechless. And yet, perhaps not: http://www.israpundit.com/2006/?p=1200 \_ That link basically just says, "No Way!" "Way!" \_ This one's much less ambiguous: http://csua.org/u/fx8 \_ eh, from the totality of reports I'm seeing, it was definitely a motion, it's uncertain whether it was passed into law, and it's uncertain whether it was approved by the Supreme Leader \_ "This article is no longer available". Retraction? -John |
2006/5/5-9 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:42953 Activity:nil |
5/5 Blair fires Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, who said that a preemptive nuclear strike on Iran was "completely nuts", and also said he was as "certain as he could be" that the U.S. would not engage in a (conventional) preemptive strike, and neither would the UK. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/sunday_am/4893130.stm As recently as April 18 this year, Dubya said "all options" were on the table ... I believe Blair hasn't publically backed up Straw, and instead let Dubya do the talking. \_ Jack Straw from Witchita cut his buddy down |
2006/3/9-11 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:42167 Activity:nil |
3/9 Poll on Iran. We will: attack iran: talk tough: .... send tom and dans to mediate the conflict: .. \_ Dude, are you trying to start a civil war? -dans |
2006/3/8-10 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:42134 Activity:nil |
3/8 Murtha doesn't like Cheney's recent statements on Iran and why http://www.crooksandliars.com/2006/03/07.html#a7432 \_ He can try but he is not able to convince average American not to attack Iran. Most American think we can go in, surgically bomb couple places and leaves, and suffers no consequences afterward. Just like most people don't think much of our relationship with Iran has nothing to do with the fact that we overthrow their government for oil in the past. |
2006/2/16-17 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:41889 Activity:nil |
2/16 In Iran, Danish pastries now called "Roses of the Prophet Muhammad". http://apnews.myway.com/article/20060216/D8FQD2FOB.html \_ Congrats to Iran, they've proven their leaders are just as juvenile as ours. \_ What was it that clued you in, the pastry thing, the last 25 years of "must destroy Israel", the head slapping, what? -John |
2006/2/6-7 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:41722 Activity:nil |
2/6 Iran asks the IAEA to cease "all voluntarily suspended non-legally binding measures", which includes: - Removal of all surveillance cameras and seals, by the end of next week - Sharp reduction in number of inspectors and types of inspections (including surprise inspections), effective immediately - Formal date for resumption of full-scale enrichment, with some ("voluntary"?) IAEA inspector oversight http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060206/ap_on_re_eu/nuclear_agency_iran \_ We should send in DELTA FORCE in inspector outfits and take out their nuke labs. \_ We should send in LANDSHARK. -John \_ Candygram! - Sharp reduction in number of inspectors and types of inspections (including surprise inspections), effective immediately - Formal date for resumption of full-scale enrichment, with some ("voluntary"?) IAEA inspector oversight http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060206/ap_on_re_eu/nuclear_agency_iran |
2006/1/30-2/1 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:41604 Activity:low |
1/31 New Iran development, see bottom: - Iran breaks seals, announces resumption of enrichment research \_ You continue to fail to understand my point. I did not say it was a "good" ruling. - West condemns Iran, support move to Security Council - Iran condemns West, threatens full-scale enrichment upon referral - Russia/China upset, but don't support move to Security Council - Russia highlights enrichment in Russia - ... Days tick away to IAEA board meeting ... - Iran says Russian enrichment plan "positive" Last Thu-Fri: - West (including U.S.) fully endorses Russian enrichment plan - Iran says of Russian plan "capacity of the program not sufficient ... can be revised to be more complete" - Iran allows IAEA visits to Lavizan military site Today: - China and Russia sign on to statement with EU3 + U.S. saying they support reporting Iran to UN Security Council in a IAEA vote Thursday. Sec Council will consider issue in March after formal IAEA report is delivered. \_ Your timeline would be useful except you drop key points. Like you say Iran allows IAEA visits to Lavizan, but you leave out the part that it was a limited visit and they weren't allowed to see everything they wanted to see which is why they got referred to the Security Council. If you're going to bother, do it right. \_ OP might have an agenda. \_ op does not have an agenda. BTW, Iran is not getting sent to the Sec Council because of Lavisan restrictions, even if they were in place, which is why I didn't mention them and also the fact that Lavisan has been "cleaned" ahead of time. If you want to jump to conclusions at least get it right. -op \_ Restrictions on Lavizan (which had already been "cleaned") is not why Iran is getting referred to the Sec Council. If you say someone is wrong, please try to get it right. -op \_ op does not have an agenda. -op \_ Convenient that you forget to mention it. If I'm wrong, go ahead and prove it. It's your timeline. Post a real time line with all the facts or dont bother. Anything less and you might as well just keep it to a few lines of whatever your agenda is and save us the false appearance of historical honesty spread across 20+ lines. \_ Let's keep this discussion very focused. You said restrictions on Lavizan is why Iran is getting referred to the Sec Council. Do you still stand by this? \_ Stop being clever. Post your link. I said what I said. Either way, your 'timeline' stated that Iran allowed the IAEA to 'visit' which is only technically correct. They were not allowed to look at everything they needed to look at which is not in your timeline which makes your version of history make the Iranians look accomodating when they're not. Focus, indeed. \_ All you needed to say was, "Yes." I mentioned that Russia and China were going to support a move to the Sec Council, and I kind of assumed the reader would realize, "Oh, if China and Russia are on-board (even with the fact that China gets 14% of its oil from Iran), maybe Lavizan was just a dishonest attempt to divide the other side"? You know, I think I just should have written, "Yes, you're absolutely right that Lavizan was a diversion, but the reason why the case is being moved to the UN is because of the resumption of enrichment research. I omitted the Lavizan detail because I kind of assumed the reader would recognize and even post about this." I should have written that instead of getting all pissed off about a random sodan attacking me. \_ Restrictions on Lavizan is not why Iran is getting referred to the Sec Council. If you want to make a statement, make sure it's correct. -op \_ Ok then. I just want to see history kept straight if history is being posted. IMO, Lavizan wasn't an easily dismissed detail; I think it was quite important. I'm happy to leave it at that. -- random sodan \_ Not really dismissed, but I kind of assumed the reader would realize it was a diversion -- that Iran would not be giving genuinely helpful info re Lavisan access, given China/Russia's support for move to the UN. I kind of just got pissed off when the post came with an attack on me too. |
2006/1/23-24 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Israel] UID:41484 Activity:nil |
1/23 http://csua.org/u/eqr Iran's "president" Ahmadinejad in front of an interesting painting. |
2006/1/22-24 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:41478 Activity:high |
1/21 "India must not allow itself to be dragooned into joining the Washington-led nuclear lynch mob against Iran," The Hindu, one of India's most influential newspapers, cautioned Thursday. http://tinyurl.com/baa48 Iran Sanctions Could Drive Oil Past $100 Looks like US and Bush admin addiction to oil is compromising our abililty to impose sanctions without hurting ourselves. $100 oil will tip US into recession. \_ Trolling at its finest. \_ Simple answer--India wants gas. Iran has lots of it. Viz. China and Sudan. -John \_ Iran supplys something like 18% of petro to China. and Iran is only major oil-producing nation which China has big investment in it. To ask China to mess around with Iran is like asking USA to mess around with Saudi's. \_ Sort of my point, isn't it? The only difference is that some nations exhibit more scruples about the types of government maintained by their energy suppliers (at least when it suits them to do so.) -John \_ absolute monarchy which export extreme version of Islam? FYI, China deals a lot of nasty government for its energy needs (Sudan, for example). But Iran is *NOT* one of those 'nasty' governments. \_ I'm pretty sure everyone here but you would consider mainland China to be one of those 'nasty' governments. \_ Uhm, wow...chicom troll doublethink at its finest. \_ Chicom troll, I am sad. After all my intensive troll training, your reading comprehension still equals your grammar skills and no more. -John \_ care to explain how US-Saudi relationship is morally more superior than China-Iran relationship? ^more \_ Why should I? You did catch the "when it suits them" part, right? You may also have noted a mildly sarcastic tone in my post. Back to reading comp 101, grasshopper. -John \_ To the person worried about Pakistan as a greater proliferation threat than Iran, one of the key problems with Iran getting nukes is they're a terrorist state and, unlike Pakistan, would be very likely to try directly or help their proxy terrorist armies smuggle a nuke into some other country's harbor. There can't be any retaliation for such an act since it would be impossible to prove who nuked the city. That city could be any coastal city with a port (all of them) in the world, or any city reachable easily by land due to lax boarders. "Iran getting a nuke just isn't that big a deal" is a stupid concept for this and many other reasons. This whole thread is troll heaven. Have fun. \_ Iran is not a terrorist state. They support certain group to \_ Iran is *NOT* a terrorist state. They support certain group to achieve their foreign policy. If anything, USA has outdo Iran in Afganstan in the 1980s, both in terms of amount of money involved, and the degree of extremism which the group receiving the aid. Iran, though eccentric from our point of view, is nevertheless a rational State. No rational state would give out nuclear weapon to any group just because chances of getting backfired is very high. Pakistan is a problem because their intelligent service, one of the best in the world, has close tie to Pushtuns/Taliban in Afganistan. N.Korea is a problem because they have an army which is one million strong but could barely eat two meals a day... and that they don't really need any delivery mechanism to do some harm across the 38th parallel. By comparison, Iran is a much less of a problem, as their youth is demanding more and more reform and open policy in the near future. \- It is extremely unlikely any state would as *a matter of policy* give away nukes. Schelling and Waltz [see links below] agree with this position and the scenario you spell out seems ridiculous ... iran would give one of its only nukes to a "terrorist army" to do whatever it wanted with it ... something that doesnt really advance iranian state aims in any concrete way but does run massive risks of getting caught and in which case iran faces a gret likelihood of this getting traced back to them. so the "policy" of xfer to terrorists scenario is not likely. the "loose nukes" -> terrorists scenario seems more likely and the more reasonable threats there are russia [lots of nukes], pak [state meltdown] or nkorea selling nuke tech. again the issue isnt "should we be happy or sad about iran getting nukes" but "what should he us policy be" and the policy formation stage depends on your beliefs about how this changes iran's "intentions and capabilities". \- What does a nuclear Iran with a small number of bombs with limited delivery options let Iran do that it cant do now, except significantly deter say bombing Tehran. This is a serious question and I have some ideas but I want to hear what other people think first. --thehindu@soda \_ much of US' attitude toward Iran is irrational. We overthrow their democratic government in the 1950's, then the Shah we installed got overthrown, and we were angry at Iran ever since. So, answer your question, a nuclear Iran is probably less problematic than Nuclear N.Korea or Pakistan. By the way, India were on the side of USA last time UN voted on this matter. \- i didnt ask "why is the us concerned about iran" [which would be a foreign policy question], i asked "how is the iran+nukes scenario different from the iran-nonukes scenario" which is a question about prediction or capabilities. anyway, one scenario which i suppose is possible is that the new iranian leader will feel a little more emboldened to pursue low level terrorism sponsorship [unlike libya or syria now] with nukes than without. btw, aside from anti-western fatatics, you can hardly blame reasonable iranians for being pissed off about how the us handled the aftermath of the vincennes shooting down the iranian airliner. \_ Hi pro-Iranian Troll! No one gave a shit about the Shah. Are you totally unaware of that little thing we called The