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Technology has always found its greatest consumer in a
nation's war and defense efforts. Since the last attempts at a
"Star Wars" defense system, has technology changed
considerably enough to make the latest Missile Defense
initiatives more successful? Can such an application of
science be successful? Is a militarized space inevitable,
necessary or impossible?
Read Debates, a new
Web-only feature culled from Readers' Opinions, published
every Thursday.
(3322 previous messages)
rshow55
- 08:08pm Jul 28, 2002 EST (#3323
of 3328)
In addition to the "crazy Showalter
hypothesis" I think people ought to consider the
"Ishmael hypothesis."
MD2476 rshow55
6/6/02 9:32pm .... http://talk.guardian.co.uk/WebX?14@@.ee7a163/289
and http://talk.guardian.co.uk/WebX?14@@.ee7a163/294
:
" "The story I like best about me, in this
regard, is that I'm just a guy who got interested in logic,
and military issues. A guy who got concerned about nuclear
danger, and related military balances, and tried to do
something about it. Based on what he knew - with no access
to special information of any kind, he made an effort to
keep the world from blowing up, using the best literary
devices he could fashion, consistent with what he knew or
could guess. "
Maybe that's a "story" worth telling, now that the
government has screwed up so much, so many ways, and people
have stolen so much so that nothing can be checked.
To find out whether or not it is a "story" or not, things
would have to be checked. In the United States of America,
when security issues are even tangentially involved, can
anything be checked? What does this say about the
limits on what "insiders" can steal?
Of course, I don't have the credentials the NYT most values
- and rightly values.
Even so, if I were the NYT, I'd look closely on the origins
of Texas oil fortunes -- and the details of how the far right
wing of the republican party came to be so very well
funded.
I say that sincerely . In Virginia, Young
Conservatives Learn How to Develop and Use Their Political
Voices by BLAINE HARDEN http://www.nytimes.com/2001/06/11/politics/11CONS.html
wrcooper
- 09:27pm Jul 28, 2002 EST (#3324
of 3328)
Whatever. God speed.
lchic
- 09:36pm Jul 28, 2002 EST (#3325
of 3328)
http://www.dictionary.com/search?q=godspeed
mazza9
- 09:39pm Jul 28, 2002 EST (#3326
of 3328) "Quae cum ita sunt" Caesar's Gallic
Commentaries
do do do do,(pause)do do do do,(pause)
Robert, the sign post up ahead...Well you've entered the
Twilight Zone!
Luigi Salvatore Mazza
rshow55
- 09:52pm Jul 28, 2002 EST (#3327
of 3328)
Interesting. 22 posting just got deleted. I'll have to go
back and check what they were.
I was about to post this:
U.S. Exploring Baghdad Strike as Iraq Option By
DAVID E. SANGER and THOM SHANKER http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/29/international/29IRAQ.html
"We are looking at the three or four options
in between."
As a person who once gave a good deal of thought to
interdiction - - it seems to me that the US might consider 4-9
options "in between" -- with sub-options -- all
CLEARLY disclosed to the Iraqis.
Repeat: Clearly disclosed.
If the US military can't come up with 20-50 fully workable
plans, in short order -- they should work (for the 2-3 weeks
it ought to take) until they can do so. Then, they should
choose option sets according to a simple rule.
The military should look at options where defense
against any particular option precludes an effective defense
against any other, from the Iraqi point of view. And where
switching from option to option is quick and easy for American
forces. Details of execution should be quickly, cleanly
programmed for whatever defense option the Iraqis happen to
deploy.
In military history, the cleanest, neatest fights are not
routs. They occur when one force commits to a coordinated
effort, and can be "taken down in order."
If the Iraqi military were confronted with a situation
where they were sure that they were going to be
defeated - -- beyond reasonable question -- down in order -
the objectives of the war might be accomplished cleanly, with
absolutely minimum casualties (and minimum mess) on either
side.
Professional soldiers are brave, but not suicidal.
Our objective is not carnage, but regime change.
A negotiated change of Iraqi behavior, that
eliminated the threats that worry us, would be ideal. For all
concerned.
If the military forces of Iraq were sure that they
could not survive an attack -- defending only the desire of
Saddam to threaten mass murder -- and were also sure
that they could defend anything they could reasonably value
about their country if they negotiated -- fights might be
avoided.
(Note: IMHO, if the Bush administration had called me on
the telephone, as I asked them to do before Bin Laden slipped
through their fingers -- things would have been considerably
cleaner. I've had some very expensive training, and it seems a
waste that I'm having to work under current, cramped
circumstances. )
The United States ought to want to neutralilze
intolerable threats from Iraq (one way or another.) But it
ought to want to do that on a basis that has a
decent and stable end game.
Because it was one of the main concerns Casey had, I've
given a lot of thought to that.
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