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25 new of 122 responses total.
janc
response 30 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 02:48 UTC 2003

I have to disagree with Rane.  This isn't assassination.  In the first
place, I don't believe killing Saddam or his sons is the goal.  I
haven't been following this closely, but I think they'd prefer to take
him alive.

Second, they are legitimate military targets in what is obviously a war.
No, it hasn't been properly declared, but that's not especially Bush's
fault.  Our wimpy congressional noodles (of both parties) have entirely
abandoned the congressional responsibility to declare war.  They haven't
done in in ages.  The notion that this is not a war is a stupid
political fiction.  For all moral purposes this is a war.

I don't like the ransoms much, but I don't consider them illegal or
immoral in the current context.  I think they bad tactically.  It may
play well in the US, but I'd guess that it will spin badly in Iraq.  In
the minds of Iraqis, who are the Iraq citizens who cooperate with the
Americans:

  (1)  Iraqi patriots working for a better future for all of Iraqi, or

  (2)  Greedy traitors, helping America against their own people for
       personal gain.

It's vital to the success of the American mission in Iraq that the Iraqi
people eventually except option (1).  The more people believe that, the
safer our troops in Iraq will be.  Our enemies in Iraq will be pushing
view (2).  The more people believe that, the more Iraqis will oppose us
or refuse to help us, and the more Americans will die.  These extremely
public and extremely large bribes draw a lot of attention.  The people
who get these ransoms will be among the most prominent Iraqis "friendly"
to the US, among the first to come to mind when ordinary Iraqi people
think of people friendly to America.  And they fit resoundingly into
category (2).  The whole thing can be spun very strongly against
America's mission in Iraq.  Our claim is that we are there for the good
of the people to depose the hated tyrant Saddam.  Offering huge bribes
to the people to try to convince them to help us catch Sadam undermines
that claim.  If the people really hate Saddam and love us, then they
shouldn't need such buge bribes to cooperate with us.  Offering so huge
a bribe suggests that it would take such a huge bribe to convince
someone to turn Saddam in to us.

So my reading of this is that the bribes improve Bush's image in the US
as a tough leader who will stop at nothing to bring down the bad guy,
but undermine our stated mission in Iraq.  Which doesn't much surprise
me because I think Bush has told mostly lies about why we are in Iraq. I
much prefered presidents who mostly just lied about their sex lives.

I don't think these ransoms will ultimately cost more American lives. 
They would if we meant to stay there in the long run, but I think Bush
will pack up and leave as soon as he can plausibly declare victory. 
Killing or catching Saddam might well be that point, and the bribes
could speed that up.  Getting our troops out faster may save more lives
than cranking up the hatred for our troops costs.  Plus getting out
troops out before the election would be good for Bush.
pvn
response 31 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 04:34 UTC 2003

It is apparently likely that one or both of the brothers committed
actual suicide rather than "suicide by cop" as it were.  Either way, no
deliberate assassination attempt per se.  In any event you don't conduct
a 6-hour firefight to assassinate someone, you drop 4 2Klb smart bombs
on the room they are in.  The brothers chose to fight, they chose to
die.
rcurl
response 32 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 05:41 UTC 2003

We don't have the full story yet, but it would have been perfectly practical
to surround the building and wait them out (cutting power and water). If
they commit suicide, then that's that. But there was no need for another
Waco style seige. I consider it an assassination because killing them was
a higher priority than capturing them. 
jep
response 33 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 13:07 UTC 2003

resp:30 was a lot more analytical.  Thanks, Jan!

I don't entirely agree, but I agree with some of it at least.

I don't think the reward money is necessarily an indication to anyone 
of a level of support for America or for Saddam Hussein.  I think it 
was a recognition of risk.  The person who accepts that reward money is 
sure enough going to be a target.  He probably ought to leave the 
country for his own safety.

How much would it cost for you to leave your country?  It'd take more 
than $30 million for me, at least, it probably would.  The person who 
collects, if he is a relative of Saddam Hussein's, probably has a lot 
more money than I do.  Who knows, maybe he'll have to split it with 30 
members of his family.  Maybe they'll all have to leave Iraq.  If they 
don't, maybe they'll all be killed.  Maybe they'll be followed, 
wherever they go.  How much money would it take for you to risk all 
that?  Would you put your family in the situation of that kind of risk 
and turmoil just because you thought it was the right thing to do for 
your country?

I just don't think $30 million is all that much for someone to get, 
considering what Saddam Hussein and his followers were/are like.  I 
don't think it's much at all for America to spend.  I think it's worth 
a lot to have a couple of top Hussein heirs out of the political 
picture in Iraq.