Hostage Crisis that went on for a few hundred days? \_ no one give a shit about Shah? The demand *WAS* about 1. apologize the overthrow of Mosaddeq and 2. hand over Shah back to Iran so USA won't try to install him again. This is typical... memory selectively failed on all the wrong doings beforehand, then react violently to the repercussion in the name of self-defense. \_ Threaten to hit southern Europe. I don't understand how this isn't obvious. \_ why Iran want to bomb southern Europe again? it's not obvious at all. \_ I'll rephrase it from the other point of view: if you were in south europe would it concern you if the crazies in Iran got nukes? (yes, you're in reach in S.E.) Crazy people should not have nukes. That should be obvious. \_ it is *NOT* obvious that Iran is a "crazy" state. Just because USA doesn't like Iran doesn't make it crazy. There are plenty of nations having plenty of normal bilateral relationships with Iran. They are no less / no more diff than any other countries in the region. In fact, if anything, Iran is a much normal state than, let say, Saudi Arabia. \_ BUD DAY does *NOT* like your tone, son. \- So if Iran gets 10 nuclear bombs they may threaten to nuke Athens? Rome? Nice? Can you spell out this obvious scenario a little more? I would be helpful if you signed your name since I want to know if I am speaking to the same person in a followup. Just out of curiosity, why isnt Pakistan interested in hitting southern europe. Obviously it is implicit in my question "what could they do and would have some interest in doing". \_ I think I'm being trolled so my answer will be brief: Pakistan is a secular dictatorship who wants nukes because their long term enemy next door has them. Pakistan also doesn't have the range to hit most of India much less Europe so that isn't an issue even if they wanted to do so. Iran is run by religious fundmentalist Muslims who believe it is their duty to spread their form of Islam over the entire world. Europe is a secular super nation/state and happens to be the closest interesting area to Iran. Finally, what is the point of asking for my name when you don't give yours? How do I know any responses will be you? \_ Two additions. They are willing to spread Islam by murder/conquest if necessary, and they seem to think it would be a good idea to nuke Israel. -!pp \_ you are mixing up Iran with Saudi Arabia. Further, USA spread democracy by murder/conquest if necessary too, right? \_ When did you stop beating your wife? \_ My eyes, they see only happy things! \_ You and chicom troll, man. Maybe you should switch to a lower dosage.... \_ Some possibilities that I can think of: 1. Nuke strategic targets in Israel. I do not think that Iran has sufficient conventional weapons that can be delivered as far as Israel and cause serious damage. 2. Give the nukes to Iran friendly factions currently fighting in Iraq or Afganistan. Iran's conventional capability, again, is probably insufficient to signif- icantly affect American forces. 3. Give the nukes to Pakistan for use against India (or perhaps direct use against India). --yaHindu@soda. \_ Seriously, each of your points are so dumb, you really need to stay out of this discussion. What does a faction struggling for political control need a nuclear bomb for? Given that Pakistan already has nukes and Iran doesn't, doesnt it seem a little odd to be talking about Iran -> Pak nuke xfer. And what does Iran get out of seriously pissing off India? Are you are troll or are you an idiot? To be ignorant of politics is ok, but to be so dumb as to wade into a conversation where you have no grasp of any of the relevant facts, is just ... the relevant fact, is just ... India and Iran are on decent terms. Khatami was the guest of honor at the 2003 Republic Day festivities. Later this week, this year's chief guest will be the Saudi king. \_ Do you seriously think there would be anything left of the place formerly known as "Iran" within several hours of a nuclear attack on Israel? Israel almost certainly \- or france, or italy or ... has the H-bomb, and presumably already has everything in Iran targeted with the finger on the button, and one would imagine that Iran knows this. I would also hope, as an American, that if they ever used a nuclear weapon on Israel and Israel was unable to retaliate for some reason, that the U.S. would level their country. \_ Do you seriously think the nutheads running Iran share your belief in Mutally Assured Destruction theories or your western view of the value of life? Willing to bet a few million lives on it? Not even the Iranians are willing to try to push that line. Their entire public stance is that this is about peaceful energy sources for their own country which is a crock since they're the fourth largest oil producer in the world and have relatively tiny energy needs. \- yes the public stance is a lie but the bush administration also knew that the steel tarriffs were illegal. and the us signing on to plank ii of the NPT is also a "crock". the rhetoric is not important. whether you would choose to bet on it is also not important, since preventing this is not a free choice. the question is what should the us do about it, and then three categories are accept that it will happen [not necesarily quietly], try to prevent it without military action, try to prevent it with military action. i personally think the us will not be able to prevent iran from getting nukes although it is possible some actions can make it take say 10yrs instead of 5. i also dont think the mullahs actually in power are as irrational as you seem to think they are. this isnt an especially great interview but it is from a long time commentator on nukes who isnt a liberal fruitcake on this exactly question. BTW Schelling also won the Econ nobel last year, in part for this work on nuclear deterrence theory: http://csua.org/u/eql After stumbling on that article i searched for some other good names. see the last page of this article: http://csua.org/u/eqm Nicely put: "the us worries as much about being deterred as being attacked". Well i dunno about the "as much" but if you factor probabilities in, that is probably true. Waltz is ex-UCB and "The world's most influential International Relations scholar" and "most cited book ever written in the field of International Relations". Mearshimer is also a pretty interesting fellow. Allison is a little airy-fairy. Jervis is solid. I am not familar with the other fellow. BTW, do you think the people advocating SDI dont believe in MAD? do you think they are willing to bet millions of lives on SDI/ABM technology? Relations scholar" and author of "the most cited book ever written in the field of International Relations". Mearshimer is also a pretty interesting fellow. Allison is a little airy-fairy. Jervis is solid. I am not familar with the other fellow. \- look the "iran nukes X" scenario is ridiculous. one thing that is possible is they will be emboldened to more aggressively pursue low level terrorism and figure the US is less likely to bomb tehran in retaliation [along the likes of Raygun bombing Khadafi]. i actually think the pakistani bomb is more dangerous than the iran bomb because a meltdown of the pakistani state in the crazy direction is a lot more likely and then you may have loose nukes. if pakistan has a meltdown in the next 10 yrs ... say their maximum leader is assassinated and different military generals start a violent struggle and one tries to ally with a fundamentalist faction ... it will be an interesting question whether india or the united states will freak out more. \_ How would a "meltdown of the pakistani state in the crazy direction" look any different from what Iran already is? \- iran is not an anarchy. i would worry more about the period of anarchy than the aftermath. that's what i mean by "loose nukes". nuclear weapons are good for deterring threats against the homeland. the big problem with the is the problem of accidents and proliferation to non-state actors. what effects nukes have lower of the "ladder of escalation" is unclear. like would the iran- iraq war have looked different if one side had 5-10 bombs? i dont think that is clear. if both sides had 5-10 nukes do you think it would have happened at all? \_ Pakistan is a different issue and is not currently 3 months from having nukes running around loose. And even if Pakistan was in the midst of chaos the Iran situation would remain a problem and need to be dealt with. I don't understand this "we can only deal with or think about one problem at a time and the worst problem makes the second worst problem ok and acceptable by comparison." This sort of deflection is the second weakest form of rhetorical debate tactic. \- i'm not the one saying "we can only deal with one problem at a time" and i am not sure anybody else here is. my position is: 1. i think iran will get nukes 2. i think from their point of view it makes sense for them to get nukes [just like it makes sense for pakistan and the israelis, and note "makes sense/is rational" != "is a good thing/makes me happy"] 3. i would personally be more worried about the PAK nukes[#4], but that is a estimation of risks not a policy prescription ... i might think Las Vegas real estate will do better than Phoenix real estate but that doesnt mean i am suggesting buying into Vega$. 4. in gereral i think the concern about proliferation is really about "loose nukes" rather than states we dont line having the bomb. so the problem is stability and competence more than ideology. [once again, you may wish to see the adelphi paper "the spread of nuclear weapons, more may be better", written by a now fmr ucb prof kenneth waltz.] 5. sure iran is doing lots of lying but guess what, that's standard in diplomacy. if country A asks country B, are you spying on us, what are they supposed to do, answer the question completely and truthfully? when the us signed the non- proliferation treaty which says the nuclear states should eventually be pursuing the goal of total disarmamanet did the us lie? \_ Sell their oil to whomever they wish, continue with theocracy without fear of US inteference, etc. Nukes are a deterrent. They say leave us the hell alone. \_ No one is invading Iran. Their 18 year effort to get nukes and the lies they've told about it are not about getting a deterrent. \_ Instead of speaking in negatives, how about explaining what Iran is doing, then? \_ Various elements in the Bush Administration have threatened Iran with invasion and Bush included them in his "axis of evil" so I think it is reasonable that they are concerned about an invasion. If things had gone well in Iraq, Bush proabably would have invaded Iran by now. |
2006/1/12-17 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:41366 Activity:kinda low |
1/12 Iran all of a sudden says they want to talk now http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/01/12/D8F3BVG01.html \_ Talk about a play right out of the North Korean handbook. \_ True, but all the major players are at a consensus that they don't want Iran to have The Bomb, and are also in a position to actually punish Iran with economic sanctions -- unlike N. Korea, which is already isolated anyway so that the effect of sanctions would be diminished, and was a whole big mess with S. Korea and China not on the same page as the U.S. And you know what? I credit international diplomacy. \_ You credit diplomacy with accomplishing what? The EU3 played a role because they want to negotiate first. The U.S. played a role because they pushed the EU3 to put teeth and a real stick into the negotiations along with the carrots. They moderated each other. The IAEA is playing a role because their inspectors are actually there, monitoring critical equipment. Russia, China, and Annan are playing roles by acting as Iran's good buddies, telling Iran that they won't stop the West from imposing sanctions (which opens the door to other things), until they finally realize they can't play this game anymore. This game is playing out as best as it could, IMO. \_ oohhh, like good cop/bad cop? \_ Yeah, Russia/China/Annan = good cop ; U.S.+EU3 = bad cop The U.S. needed to infect the EU3 in order for them to become the bad cop. \_ Perhaps I'm an idiot, but what does the 3 in EU3 stand for? \_ UK, Germany, France \_ Iran supplies close to 20% of China's oil need. I am not sure China is playing good cop, or is that China is simply don't want to mess around with its main oil supplier (similar to US would never mess with Saudis). Further, IAEA and EU and USA all have credibility problem. If IAEA/EU/USA allow India/Pakistan/Israel/N.Korea to have the bomb, why can't Iran join the club? \_ This is a stupid question, I hope you see why. \_ no, I don't. \_ Well, first off, IAEA/EU/USA didn't "allow" any of those countries to get the bomb (except MAYBE Israel, but I'm not even sure they "officially" have the bomb, although they obviously have had it for > 20 years). Those counties got the bomb secretly. Can you honestly say the US "allowed" NK to get the bomb? Those are all considered failures of the anti-nuclear proliferation programs. Furthermore, we don't like Iran, and we don't trust them. It's perfectly reasonable to try to stop them from getting the bomb. Sure, that's a subjective measurement, but so is everything. Whether 9/11 was good or bad is also subjective. \_ You credit diplomacy with accomplishing what? \_ "This game is playing out as best as it could, IMO." \_ "Our job is to form a common consensus. This is what's called diplomacy." -GW Bush, Genius (Jan 13, 2006) \_ So the success here was getting the EU to go along with the idea that being in range of Iranian nukes is a bad situation? In the meantime, they've broken the seals, and restarted (if they ever stopped) working on a nuke. Yay diplomacy! |
