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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
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(4900 previous messages)
commondata
- 07:38am Oct 15, 2002 EST (#
4901 of 4916)
PREVENTING BALI, WHAT
WE COULD HAVE DONE:
- A new alternative energy strategy, aimed eventually at
weaning the west off oil. No longer would the US and others
need to manipulate the Middle East just to safeguard their
petrol supply. They could let the peoples of the Arab world
choose their own governments for once.
- The US would move its troops out of Saudi Arabia,
healing one of the sores Bin-Laden most likes to inflame: the
presence of "infidels" on holy Muslim soil.
- And Washington would pick up where Clinton left off,
devoting serious political muscle to the Israeli-Palestinian
peace process. Genuine movement in that area would instantly
rob the Islamists of one of their greatest recruiting
pitches.
BUT NO. WHAT WE DID:
- Like the rulers of Orwell's 1984, our leaders have
urged us to switch our hatred overnight not from Eastasia to
Eurasia but from al-Qaida to Baghdad. Now we are to believe
Saddam is the urgent, number one priority.
MEANWHILE BACK
IN IRAQ:
In summary, sanctions continue to malnourish and kill.
Sanctions are undermining the cultural and educational
recovery of Iraq, and will not change its system of
governance. Sanctions encourage isolation, alienation
and fanaticism. Sanctions destroy the family,
undermining women's social and economic advances and
encouraging a brain-drain. Sanctions constitute a serious
breach of the United Nations charter on human rights and
children's rights. Sanctions are a counter-productive,
bankrupt concept that has led to unacceptable human
suffering.
lchic
- 10:42am Oct 15, 2002 EST (#
4902 of 4916) ~~~~ It got understood and exposed
~~~~
FISK - we are living – whether we know it or not – in a
terrifying new age
http://argument.independent.co.uk/commentators/story.jsp?story=342461
http://argument.independent.co.uk/commentators/
commondata
- 12:13pm Oct 15, 2002 EST (#
4903 of 4916)
gisterme
10/14/02 6:56pm
And the prime minister of Great Britian said "peace in
our time!"
If Iraq had complied with UN resolutions, why did they
kick the UN inspectors, including Scott Ritter, out of the
country? Do you suppose Saddam was afraid US or British
inspectors would spy out some fancy new technology from their
baby-milk factories?
Neville Chamberlain's trust in Hitler in 1938 was indeed
misplaced. I'm not sure why you draw parallels between that
and the Iraqi situation. You're in good company though, the Conservative
Monitor makes similar connections in between its rants on
abortion, public nudity and the UN.
Maybe if Madelaine Albright hadn't considered a death toll
greater that Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined and the death of
5000 children per month "a price worth paying" ...
Maybe if Scott Ritter and his colleagues had been listened
to ...
Maybe if the US hadn't considered the whole situation a
great intelligence gathering opportunity ... and wanted to
stay for good ...
... things could have been resolved in a way that was safer
for you and more humane for them. Iraq, of course, maintains
that it had complied with UN resolutions, and a lot of other
people think they did too.
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