2006/1/12-17 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:41360 Activity:nil |
1/12 Iran: Damned if you do, damned if you don't. http://www.iranfocus.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=5183 \_ Damn that is fucked up. \_ Ya it is. It's not stated in the article but I'm guessing that the rapists (intended rapists?) were probably part of some self-appointed militia that was "defending Islam". In Iran, it's illegal to be in public with a member of the opposite sex who is not close family (1st cousins often marry, so that's not allowed). \_ on top of it, how come some lunatic managed to become the president? \_ because it's a religious state and he's the biggest supporter of that sort of thing going back decades? \_ Because he's a fundamentalist politician with a history of anti-corruption and standing up for the poor. That doesn't mean he's not a nutjob, but it sort of explains the appeal to the voters. \_ It also helps when the religious nut heads who actually run the country decide who is and is not allowed to run in an election. \_ Excellent point. --pp |
2006/1/10-12 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:41322 Activity:low |
1/10 http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/10/international/10cnd-iran.html Iran about to cross the "red line", breaking seals and announcing they will introduce uranium gas ino a research centrifuge. According to an IAEA official, if Iran uses that centrifuge, the pilot research would allow Iranian scientists "to acquire the knowledge and the ability" to do enrichment at any level. (The previous breaking of seals was for uranium conversion, which was uranium ore -> uranium gas, which is relatively low-tech.) My prediction is that they'll let the centrifuge sit unsealed, but won't actually spin it with uranium gas inside. If they do ... this would be their "all-in" bet. This latest move is a big raise, to continue that analogy. \_ They already crossed the line. http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/01/10/D8F1T2NO3.html \_ It is one red line to many people to break those seals, I agree, and the West is acting hella pissed off ... but in my book, the real red line is actually spinning a (research) centrifuge with uranium gas, at which point the West+Russia will *be* more hella pissed off than acting that way. \_ Iran is doing the best it can to get the EU and the US on the same key for a change. They just might succeed. |
2006/1/2-4 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:41194 Activity:nil |
1/2 Next on our target list: Iran. This war on terror thing is getting better and better! http://www.aljazeera.com/me.asp?service_ID=10415 After we hit them, only way Iran can hit us back is to support terrorist activities against USA... then, we can claiming that the pre-emptive strike against Iran is justified because it supports terrorist organization... I love this. \_ So, what would you suggest we do about Iran? \_ leave them alone, just like what we've done to Pakistein, India, Israel and North Korea. \- Do you mean India -> Hindustein |
2005/12/14-15 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:41014 Activity:low |
12/14 Following up on an earlier thread... "Iran President: Holocaust is a 'Myth'" http://csua.org/u/eb0 \_ in other news, aliens land in Terran \_ Soon they'll land in Protoss and Zerg |
2005/12/5-6 [Science/GlobalWarming, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:40850 Activity:high |
12/5 http://csua.org/u/e66 (Washington Post, Aug 2 2005) "A major U.S. intelligence review has projected that Iran is about a decade away from manufacturing the key ingredient for a nuclear weapon ... in line with recently revised British and Israeli figures." http://news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/article331219.ece (Dec 4 2005) "Although IAEA officials have said it would take at least two years for Natanz to become fully operational, Mr ElBaradei believes that once the facility is up and running, the Iranians could be 'a few months' away from a nuclear weapon." http://csua.org/u/e67 (jpost.com, Dec 5 2005) "IAEA chairman Muhammad ElBaradei on Monday confirmed Israel's assessment that Iran is only a few months away from creating an atomic bomb." So, uh ... what exactly changed between August 2nd, 2005 and now? \_ Nothing has changed - the IAEA has always been completely inept. \_ Nothing has changed - the IAEA has always been completely inept as have most of our politicized intelligence agencies (e.g. State and the CIA, glaringly exposed in the Plame case). It should not be any surpise then that we missed WTCI and II, Pakistan, India, Libya, Cole, Sudan, WMD in GWI, etc... The point is not whether Iran is months away from a bomb, they probably have that now. Rather, the key question is whether they have a nuclear tipped Shahab-3. probably have that now. Rather, the key question is whether they have a nuclear tipped Shahab-3. Those nuclear bunker busters and theater missile defense sure sound like a good idea now eh? Thank you Jimmy Carter \_ bunkerbuster bombs dont work, study your physics. \_ Yeah, I'm sure those dead people agree. \_ tell that to all those women and children hiding in the baby milk factory. \_ I'm glad you brought that up. Those signs looked believable to me. \_ What? You don't believe a sign written in English in the middle of Iraq that says, "BABY MILK FACTORY! DO NOT BOMB HERE YOU EVIL AMERICAN PIG DOGS!"? \_ I would agree that IAEA is completely inept. I mean, they should of pressure USA and Russia to disarm their nuclear weapons as part of the deal too. Instead, it is single-mindly focusing on those who want to join the nuclear club. \_ Uhm... what? \_ Dunno but guessing: new intelligence info? The world isn't static. \_ Maybe the recent story about Iran buying nuclear tech from North Korea for oil \_ This post is so partisan I don't know what to say. \_ Yeah, he forgot the part about the CIA missing the fall of the USSR, since spying on the Soviets and knowing what was going on was the reason for the CIA to exist the last 50+ years. \_ you didn't know that USA and Russia suppose to disarm as part of NPT, don't you? \_ you mean article 6? re-read it. \_ honestly, I don't see any danger of Iran having nuclear weapon. If anything, India/Pakistein poses more danger simply because one \- is that the Jewish part of Pakistan? of them have the incentive to use it in a conflict. |
2005/10/20-22 [Politics/Domestic/President/Bush, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:40199 Activity:nil |
10/20 Powell fucks Dick http://onegoodmove.org/1gm/1gmarchive/002492.html#002492 "a plea bargain process has evidently been opened with Vice President Cheney's lawyer ... Powell ... showed that memo only to two people-- president and vice president. ... Powell testified about this exchange in great length to the grand jury ... Powell appeared convinced that the vice president played a focal role in disclosing plame's undercover status." \_ Is it possible to overdose on schadenfreude? \_ On the contrary, my mom is convinced that when my grandmother was dying of a degenerative brain disease back in the 70's, that Watergate-related shadenfreude added months to her life. She was a Trotskyist, and of course loathed Nixon. \_ Could the "schadenfreude" guy please give it a rest? The only reason any of us gain any bit of enjoyment in what's happening is in the possibly naive hope that America will wake up and vote these corrupt, incompetent and treasonous clowns out of power. |
2005/9/24 [Science/GlobalWarming, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:39850 Activity:nil 57%like:39860 |
9/24 http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050924/ap_on_re_mi_ea/nuclear_agency_iran IAEA votes to refer Iran to UN Security Council. In order to obtain abstentions from China and Russia, language specifying "sanctions" and including a specific date were dropped. \_ how about N.Korea? |
2005/9/15-17 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:39697 Activity:low |
9/15 US Deploys Powerpoint slides against Iran http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/13/AR2005091301837.html \_ See, last time we used presentation boards. Powerpoint is MUCH more reliable. \_ How about India/Pakistan/N.Korea/Israel? Why pick on Iran? Mind you that: - Iran is much larger country than Iraq - Iran is China's main oil supplier, and China's effort to diverse its oil supply kind of killed by USA couple months ago. - UN Security Council - China sits in UN Security Consoul... |
2005/8/10-11 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:39079 Activity:nil |
8/10 FYI, Iran broke IAEA seals on equipment that's used in the first half of the fuel cycle today. Earlier this week they had resumed work without breaking seals. Can you say: EU3 and U.S. bluff called? \_ In other news, I'm now getting propaganda spam about this. \_ http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/08/10/nuclear_spam_trojan \_ Aiyahhh. Thank you. |
2005/8/8-11 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:39057 Activity:nil |
8/8 Iran resumes fuel cycle work http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0809/p02s01-wogi.html My interpretation: (1) Iran has just successfully called the bluff of both the EU3 and the U.S., or, (2) The U.S. really does want to refer Iran to the Security Council, impose sanctions, and gear up for war in ~ 2-3 years. My solution had been to create a schedule whereby Iran /could/ perform different stages of the fuel cycle until after some number of years they could do the whole thing, but hey, if we want to do (1) first that's fine by me, and if the U.S. wants to do (2), well ... I guess we'll find the troops to do it somehow. \_ They'll just draft CSUAers and conservative bloggers. |
2005/8/8 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Science/GlobalWarming] UID:39044 Activity:nil |
8/8 Iran resumes fuel cycle work http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0809/p02s01-wogi.html |
2005/8/2-4 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:38940 Activity:nil |
8/2 That's pretty funny. Last week Iran said they would resume uranium enrichment. Dubya called them on that. Iran backed down. Then we have reports yesterday of the National Intelligence Estimate saying the consensus is that Iran is 10 years away from a nuclear weapon -- at best. Now Iran today says, fuggit, we're enriching. Diplomacy at work! |
2005/6/22-23 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:38242 Activity:low |
6/22 Was this U2 shot down over Iran? http://csua.org/u/cgw \_ If you don't know, how would any of us know? \_ Which is better, U2 or SR-71? \_ SR-71, or originally RS-71, and before that A-12, was better but now is retired. \_ Huh? The A-12 was never built, and it wasn't a reconnaissance plane. \_ Hmmm.. this guy seems to think the SR-71 is back in service. Has anyone heard that before? http://www.area51zone.com/aircraft/sr71.shtml \_ The SR-71 program was cancelled in the late 80s/early 90s, reactivated around 1994, and re-deactivated in the late 90s. NASA also used them for a while to escort landing Space Shuttles, since they were the only things fast enough to keep up with the re-entry speeds. -gm \_ Why were landing Space Shuttles escorted? It's not like the escorting planes could do something when things went wrong on the Shuttles. \_ I think it was to perform visual inspections for damage, that sort of thing. Maybe also to measure wind and such, since the Shuttles are just really big gliders. -gm |
2005/6/16-18 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:38165 Activity:high |
6/16 For those who want to push democracy worldwide and bitch Iran being member of "axis of evil," Do you even realize that Iran has a very lively democracy and they are holding their presidential election this Friday? \_ anyone remotely familiar with the gov of iran knows that the theocratic body can over rule any decision of elected representatives at any time. so either you're ignorant or a troll. \_ The Democaracy is very weak in Iran. The ultimate authority still lies with the mullahs. The president is very weak and mullahs get to decide who can run for a seat in Iranian parlament. Last year, they prevented a couple of thousand candidates from running from not being faithful enough to the priciples of their running for not being faithful enough to the priciples of their revolution. The mullahs also can pretty much veto anything. \_ Hahaha. Do you realize that people who wish to run in the \_ Hahaha. Do you realize that the only people who run in the elections must be approved by the mullahs? Imagine if Bush got to decide who ran in all the elections, state, city, senate, house, etc. Would you call that a "lively democracy?" (Oh, and Bush has been made supreme leader, he cannot be taken from office. No elections for him.) \_ it's a different form of democracy. Why don't you bitch about Britian's upper house are appointed? \_ Freedom is slavery! Despotism is democracy! house, etc. Would you call that a "lively democracy?" \_ kngharv is funny. \_ AFAIK, the house of lords does not directly influence gov policy (except as relates to certain judicial appeals). \_ It's _not_ a "different kind of democracy". By your definition, the Soviet Union was a "different kind of democracy", as was the US before letting women and blacks vote. Newspapers are regularly shut down, people beaten, imprisoned and killed for voicing anti-government opinions, an unelected self-perpetuating system (council of guardians, supreme leader) has the possibility of vetoing all electoral candidates and laws, and the revolutionary guard/interior ministry holds the implied threat of violence over everyone's head. But hey, I guess Zimbabwe is a "different kind of democracy" too. -John \_ threat of violence, though illegal by Red Cross standard, is sactioned by USA and routinely praticed. \_ these are human right issue, which is independent from the issue of democracy. Iran has supreme leader, USA has electral college and life-term supreme court judges appointed by the president. I am simply pointing this out because Americans hate current Iranian regime, and we often ignoring the fact that Iran has one of the most mature democracy in the Middle East. \_ hehe. -- ilyas \_ "mature"? You are comparing to Syria, Egypt and Saudi Arabia. That's not a challenge. Yes, the US have lacked sound judgment in dealing with some aspects of Iran. That said, how do you treat a regime, one part of which is strongly reformist but impotent, the other of which openly sponsors terrorism and other nasties? Plus, your comparison to the US beggars belief--the Supreme Court is appointed by an elected official, its members approved by other elected officials. That said, the threat of violence is NOT separate from the idea of democracy--democracy means, essentially, one man one vote--if said man is intimidated, or his vote fraudulently discounted, or his elected officials rendered irrelevant, he is not living in a democracy. What is this, ChiCom Troll goes Middle East? -John \_ Democracy and freedom are relevant to the people when they have enough food, water, shelter, and stability in the community. In another word, most Middle Easterners don't really give a shit about freedom at this point since they don't even have enough basic necessities to even think about freedom. Americans talks about freedom as if it were the greatest thing on earth, and they're right because they already have basic necessities for life. However, freedom is not for everyone on this planet, especially for people who cannot even begin to think about freedom. You can't hand freedom to people and expect them to embrace it. People have to have basic necessities, and it is then that you can begin to talk about freedom and democracy. Giving freedom to the Iraqi people is like Microsoft donating billions of dollars worth of Windows XP licenses to starving African kids. \_ Interestingly, prosperity in the West developed in direct proportion to political freedom of the general populace, and the merchant and craftsman classes in particular. Feudal serfs will not create prosperity. -- ilyas \_ is it also a coincident that all the prosperous Western democracies were Imperial Power of 19th century? \_ This is simply not true. How about Scandinavian countries? Prosperity enabled imperialism, not the other way around. -- ilyas Also, some countries that were neither prosperous, nor 'progressive' politically were imperialist (Russia). I am calling Russia imperialist despite the fact that its colonies were technically on a contiguous land mass with the 'mainland.' This didn't really change the familiar dynamic of imperialism. Prosperity enabled imperialism in the West, not the other way around. -- ilyas \_ I have been saying that all along and no one listened. If you travel to China and look at their human right problem more closely, you will find that while political and religious dissidents get most of attentions, it is the human right of the dirt poor which are been routinely violated on a massive scale. Given the dire economic circumstances, those dirt poor's human right are being violated in USA as well (e.g. homeless folks in People's Park). The only differences between China and USA, is that China has 300 million of those who are at least as poor as Dwellers of People's Park. \_ I agree with the pp, (people need food and security before they can really use freedom), but I don't really agree with you. You're making a pretty tenuous connection between "The poors' human rights are routinely violated," and "prosperity a human right." At least, I think that's what you're saying. \_ next time, check out how police evict homeless people on the street, you will understand what do I mean. \_ For my edification, please explain how exactly it is possible to `evict someone on the street.' -dans \_ He may be talking about the state-sponsored (or at least done with the collusion of corrupt officials) beatings and evictions of poor squatters in favor of new factories or luxury homes. -John \_ I think the squatting phenomenon you're referring to is much more prevalent in Europe, though I have seen a handful of isolated incidents in the New York area. Regardless, `evict someone on the street' still doesn't parse in any meaningful way. -dans \_ No, it doesn't exist at all here, nor do I believe it's occurred recently in the US (or in any civilized country.) You are probably referring to squatters who occupy buildings, which sometimes ends up in a violent eviction. Minor semantic difference, but these guys usually squat as a form of protest, knowing that the landlord will try to assert his claim at some point in the future. I was obliquely referring to this riot in China last week: http://tinyurl.com/dxrbh Although to be fair, they weren't even squatters, and similar things have happened in Malaysia. I suppose op was talking about cops telling homeless people to "move along". -John \_ To me your argument seems to state that unless people have the necessities (food, water, shelter, &c.) freedom and democracy are irrelevant (or at least unnecessary) If this is true, why not round up all the people who don't have the necessities and stick them in a camp where someone provides all of these things to them? Of course the camp would be subject to the external control of the people providing the necessities and an individual in the camp would have no alternative but to live by the rules of the external parties. The question then is when will a man in the camp be deemed capable of having freedom? If the answer is when they have the "necessities", then I am led to ask, who decides when they have the "necessities" - can the people in the camp decide they have got enough and then opt for freedom or will the get freedom when the "enlightened" protectors decide it is appropriate? I think that it is apparent that they will never be given Freedom b/c they implicitly bargained it away in exchange for physical comfort. Knowing this, it would be wrong to give someone physical comfort before freedom. \_ Only to the left is the largest state sponsor of terror besides the Soviets over the past 3 decades a misunderstood democracry. the Soviets over the past 3 decades a misunderstood democracy. I'm sure the Lebanese feel just terrible about the misunderstanding. \_ huh? \_ exactly. |
2005/3/17 [Science/GlobalWarming, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:36741 Activity:high |
3/17 http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/03/17/el.baradei/index.html CNN interview today on Iran with IAEA head ElBaradei. Summary: North Korea is "an absolutely black hole" -- we know they have the plutonium for a bomb, but we don't know if they've built it into a bomb yet. There are no technical hurdles now they have the plutonium. -- Iran, on the other hand, we don't think they have the plutonium or highly enriched uranium yet, and they have been cooperative. As long as we're talking, it's good. The U.S. joining is wonderful. Enrichment should be limited to an "international consortium" -- everyone needs to agree on an inclusive and fair system, so if a country wants enriched uranium for peaceful purposes, they can get it. No one's ruling out the possibility of Iran doing enrichment, but Iran has built a "confidence deficit" because of its "undeclared program" of the last 20 years. Translation: Iran can enrich, but maybe in the future. (My interpretation: Iran will settle for a plan whereby in x years, it can operate research centrifuges, after y years, enrich a certain amount, z years, enrich more. There will be many, many folks in Dubya's admin that say x, y, and z should be undefined, or Iran should never enrich, but my gut feeling is that Dubya will settle, after much bargaining, for x >= 5 years, y >= 10 years, z >= 20 years. Included with such an agreement will be a ban on heavy-water reactors and other reactors that produce fissile material as a by-product. Freepers will scream and shout.) \_ Considering that Iran has had a (more or less) stable government for the last 15 years, I'd be less worried about them than Pakistan. The heavy water reactor is troubling, but given Western attitudes towards them, I understand Iran's goals. Hard call on this one. \_ Shrug. If they proceed seriously with the heavy water reactor or enrichment, we at least call sanctions. It's just a question of how many allies are with us at that point. \_ The IAEA is worthless. Prior to GWI they issued even less urgent statements about Iraq. Post GWI we learned Iraq was 18- 24 months from a a bomb and had up to 20,000 researchers on the project. Iran has been the largest state sponsor of terror, maybe after the USSR, over the past 25 years. It's naive and completely irresponsible to trust them, but thanks to Dem. and leftist propaganda Iran is painted as a victim of imperialist American hegemony. \_ Name a Democratic defender of Iran. \_ Name one who will do anything about Iran. \_ Answer the question. What Democrat is painting Iran as a victim of imperialist American hegemony? -tom \_ Uhm, anyone who is Iranian in origin and a democrat? Duhhh? Talk about missing the point. But what can you expect from tom? He walks in and the average IQ of the room goes down a couple of points. -!PP \_ I notice nobody has answer my question. !tom \_ Dubya FAA security was worthless pre-9/11. Everything changed after 9/11. (Hey, the excuse seemed to work for Dubya, who not for the IAEA) |
2005/3/10 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:36638 Activity:nil |
3/10 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/11/politics/11iran.html "Europe and the United States have agreed on a joint approach to negotiating with Iran over its nuclear program after months of dispute, with the Bush administration agreeing to offer modest economic incentives and the Europeans agreeing to take the issue to the United Nations Security Council if negotiations fail, senior American officials said Thursday. The American incentives would go into effect only if Iran agreed to halt the enrichment of uranium permanently. The agreement represents a major shift in strategy for both the Bush administration, which has refused for years to offer Iran incentives to give up its program, and for Europe, which had been reluctant to discuss penalties." |
2005/3/3-4 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:36514 Activity:high |
3/3 http://csua.org/u/b8v (AP) So ... "diplomats" at an IAEA meeting today said Iran was "starting work" on half-mile deep tunnels of hardened concrete at their premier site for uranium enrichment. The IAEA is pissed that Iran didn't tell them beforehand. Iran also just began construction of a heavy-water nuclear reactor at Arak. Spent fuel from heavy-water reactors is much more easily converted to bomb-grade material. This is in contrast to the Bushehr light-water reactor that Russia helped build. The reactor material for light-water reactors is not easily converted to bomb-grade material, and anyway, Russia said they would cart it all away when they were done and monitor the stuff. Britain, France, and Germany asked Iran nicely not to build the heavy-water plant. So, uh .... what to do? \_ I know! Let's abandon the people of Iraq and Afghanistan and spend another $200 billion getting ourselves into another horrible mess! What do I win? -tom \_ Interestingly, this news came on the same day that Dubya was meeting Condi to talk about offering concessions to Iran to give the EU3 more leverage. the EU3 more leverage. The concessions are: not opposing Iran's WTO entry, and not opposing European sales of civilian aircraft parts to Iran; in exchange for: Iran giving up uranium enrichment. The Arak reactor would produce plutonium, which I believe doesn't need the laborious enrichment step of using hundreds of centrifuges. And, as you might have guessed, heavy- water reactors use unenriched uranium as fuel. The Dubya-Condi meeting was announced at least five days in advance. \_ My prediction of how it will play out: Condi has told Dubya that he REALLY needs the world's support. The U.S. cannot go it alone on Iran. Dubya trusts Condi. She advised him to invade Iraq. The U.S. will be on the same page as the EU3, and will try not to substantively undermine them. Iran will build its tunnels. Iran will say it will never give up the right to enrich uranium. There will be an understanding they won't do it though, nor build more centrifuges; there will be a set limit on centrifuge parts. Arak will not be built. Bushehr will go ahead as the original plan, maybe with plans for another one or two light-water reactors. The IAEA will periodically send people to look in the tunnels. Iran will receive support for WTO entry and other incentives. Freepers will scream and yell. -op \_ Nice "it could go like this analysis", even if it isn't very likely. Keep up the good work. \_ Well, I'm not saying this will be worked out in 6 months. It could take years -- but I believe the U.S. will be resolved to expend all possible options before bombing or a full-scale invasion, the idea being it will need its partners before a full-scale invasion, and bombing would make the situation worse. I do think my prediction is the most likely outcome, and fortunately it seems like the best possible outcome given the players. If you really want to be optimistic, you could say that the essential reason for this whole kissy-kissy make-friends- with-Europe-again thing was a common understanding across the ocean of the need for a united front on Iran. -op \_ I wasn't being sarcastic. I liked your analysis. \_ Yeah, I know. I was just saying it could take a while. -op \_ Okay, I'll also give you a possible "bad" situation: Iran says, screw you all, we know you can't do shit (what with the U.S. being overstretched, and Europe's people ousting their leaders if Blair/Chirac/Schroeder ask for war). The Security Council passes sanctions (with Russia and China abstaining), the U.S. bombs like crazy, a real coalition forms and invades Iran, but the common people in Europe and most Democrats are still mighty pissed, Iran becomes likes Iraq today. -op \_ Watch out there. Population of Iran >> Pop. of Iraq >> Pop. of Sunnis Iraq Same for land area. |
2005/2/16 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iraq] UID:36202 Activity:very high |
2/16 "Iran Threatens to Shoot Down U.S. Drones" Why don't they just shoot it down? I take it they don't have the capability? If anyone's flying drones over the US airspace, you bet we would shoot it down on the first opportunity. \_ what is the international law on sovereignty of airspace? And how high do the drones fly? Just curious... \_ Bush breaks International Law again. What do you think? \_ WRONG. Bush IS the law, international law. \_ Prepare to be JUDGED! \_ 15 years in the academy He was like no cadet they'd ever seen A man so hard his veins bleed ice and when he speaks he never says it twice they call him judge, his last name is Dredd, so break the law and you'll wind up deeeeeeeeaaaaad! Truth and justice is what he's fighting for judge Dredd the man: he is the laaaaaaaawwwwwwww!!!! Respect the badge!!! he earned it with his blood. fear the gun!! your sentence may be death because I am the laaaaaaawwwwwwwww!!!! \_ Where's chicom troll to lecture us on the inherent hypocrisy of the US and how China is so much more logical and humanitarian.... \_ you are stupid. dumb US just destroyed Iran's arch-enemy Saddam for them, at the cost of hundreds of billions of dollars, and 1500 lives and counting, and are still battling the Iraqi Sunnis while Shiite religious fundamentalist parties just dominated the election in Iraq. why would they want to shoot down US planes? chicom troll is not stupid like you. even if iran wants to shoot down US plane, they will warn first like above, otherwise, US will lie and say they got shot down in iraq, blah blah. now, after the warning, when US plane got shot down, the whole world will know it's because they violated Iran's airspace and has only themselves to blame. no point getting into unnecessary fight with US when it is serving as your running dog. the past few years, all the mad iranian mullahs have been laughing hysterically at US idiocy and for their regime's good fortune. \_ Do you have a problem with the above statement? Are you suggesting the US will simply protest someone flying drones over its airspace? What about the time one CIA drone fired a missile at a target on the ground in another country? Oh I get it, they are all terrorists, and as such they don't have any rights that you so proudly claim and try to enforce upon others, but choose to abandon at the first sign of trouble for yourself. Better yet, call all your enemies terrorists. (Oh wait, I take it back, you are already doing that) \_ yay! chicom troll's young padawan speaks! -chicom troll #1 fan \_ Wow, nice merging. This response belongs with the stupid guy, not the problem guy. \_ China has been intruding Japanese marine territory with subs for years. \_ Iran claims to have already shot some down. They are going public with the info now. \_ link? |
2005/2/12 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:36153 Activity:nil |
2/12 THe gift that keeps on giving CIA Operation in Iran Failed When Spies Were Exposed http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1341654/posts \_ [IP address replaced with hostname] |
2005/1/31 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:35987 Activity:nil |
1/30 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/4217703.stm Halliburton pulling out of Iran. I smell a new war in the future. |
2005/1/18-19 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Science/GlobalWarming] UID:35773 Activity:very high |
1/18 I just don't get it. We have enough nukes to nuke every major city on this planet, yet we go around the world telling other countries "no, you cannot have nukes", not to mention we are the only country on the face of this planet in the course of humanity to use a nuke. We said Iraq definitely have WMD, well where the fuck is it? Now we say Iran definitely have it and must be eliminated or the world will come to an end. It's like a millionaire telling the poor guy on the street, "no, you cannot have $10!!" All this shit, and there are still idiots on the motd believing Bush and the lies that are coming out of this administration. I just don't get it. Without Iran and NK, BushCo would have you believe that China would be ready to nuke us any minute now. Just tell me again why Iran cannot have nukes but we can, and we have shit loads of them. \_ Because why does an oil-rich country need nukes? \_ Because Iran is ruled by a cabal of religious extremists. \_ And the US is not? \_ Your brain has been classified as: small. \- you must pay me 5cents. \_ No, it's a republic with 3 branches of government. By the way you are stupid. \_ I see it ruled by the republicans. \_ Who were lawfully elected to the offices which they hold. If they fail to properly enact the will of the people they will be voted out of office. Just b/c you didn't vote for them doesn't make them a cabal. \_ Do humanity a favor and jump off Evans. \_ Do humanity a favor and go fuck yourself. \_ Stop thinking! It is unpatriotic. \_ The will of the people? Bah. Bush won a popularity contest, not an election based on an electorate rationally considering the issues. Now, having his illusory "mandate", he will do is own will, not ours. \_ Clinton also won a popularity contest. That's what elections are. Ar-nold. \_ You don't understand the difference between Iran and the US? Try living in Iran for a year and let us know how it goes. \_ Even forgetting about the arguments about how we're morally better than them or have a better form of government, we don't want them to have nukes because they are not our friends and we want to have more power than them. It has nothing to do with being fair. It's a seperate argument to say that we are a democracy and they are not. But the real answer to the op's question is that we don't let them have nukes because we don't want to be threatened by them. We want to be the ones pushing them around, and not vice versa. Besides, they might be crazy and use them for all we know. Even if this is unlikely, why risk it? \_ Please tell me that you are a conservative trolling. \_ Please tell me that you are a conservative trolling. -liberal \_ I think it might be Chicom troll. His English probably improved. \_ no, it's not me, and FYI, i don't think he is trolling. \_ I've got a gun. That bad guy down the street who hates my guts and wants to kill me is trying to figure out how to get a gun. He hasn't done it yet but he's getting pretty close. In your little world, I should go knock on his door and give him my gun so that he can shoot my head off. HINT: Its a jungle out there and only the fittest survive. I'm not a saint, and I won't be in this life so if its btwn me or the bad guys, I'm chosing me. \_ I don't have a gun. But the guy up the street has one and hates me. He has not shot me yet but I am not going to sit here and wait. But since he is trying to keep me from getting a gun, obviously he is preparing to shoot me. In your macro world, you would shoot everyone who you think may shoot you. And yes, the guy just hates you because you're free. Ever figure out why people hate each other? \_ Good try, but you have made some key mistakes. The critical one is that you assume the good guys want to shoot the bad guy who is trying to get the gun. This is not true. If the bad guy wasn't out to get the good guy, he would leave them alone. The second mistake is that you state that the guy up the street hates you. This is also not true. You are the hater who is going after the good guy who lives up the street. The reason why the bad guys hate us is quite simple. It is the green eyed monster known as envy. Those buggers hate the fact that a free and open society leads to scientific progress and material gain. They resent the fact that our freedoms have made us the most important and prosperous nation in the history of human civilization while their own outmoded ideas have brought them nothing at all. \_ I was with you for your first paragraph, but the second one is bullshit. You really think the average Iranian who shakes his fist at the Great Satan of the U.S.A. is pondering where their civilization went wrong, and becoming envious as a conclusion? When people live in a dictatorship, they tend *not* to do much thinking, which is the problem. Maybe the people *writing* the propoganda think the way you say, but the average man on the street is just spouting crap he heard from his TV/radio/Cleric. I'm guessing that the real thinkers among them hate the regime so much that they secretly like America just because it's the opposite of what they hate. I've sure met a lot of former soviet citizens who felt that way about Reagan's America. \_ Because Iran said they won't \-You may wish to read the famous paper "the spread of nuclear weapons: more may be better" [adelphi paper #171] by fmr/emeritus ucb prof kenneth waltz. there is also a book by waltz and sagan that is ok. --psb \- oh this paper is online at: http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/waltz1.htm [i didnt check if it is complete. pretty much everything by waltz is good.] \_ Please explain why the world will be better with a nuclear Iran. \_ Someone to nuke Israel, duh! \-are you more worried about nuclear "leakage" from the ex-Soviet Union or an Iran bomb? How about Iran vs. Pak? I think Pak is more likely to fall apart. My concern w.r.t. nukes is not the ability of states posessing them increase their ability to influence outcomes beyond their borders, but their ability to maintain good command and control systems. It makes sense for Iran to chase the bomb. It probably didnt make sense for South Africa. I dont think it makes sense for Brazil at the moment, but who knows 10yrs from now under the Jeb administration. \_ Sodians are mostly white imperialist, who uses different standard to judge others because they think USA is morally/culturally superior. And if you notice, it's not just nukes. Chemical weapon, biological weapons, land mines... the theme is consistant: we got them all and free to use it, but no one else should have it. *ESPECIALLY* if you are not Christian Jews, and/or white. Did USA signed universal nuclear test ban treaty? nope. is USA destroying stockpiles of chemical/biological weapons nope. \_ If the jackal asked the elephant to please give up his trunk and his tusks, the elephant would laugh. There is a universal law, it is called survival of the fittest. If you foolishly give your advantage away you are asking to get killed. The TBT is a terrible idea. It ties our hands but allows our enemies to to whatever they like. It is a good thing that ADULTS run this world, not fools like you. \_ In other words, let's quash those Tibetans since TI is bad for China and detrimental to China's vital national intereset. It's a matter of survival of the fittest. When Americans complain about human rights, they are just being a bunch of hypocrites and Pharisees, just like in the Bible. - Chicom troll \-ObMelianDialog: The strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must. [nb i mean that as an empirical not normative statement. assessing the normative nature of the international system is beyond the scope of the motd, but see man, the state, and war, and the Stag Hunt example] --psb \- ObAbeLincolnQuotes: "Let us have faith that right makes might, and in that faith, let us, to the end, dare to do our duty as we understand it." "The only assurance of our Nation's safety is to lay our foundation in Morality and Religion" -- chicom troll \- Does the Melian Dialog fit with some kind of Hindu or Buddhist karma world view? |
2005/1/17 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:35749 Activity:insanely high |
1/17 Iran is next! http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?050124fa_fact \_ And Hersch (and his informer) should be executed for treason. Didn't people complain that our intelligence in Iraq was faulty because we didn't have human intelligence on the ground? \_ HOW DARE HE QUESTION OUR LEADER! \_ Let's execute all dem "newsjournalists" for tippin' off the enemy while our boys are behind enemy lines! </troll> \_ What is treasonous about this article? Specifically, I want you to point out something that was published in there that the enemy doesn't already know. Are you against the Freedom of The Press now? \_ *laugh* take a look at the right wing republican track record on any subject relating to freedom of the press and decide for yourself. Of course they don't support freedom of the press. \_ I did not know that we had boots on the ground in Iran. I did not know they were the next target (thought it was Syria). Freedom of the Press does not include shouting fire in a crowded theater. \_ You have to consider the possibility that some of Hersch's sources might be feeding him disinformation. \_ That doesn't change the fact that he shouldn't be printing it. \_ I know we have boots on the ground in North Korea and Pakistan, unless the SEAL who told me he had been there in the last year was lying to me, a distinct possibility. I assume we put Special Ops or CIA agents in places like this. That is their job, after all. And Hersch job as a journalist is to make sure we have a national coversation about war against Iran before we say, bomb the crap out of them. If Hersch had not exposed the Abu Gharib torture, it would probably still be going on. Would that be the best thing \_ do you really thikn we have forces in NK right now? do they disguise themselves as bowls of gruel? \_ Are you a moron? The Army had already started their investigation. Why do you think it would still be going on? The process was working. \_ If you think it's not STILL GOING ON RIGHT NOW, you, sir, are the moron. \_ So there are still people being abused in Abu Ghraib right now? What is your proof? \_ hey guys, I'm confused, are you talking about waterboarding, pyramid pileups, forced masturbation, sexual humiliation in general, or forced positions? thanks \_ I think he is talking about the gang raping of minor boys. raping of minor boys. Cons always hate sodomy, except for the non consensual kind. \_ I don't know, are you ? We were still toruring people at Gitmo for quite a while afterwards and the only reason we stopped was because of the public outcry over Abu Gharib. \_ Please show a reputable reference that there was continued abuse at Abu Ghraib after the military began its investigation. \_ I meant that torture would still be going on, not necessarily torture at Abu Gharab. We continued to torture at Gitmo. If we had not had that national conversation about torture, where even "Torquemada" Gonzalez repudiated it, it would still be going on. for America? How bad would it have gotten before it was exposed then? \_ do you really thikn we have forces in NK right now? do they disguise themselves as bowls of gruel? \_ Syria isn't dangerous. There's no point wasting time with them. By the way this article is the first time I've noticed the use of an umlaut in words like cooperation and preemptive (pree:mptive). Is that an established thing? \_ It's a New Yorker mag thing, don't worry about it. - danh \_ Doesn't Syria have WMDs? Aren't a non-negligible number of insurgency leaders in Syria? \_ So you think Hersch should be executed for treason because he published a report that the US was sending Special Ops teams into Iran. Is that your serious contention? I think you are a loon. \_ "I'm absolutely convinced that the threat we face now, the idea of a terrorist in the middle of one of our cities with a nuclear weapon, is very real and that we have to use extraordinary measures to deal with it." -VP Cheney \_ Was that the line against Iraq or Iran? \_ VP debate, Oct 5 2004. \_ I don't think that he should be executed, like the loony Con up there, but I think he should have kept his mouth shut. It is not like he is exposing government wrongdoing, like at Abu Gharib or in the OSP case or numerous other times. -liberal \_ Does the article say whether any special ops teams are there in Iran right now? \_ "The American task force, aided by the information from Pakistan, has been penetrating eastern Iran from Afghanistan" \_ thx! -khamenei \_ Next time RTFA! |
2004/10/22-23 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:34302 Activity:nil |
10/22 The Jews are at it again: http://tinyurl.com/5hskc \_ AH, we can always count on them. Seriously, Iran has to really take into account that Isreal might pre-emptively nuke THEM... \_ Count on them? To do what? Destabilise the entire middle east? Israel has had nukes for decades. Now they want to make sure Iran and we all know about Iraq from 1991 don't get military parity. All they want is walls and nukes and Dubya-like pre-emptive strikes on people who are just trying to build a better life for themselves building electric power plans. Why can't the Jews just get along with their neighbors? \_ Isreal is a dick, Iran is an asshole, and you are a pussy. -trey and matt \_ Are you implying an imminent of invasion of Iran by Israel, or are you saying I shouldn't accept any drinks from Israel? \_ I'd go with both, just to be on the safe side. \_ Troll! \_ You confuse trolling with dripping sarcasm. \_ w00t! \_ Dur, the Americans have to do it this time. Thanks for the URL. |
2004/10/22 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:34292 Activity:low |
10/22 http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/latimests/20041022/ts_latimes/israelmayhaveiraninitssights The Jews are at it again. \_ AH, we can always count on them. Seriously, Iran has to really take into account that Isreal might pre-emptively nuke THEM... \_ Count on them? To do what? Destabilise the entire middle east? Israel has had nukes for decades. Now they want to make sure Iran and we all know about Iraq from 1991 don't get military parity. All they want is walls and nukes and Dubya-like pre-emptive strikes on people who are just trying to build a better life for themselves building electric power plans. Why can't the Jews just get along with their neighbors? \_ Isreal is a dick, Iran is an asshole, and you are a pussy. -trey and matt \_ Are you implying an imminent of invasion of Iran by Israel, or are you saying I shouldn't accept any drinks from Israel? \_ I'd go with both, just to be on the safe side. \_ Troll! \_ You confuse trolling with dripping sarcasm. \_ w00t! \_ Dur, the Americans have to do it this time. Thanks for the URL. |
2004/9/21-22 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Science/GlobalWarming] UID:33681 Activity:insanely high |
9/21 So "liberal" guy, what do you think the US should do about Iran's incipient nuclear program? \_ I think we should violently rape and kill all non-US citizens. Only then can we be SURE we won't be attacked! \_ I don't have the whole answer, but this is part of it: http://csua.org/u/959 (Yahoo! News) Step 1: Elect Kerry (Bush is bad at coalitions) \_ And he's good at what exactly? Looking smug and stupid? \_ Does step 1 include the "International tax" the UN wants and GWB would never allow in a million years? Why did Schroeder make a speech that essentially said, "Wait til November because our boy Kerry will do it!"? Step 2: Get Russia and Europe all on the same page (Do you really want Iran to have nukes?) \_ WTF does this mean? Get them? How? Why not just say the answer to Iran's nuke program is "Get the Iranians to stop having a nuke program"? Step 3: Help Iran build nuclear power plants, but completely restrict enriching uranium, even for peaceful purposes. Russia can supply fuel for the power plants. It doesn't matter if the NPT says Iran can enrich uranium for peaceful purposes. \_ There has been an open offer of help for years that is even less restrictive than this but the Iranians aren't interested. Now what? Please read a newspaper every so often before deciding you have all the answers. You can still do 2 and 3 without 1, but I can't help but feel Dubya will fuck it up again. -liberal \_ what the hell do they need nuclear power for? What about oil? \_ Iran will bewt the inspectors if we don't give em Step 3. Europe and Russia will say they can live with Step 3; but if the U.S. doesn't agree, then we're not using force as the last possible option. We'll just look like warmongers again. \_ Huh? The US has offered the Iranians an even better version of your "step 3" for several years. They are not interested. Now what? \_ Why does Iran need nuclear power??? It is sitting on massive petroleum and natural gas reserves. A gallon of gas in Iran is something like 0.30$. As for Europe, the Germans and French were the same countries that sold Iran the illicit refining equipment to begin with. It is Russia who is is / has been building Iran's nuclear infrastructure. Haven't you figured out appeasement does not work. Iran's foreign policy is not coexistence with the West, it is elimination of the West. Iran has been the largest state sponsor of terror over the last 30 years. \_ Then why the hell did we invade IRAQ? "Oops, one letter typo" \_ iran will probably misuse a nuclear arsenal. but it is well accepted that its oil reserves will not produce enough oil within 50 years. \_ Well accepted? By whom? Do you have a source for this statement? \_ It is a geological fact for every country producing oil. Many countries are now "post peak" and are producing less oil every year, the US being a prime example. \_ "Iran will probably misuse a nuclear arsenal" ... Pakistan has nukes and hasn't misused them. The only country to use nukes so far is us. \_ Of course Iran wants nukes; only a moron would think they were only interested in nuclear power. No one tries to squish a country with nukes without hestitating. No one also doubts that they are at the top of list for state sponsors of terror -- but it's also true we don't have smoking gun evidence of an al Qaeda link. Also, please provide a URL showing that Germany and France sold "[nuclear] refining equipment" to Iran. I believe Pakistan sold centrifuge equipment to Iran. Also, WW2 showed that giving up a country to an invading country doesn't work. This was the example of WW2, Korea, and Kuwait. However, Vietnam and Iraq have been different stories, and it might be again with Iran. So, do we have enough people to invade Iran ...? I told you what I'd do. Now what would you? -op \_ He answered. He'd appease. \-semi-tangential comment: while this doenst rise to a "clash of civilizations" there are some instances where it is hard to put yourself in the other guys shoes ... [continuation moved to ~psb/MOTD/AmericanDoubleStandards] \_ When you're a super power there are no double standards. You do what you want and make the rules for everyone. That's what being a super power is all about. The US is a rather benign super power as these things go. What other country with this kind of power would do so little with it? \_ US is rather benign, but it's not because of the current administration. \_ I think a fair solution would be to allow Iran to use the nuclear technologies for peaceful purposes, including the dual-use technologies, as long as they allow UN's international atomic agency to fully monitor their nuclear activities without any exceptions. Iran's government has been working a lot in the recent times to develop domestic manufacturing (including auto, aerospace) and IT industries. Their nuclear ambitions might be viewed simply as yet another step on the way to joining the "technologically advanced nation" club. They also argue that meeting domestic energy needs using solely fossil fuels will have a serious environmental impact. Neither they have enough power generating capacity to meet energy needs for future. This is probably why they have just started building a gas pipeline to Armenia. They say they intend to export gas to Armenia and import electricity produced there. I am not saying that everything is well in Iran. They were definitely caught red-handed handed with their undisclosed uranium enrichment facilities but I would allow them to keep their reactors as long as they agree to play by the rules. \_ Wait a minute. Isn't our invasion of Iraq supposed to scare countries like Iran and N. Korea into abandoning their WMD programs? |
2004/9/21 [Science/GlobalWarming, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:33677 Activity:nil |
9/21 [re-posted with various changes] So Iran today started to create uranium hexafluoride gas. They have nuclear centrifuges already built to enrich this to nuclear plant fuel, but can easily continue to weapons-grade concentrations. Their stock of yellowcake is sufficient for several nukes. So, I read that it will be about a year before Iran can build nukes without outside help. I don't understand this; I believe that IF Iran kicked out the inspectors today and IF they wanted to and IF no one did anything, they could have a nuke between 6-24 months from now without outside assistance. Isn't this accurate? The difficult step in creating a nuke is obtaining weapons-grade concentrations of uranium, while the weapon design is easy, and Iran already has the centrifuges I believe. -liberal |
2004/9/21 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:33667 Activity:insanely high |
9/21 So Iran today started to enrich uranium, from a stock sufficient for several nukes. I read that it will be about a year before Iran can build nukes without outside help. I don't understand this; I believe they can do it by themselves today if they kicked the inspectors out. Isn't this accurate? Granted it would be 3-12 months before a successful nuke test. -liberal (For all you wankers who think I'm a crazed freeper since I'm talking about Iran, here's an anti-Bush carrot for you: http://csua.org/u/959 \_ Obviously you are a nuclear arms expert and intelligence agent rolled into one so I believe you. \_ I took Muller's Physics 7B class and read what he wrote about calutrons. I think that, reading Sum Of All Fears, knowing what happened with Pakistan / India, and having some clue is enough to make my assertion. I am asking whether it's accurate, after all. Muller: "separation is the hard part; the weapon design is easy" http://people.howstuffworks.com/nuclear-bomb5.htm -op \_ I saw 'Red Dawn' and took Physics 7ABC and I think you are a troll. \_ Have you read Sum Of All Fears (no, watching the movie definitely doesn't count)? Have you read Muller's article? Repeat after me: "separation is the hard part; the weapon design is easy" http://people.howstuffworks.com/nuclear-bomb5.htm Muller: "... can employ the simple, reliable gun method. ... the Hiroshima bomb ... was considered so reliable that it was never tested before it was used." http://muller.lbl.gov/TRessays/09_Lowest_Tech_Atom_Bomb.htm -op \_ Repeat after me: troll. \_ That's because he's an idiot. He has however discovered that one of the best ways to troll is calling serious posters trolls. \_ The best way to troll is to arm yourself with a little bit of knowledge and act like you know something. This guy is hilarious! Physics 7B!!! I am going to bust a gut! \_ With Muller. If you took his class, you'd know what I meant. I don't see you disputing any of the evidence provided, and again, the original post was "please show me I'm wrong". -op \_ Let's start with your first sentence: "Iran today started to enrich uranium." You follow this with: "I believe they can do it by themselves today." You think they can process two tons of ore in a day? This is where the year comes from. \_ You really have a tough time with English comprehension. The, "... can do it today" part obviously refers to the build a bomb without outside help. In fact, the whole construct makes no sense otherwise. Why you would take an ambiguous phrase and interpret it in the way that makes it senselessness is beyond me. Is English your native language? -!op \_ No, its the motd. He just wants to start a fight. --also !op \_ Yep, I think this is about the time the Isreali special forces show up and blow the crap out of it. \_ Whatever. Israel, Bush, Kerry, Europe, Russia -- they all know the score, I just want sodans to know too when something goes down, whatever that may be. -op |
2004/7/19-20 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:32354 Activity:very high |
7/19 http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/3908245.stm We be invading Iran next. \_ FOUR MORE YEAH! \_ Pay no attention to the Saudi behind the curtain. \_ By definition, this is crying wolf. \_ How so? Tell us the names of the 3 "axis of evil" countries. \_ By definition, yermom is a slut. \_ Thanks for adding nothing and proving me right. |
2004/6/18 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:30896 Activity:nil |
6/18 CNN The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) resolution, submitted by three European powers -- France, Germany and Britain ... In harsh language, the resolution approved by the 35-member board of governors of the IAEA "deplores" that "Iran's cooperation has not been as full, timely and proactive as it should have been," and notes "with concern that after almost two years" since Iran's undeclared program came to light, "a number of questions remain outstanding." ... it states it is essential for Iran to deal with issues "within the next few months." The irony is that Dubya will probably get credit for this (building a coalition, Iran will probably back down, and the U.S. will avoid using force). \_ Why should Iran back down? "Ooh, please don't hit me with that strong language again!" \_ Compare and contrast: Iraq - Other nations: Iraq is contained, there is no smoking gun U.S.: Iraq has WMD and may give them to Al Qaeda Iran - Other nations: Iran looks like it wants nukes, and we will stop them. U.S. Iran looks like it wants nukes, and we will stop them. \_ It's all rhetoric so far. What happens when Iran says "Pppphhhhhpppt!"? \_ You're entitled to your analysis, but mine is still that the other countries are all on-board, Iran will probably back down, and Dubya will probably get credit. |
2004/6/2 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran] UID:30539 Activity:high |
6/2 Chalabi has got to be one of the greatest spies in modern history. Single-handedly brought down Iran's arch enemy Saddam by making use of the dumb and dumber Bush regime, another supposed enemy of Iran, gave Iran a strong foothood in Iraq, made BUSH CO waste 120 billion and counting, weakened US economy, destroyed US international reputation, damaged its alliances, tied up US military, exposed its limitations, and wasted the invaluable US breaking of the Iran communication encryption code, and he still gets to walk and speak freely, lambasting the Coalition, and asking US to "let my people go!" like a modern day Moses. Incredible! \_ What proof is there that Chalabi sold us out? Which U.S. government entity is directing the blame? \_ hahaha, see how brilliant chalabi is? the victim can't even admit being sold out because it is too embarrassing. \_ I see it's Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz that cut off his $340K/month Pentagon stipend last month. Iran is also saying that although they talk to Chalabi a lot, they never received any confidential information from him. Chalabi also said on May 23 that the CIA is out to get him on the intercept question. |
2004/2/7-8 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:12149 Activity:high |
2/6 A guy I work with who is not a US citizen wants to give money to an American political campaign. He's convinced that he can just use his credit card to donate a hundred bucks and no one will notice. Is he right? I actually like working with this guy, and would hate to see him get deported over some dumb stunt like this. \_ Judging by the responses below, he should consider the prevalence of hostile idiots in the US, decide that he doesn't give a rat's ass about our defective political machinations, and use the cash for something that will benefit mankind a bit more in the long run, like a down payment on a hot tub. Some of you people don't seem to know (or care) about the extent to which other parts of the world look on US politics with a mixture of amusement and sheer unbelieving horror. -John \_ Hey John, guess what? No one in the US cares *or should care* what other people in the world think of our politics. They should mind their own fucking business and worry about their own very often very fucked up systems. The *least* important concern for anyone here is what anyone anywhere else thinks of our system, our politicians, or anything else. Envy and jealousy are so ugly. \_ Of course we should care about how others think about our political system cause we are always trying to regime change other countries, by force or otherwise, to be like ours, and it would make our job a little easier if they like our system. \_ That'll never happen since they get a highly distorted view of our country from their government run media. You really think a foreign government is going to go out of it's way to show it's people anything good about our system? Esp. in places like the middle east? \_ what a DUMB ASS. $100 will not make a difference. Better donate that money to Redcross, and/or the Green Linux Association or Bay Area Bike Ride Fanatic Club \_ If he is an Israeli AND was not born in Iran/q, then he can do whatever he likes. If not, he might get in trouble. If he is from some other countries, he would be damned by just having the thought. \_ oooh, nice little racist troll. good one. \_ here's a helpful little tidbit you should try to keep in \_ You still haven't explained why it is racist. \_ no cookie, troll. \_ it's obviously not a troll, moron. (the request for explanation that is) \_ quite obviously it is and I'm not biting. no cookie, troll. that's the best you'll get out of this one. calling me a moron and abusing the word "obviously" doesn't make it different from the troll that it is. troll. mind next time you want to voice your opinion or call things \_ why not jsut have him give the money to you and you give the money racist: You are an idiot. You have a reading comprehension problem, and are too stupid to be runing around using loaded words like that. I am not the person who posted the replied to comment, and the comment isn't correct, but it was not \_ can't this be construed as money laundering? racist. You probably can't do anything about your stupidity but you can refrain from subjecting others to it; please try -phuqm \_ Here's a little tidbit that's about as helpful or useful as anything you've ever posted to the motd: FUCK OFF AND DIE. \_ You still haven't explained why it is racist. \_ it's obviously not a troll, moron. \_ He's right, it's a troll. Trollity troll! \_ why not just have him give the money to you and you give the money to the candidate? \_ can't this be construed as money laundering? \_ Even better, have him give you the money and tell him you donated it and pocket it for yourself. \_ Bingo! \_ Maybe he should influence politics in his own country. \_ He comes from a neutral country with the world's dullest politics. \_ That's his own fucking problem and no excuse to mess with \_ The amazing thing is that this thread was actually not intended as a troll, although it seems to have turned into the troll of the day. Oh well. -OP \_ No I don't think it was a troll since I know foreigners with the exact same intent and attitude. You have the right to do anything you'd like to international law breakers as soon as there's an international law, troll. \_ Maybe he should influence politics in his own country. to improve it through internal efforts. the politics in this country. \_ Nah, now that US is world's police man, openly defies international laws and claims the right to regime change other countries, he has every reason to try to influence politics in the US since it's easier to improve his country by cajoling US to regime change it than to try to improve it through internal efforts. \_ Everyone in the world has a reason to attempt to influence politics in the only super power. They don't have the right. \_ All national governments do (or should do) what is in the best interests of the nation as a whole. Your government has chosen to interfere in foreign nations. Other governments have chosen to interfere in our government. You are a citizen, not a national government and by interfering in a foreign government you are creating your own foreign policy which is detrimental to the rest of the nation as a whole. If you'd like to create your own foreign policy go make your own nation somewhere else first. \_ can I help a foreigner to influence politics in his country? And I'm not going to even bother with the trollish bit about international laws nonsense. \_ You haven't noticed this whole thread was a troll and you jumped right into it? And for the guy. directly to a candidate, give money to an interest group that supports his positions. yes, I have an inalienable right to dethrone the international law breaking lying through its teeth bush regime. \_ The amazing thing is that this thread was actually not intended as a troll, although it seems to have turned into the troll of the day. Oh well. -OP \_ No I don't think it was a troll since I know foreigners with the exact same intent and attitude. You have the right to do anything you'd like to international law breakers as soon as there's an international law, troll. \_ Nothing wrong with that. It's not like he donated millions for the guy. \_ This is almost the right answer. The real answer is that he *can* do it because it is such a small number no one will notice but he *shouldn't* do it and you sure as hell shouldn't be helping a foreigner influence politics in your own country. \_ can I help a foreigner to influence politics in his country? \_ Can? You *can* do many things. I don't think you should. \_ My country is doing it all the time. Why shouldn't I do it too? \_ All national governments do (or should do) what is in the best interests of the nation as a whole. Your government has chosen to interfere in foreign nations. Other governments have chosen to interfere in our government. You are a citizen, not a national government and by interfering in a foreign government you are creating your own foreign policy which is detrimental to the rest of the nation as a whole. If you'd like to create your own foreign policy go make your own nation somewhere else first. \_ are you really this stupid? \_ Perhaps the better thing for him to do is, instead of giving money directly to a candidate, give money to an interest group that supports his positions. \_ He should donate to a political party in his own country that supports his positions. As a foreigner he has no 'positions' in this country. |
2003/12/3 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:29689 Activity:nil |
12/2 "Iran is a more complex problem because the problem is not as clearly verifiable as it is in North Korea. Also, we have less - fewer levers. The key, I believe, to Iran is pressure through the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union is supplying much of the equipment that Iran, I believe, most likely is using to set itself along the path of developing nuclear weapons. We need to use that leverage with the Soviet Union and it may require us buying the equipment the Soviet Union was ultimately going to sell to Iran to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons." -- Howard Dean (as of a few days ago) \_ source? \_ Statement on Hardball with Chris Matthews on MSNBC. \_ Picked up by http://RushLimbaugh.com \_ Better quote: "Dean's ignorance of how people get their news - and hostility towards letting them choose it - is truly frightening, as is his quip that he'd break up Fox News Channel "on ideological grounds." Imagine the outrage if Bush made a similar statement about CNN!" --Rush Limbaugh \_ I can't tell: is this better because you agree with it? \_ Dean did say he would break up Fox on ideological grounds which makes him sound scary, rather than stupid, like the first quote. However, I think it was meant to be a joke in context of the show. I didn't find it particularly funny myself. \_ obviously it's not scary if it's a "quip". How about this comment: "If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier...just as long as I'm the dictator..." -- GW Bush, 2000 \_ Benevolent dictatorship, ho! \_ What Soviet Union? \_ Exactly. This whole thread seems to miss the original point, which is that Dean's a moron. |
2003/9/15 [Politics/Domestic/President/Clinton, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:29539 Activity:high |
9/14 The tread regard to Iran has been censored again. Haha, I think I know why that particular thread is being targeted. It exposes the failure of current administration's foreign policy. And the Motd Censor think by deleting it, people wouldn't know about it. \_ LOL why censor why you Carter and Clinton to fall back on. \_ LOL why censor when one has Carter and Clinton to fall back on. |
2003/8/5 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:29238 Activity:insanely high |
8/4 Why can't U.S. allow assassination of say, Sadam or Bin Laden? Why is bombing (which is messier) preferred over assassination? Wouldn't both effect to take out or weaken leadership, hence both are equivalent? \_ AFAIR, there was a long standing executive order that assassination is not to be used as a policy. I believe Georgie Jr. nullified that order. \_ Gerald Ford signed the executive order in the 70s and it has never been revoked. \_ you really think we haven't sent out special forces teams to try and hunt down and kill him? \_ I believe we used laser-guided bomb / cruise missle to do the same thing, caused some collateral damage. But when other people do it, it's called act of terrorism \_ who let the tamil tiger hippie have a soda account? \_ yeah, they really wanted to kill just that one guy who jumped off the Twin Towers but accidently killed everyone else. Take your hate America B.S. somewhere like Cuba or Iran or Germany \_ Or France and Belgium. I honestly wonder sometimes if the various EU countries lost too many real men during WWI/II and literally just don't have the right stuff in their genes now. \_ is this your explanation for russia, china, new zealand, canada and most of the rest of the world as well? \_ Yes. And California, New York and all those wussies in Hawaii, too. \_ No, that's just a case of trash flocking to trash. \_ China? Pacifists? Are you nuts? The Russians aren't either, they just can't afford an army. \_ Who says we can't allow the assassination of anyone? That isn't a law, it isn't in the constitution, Congress never voted on it, the Senate never affirmed it. That was just Jimmy Carter telling the \_ Bzzt. Read a book. world, "we're nice! don't attack us!" shortly before the whole Iran hostages embassy fiasco. Being nice always worked well in world politic. We can, we do and we should. What's the question? \_ You're an asshole. \_ Yes, I am, but that has nothing to do with what I said above about the US/Carter assassination policy. It is all 100% factually correct. Maybe next time you'll show up with some counter-facts instead of your little dirty-boy's mouth. \_ 100% except for the Carter part. Oh, and the Iran hostage part. \_ You scare me. I hope someday you read a book. \_ You still haven't corrected anything with facts, just useless personal attack. It's too bad facts scare you. \_ It's too bad you haven't gotten laid lately. Or ever. \_ only by yermom \_ Keep trying. I'm an asshole, I get laid, and I'm still right and you're not. \_ Hey asshole. \_ I don't usually waste my time with morons, but since you keep spouting the same lies, I am going to smack you down: http://news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/terrorism/execorder12333.html#2.11 Guess who was President in Dec 1981? Not Carter, dumbass. \_ now start your stopwatch and wait for the thread to get nuked... \_ Carter freed the hostages, but due to "unusual circumstances" their flight to Germany was delayed so that it would land a few hours into Reagan's presidency, so he could steal all of the credit for their release. \_ No unusual circumstances. The Iranians did it on purpose as a final slap against Carter. Of course they did get all of those swell spare parts, a cake, and a signed bible from Reagan later on... \_ Because assassinations work both ways. At a certain point in "civilized warfare," specific targeting of enemy officers became "uncivil." It was thought that the lack of officers would lead to chaos in the field and uncontrolled slaughter would result. This was a "do as I say, not as I do" policy and officer targeting continued for the most part although officer ransoming and prisoner exchanges were much more prevalant then. IOW, we say no assasination but we'll do it given half a chance. If they did it, we'd call them barbarians. Neat, huh? |
2003/6/3-4 [Politics/Domestic/911, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:28616 Activity:low |
6/3 DIY Cruise Missile: http://www.interestingprojects.com/cruisemissile \_ This looks like something nweaver would do. \_ obIPartiedW/Nweaver \_ nweaver has the motive (being disgruntled), the means, and the opportunity to do so. It's just a matter of time. |
2003/5/22 [Health/Disease/AIDS, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:28522 Activity:high |
5/21 Bayer sells medicine that carried high risk of transmitting AIDS in Asia and Latin America after it stop selling it in the west. 100 people in Hong Kong and Taiwan got HIV after using Bayer's medicine. http://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/22/business/22BLOO.html \_ So? Don't those other countries have their own control over drugs in the marketplace? You know there are drugs approved for use in Europe that aren't allowed here? They should protect themselves better and not rely on foreign nations to decide what drugs are good or bad for their people. \_ you have no idea what your great country is doing. USA never reluctant to throw their weight around to sell their products. if the government is not co-operating... well, the worse case is what happened to Guatemala, Iran, and Iraq - government got overthrown by US either conventional or covert forces. \_ uhhh, Bayer is german! damn nazi's experimenting again. \_ So the Great White Satan goes to these countries and says, "You must accept our poisoned drugs or we'll invade your country and install a government that will sell our broken drugs to your citizens"? Stop reading so much alt.conspiracy.esl. \_ You've read too many Gibson novels. Perhaps you should sit down, put a damp towel over your head and take a long rest. \_ Hasn't government basically dissapeard in Gibson's futuristic novels? Is the US government mentioned even once in the Sprawl series? \_ any citizens of foreign nation who is politically conscious know this. These are facts, not fictions. For most part, USA just throw its economic weight around, and because USA is the largest export market, that is usually enough. It's unfortunate for Iran and Iraq, because oil is too much to gave up. \_ Iran? You mean that we invaded Iran for their oil? WTF are you babbling about? You're beneath idiocy. \_ You know that the US overthrew a democratically elected leader in Iran and had the Shah installed in his place in 1953, right? \_ Could you join us in the current century please? And as always, it's not nearly as grade school simple as you'd like to portray history. \_ Good troll. Lots of bites. \_ You are moron. -aaron \_ "You are [a] moron. -aaron" [corrected] \_ You are fool" -!aaron \_ I am not aaron - eric |
2003/2/16 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:27435 Activity:nil |
2/16 Carter Sold Out Iran 1977-1978 http://66.34.243.131/iran/html/article774.html "Ramsey Clark...played a behind the scenes role influencing members of Congress to not get involved in the crisis." |
2003/1/21 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:27166 Activity:high |
1/20 What are the realistic chances of US mobilizing 100,000 strong force on the border of Iraq, and move them back to the States without a fight? In this regard, wouldn't you think this entire UN weapon inspection thingy is pointless since we are going to fight anyway? \_ when the U.S. goes in, the administration thinks there will be international pouting but that's it \_ Were I any foreign country with nukes, I'd proliferate them like crazy to dilute the power of the US. Who knows who Bush will brand evil next? \_ Exactly which countries would those be? North Korea, Iran, and Iraq maybe? Who else is not aligned with the West and nuclear? And what would be the biggest deterent for a nation interested in developing nuclear weapons and their delivery systems? Rendering such a weapon useless with ABM technology. And so you honestly believe Iran, Iraq and NK are not evil countries? \_ Mind you, USA created North Korea at at first place (in exchange, Soviet declared war against Japan for something like 3 days before Japanese surrandered). We don't like Iran cuz they overthrow Sha we installed back in the 50's. and Both Iran and Iraq's oil are nationalized, not controlled by handful of monarchs thus much harder to extract and manipulate profit from it. And I sincerely believe the last reason is why we don't like Iraq and Iran (oppose to other Monarchs whose human right records are not exactly spotless). \_ In fact we did partition Korea, and look at the result. South Korea is the 13th largest economy in the world. It was led by Rhee, a dictator, for all but 14 years of its existence. This was the paradigm for U.S. client states during the Cold War. South Korea's success attests to this. Reza Shah's hold on power existed for more than 30 years up until WWII when he entreated the Axis. Iran was invaded by the Allies, and his son came to power after a coup of the Soviet's candidate. M. Shah was overthrown when Nobel Mosaddeq. M. Shah was overthrown after Nobel Laureate Carter withdrew U.S. support. This precipated militant Islam's first success, the legacy of which we fight today. Had the Shah maintained power, Iran could arguably be much like S. Korea. Furthermore, the eight year Iran-Iraq war would likely not have happened. Reza Shah's hold on power existed for more than 30 years up until WWII when he entreated the Axis. Iran was invaded by the Allies, and his son came to power after a coup of the Soviet's candidate. Iraq and Iran are rogue states whose acts threaten international stability. \_ Can't believe you actually believe our imperialistic intervention is for the better of the natives. Go back to 19th century and enjoy your White Man's Burden. Iran has a very lively democracy today. This can not be achieved with our claws muddling their national affairs for the purpose of oil. North Korea's government evolved from the underground resistance during the Japanese Occupation. If anything, they are more legit then the puppet we set up in the South. \_ Kim Il Sung was educated in Moscow and a hand picked protege of Stalin. A very 'lively' democracy indeed. |
2002/9/9 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others] UID:25821 Activity:high |
9/9 On why being 7 years old in Iran can be fatal: http://csua.org/u/237 \_ that has nothing to do with being 7. \_ it has to do with being 7 in Iran. If she was 30 her dad would not have gotten an axe out. \_ Did this happen in Tehran or the arab equivalent of a hodunk town? \_ there is nothing specific about Iran. Fucked up shit like that happens all over the place. Isn't it also humiliating that they even checked whether she was still a virgin? \_ seems somewhat appropriate given the situation. maybe that's a a standard autopsy thing. \_ all over the place? uh, no. \_ "Rape often goes unreported in Iran where the conservative society sees it as bringing shame on the victim and family." Clearly, it's the victim's fault for being raped. How shameful. \_ http://www.jang-group.com/thenews/jul2002-weekly/you-16-07-2002/#2 and if anyone has a more reliable news source for this i'd appreciate it. \_ Dude this is so main stream even CNN has it. I think Time might have done it already too. have done it already too. IIRC, they sentenced the 4 rapists to death or some such thing and a bunch of others got jail time. They're appealing but currently in prison. |
1998/6/22 [Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Others, Politics/Foreign/MiddleEast/Iran, Recreation/Sports] UID:14231 Activity:nil |
6/21 How the hell is soccer supposed to make it in the US when they can't even beat Iran? \_ US team whined too much. What is it with "We would have won 9 times out of 10" and all that stuff? If they lost, they should swallow the defeat, go home, practice hard, and come back 4 years later. Enough with that sore looser crap. No wonder the world doesnt repect US soccer. \_ IRAN RULES, BABY!! --azarm |
12/25 |