As far as spin... sure, it's America buying someone's soul.  (Geez, 
turning in a family member?)  Or else it's not being cheap, and giving 
someone the means to be able to survive turning in the very top aides 
of a dangerous dictator.  I think Iraqis might see it either way, or 
both ways at once.  I think if it works, things settle down a lot, a 
new government is established, electricity and phone service and the 
economy are stabilized, and America doesn't occupy Iraq for decades, 
the spin will work out to be pretty good.
klg
response 34 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 16:31 UTC 2003

We checked the dictionary.  It appears that Mr. rcurl did not and is 
once again using words to suit his own extreme viewpoints.

as sas si nate : transitive verb  1 : to injure or destroy unexpectedly 
and treacherously
2 : to murder by sudden or secret attack usually for impersonal reasons

1.  Do you believe the the Messrs. Saddams did not expect to be 
attacked??

2.  The news reported that prior to the extended firefight, U.S. troops 
went to the door of the residence and requested permission to search.  
If the request had been approved it would have facilitated the non-
violent apprehension of the two gentlemen.


And Mr. janc appears to have had a lapse of his normally well-state 
positions.  As the constitution reads, it clearly does not provide 
Congress with the sole authority to go to war:

Section. 8. 
Clause 1: The Congress shall have Power To   
Clause 11: To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and 
make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water; .


re:  "#32 (rcurl):  We don't have the full story yet, but it would have 
been perfectly practical to surround the building and wait them out..."

How does Mr. rcurl know the practicality of such a strategy??  What 
possiblities exist for surruptitious escapes under the cover of 
darkness or through underground tunnels?
gull
response 35 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 19:59 UTC 2003

Re #33: Personally, I'd leave the U.S. for a lot less than $33 million.
 But that's just me.
slynne
response 36 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 21:15 UTC 2003

Well. I would only consider it if I could go live in France. ;)
tod
response 37 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 22:11 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

scg
response 38 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 22:33 UTC 2003

I've paid money (to airlines) in order to leave the US in the past, but I've
also paid the airlines to bring me back here.  There's are big differences
between leaving home on a trip, leaving a previous home to move elsewhere
knowing that you can come back and visit, and leaving knowing you can never
see those you are close to again.

Of course, 150 years ago that last scenario was pretty common, since that was
what moving any significant distance meant.  I have plenty of ancestors who
did so, as probably do most of us.  That doesn't make it any easier for me
to imagine now.
tod
response 39 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 24 22:53 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

pvn
response 40 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 04:16 UTC 2003

re#32:  Perhaps police officers have the training and the patience to
wait out someone who shoots at them.  Troopers on the otherhand are
trained to kill someone who shoots at them.
rcurl
response 41 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 06:24 UTC 2003

There seems to be considerable objection to the killing of the brothers
rather than their capture among Iraqi citizens. Many would have liked to
have seen them captured and tried, largely to attain what people call
"closure"  for all those who suffered at their hands. That is, they wanted
a full airing of their cruelty to their faces. It is apparent that Iraqi
citizens were not consulted on the course of action to take in this. 
Typically, Bush's legions rush headlong and headstrong into use of force
above thought. 

jep
response 42 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 12:49 UTC 2003

Maybe there should have been a nationwide referendum in Iraq.  "Should 
the Hussein brothers be shot and killed, or should US forces attempt to 
contain them and eventually arrest them?"  That way, a popular decision 
could have been assured.
gull
response 43 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 12:49 UTC 2003

Re #40: Unless they're Detroit police officers. ;>
klg
response 44 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 16:21 UTC 2003

Perhaps Odai and Qusai could have benefited from human shields.  (Mr. 
rcurl, are you busy these days??)
tod
response 45 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 16:49 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

rcurl
response 46 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 16:54 UTC 2003

The "consultation" with the Iraqi public could have occurred if the brothers
had been taken alive, in the form of a trial - you know, the former American
standard of justive.

Someone above objected to their killing being called "assassination". 
Perhaps "lynching" would be better? That is closer to another American
standard of frontier justice, when the posse breaks down the jailhouse
door and enacts "justice" on their own terms. Unfortunately there seems to
be no strict but honest Marshalls in our army. 

klg
response 47 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 17:02 UTC 2003

(Has Mr. rcurl been paying attention?)
novomit
response 48 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 17:06 UTC 2003

Ah, yes, but could either of these two gentlemen have gotten a fair trial in
Iraq? 
tod
response 49 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 17:11 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

rcurl
response 50 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 17:30 UTC 2003

If by the "LAST time" you mean the Bush I war - Iraq had invaded Kuwait,
and we went to their defense. This time, we invaded Iraq.
tod
response 51 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 18:23 UTC 2003

This response has been erased.

rcurl
response 52 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 19:27 UTC 2003

That's pretty loopy (thanks, scg!). The Bush I war was ended with terms
agreed to by the UN and everyone else involved in the action. That was
then done and finished. Other things happened after that, but no one
invaded anyone else, or even threatened them, until the US invaded Iraq
with no legitimate provocation. 

Of course it all is in the course of history in a particular region, but
there is no justification in the outcomes of the the Bush I war to justify
instigating the Bush II war, except for the war mongering of the Bush II
administration.
carson
response 53 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 19:37 UTC 2003

(...because the Iraqi government had met all of the terms and conditions
agreed upon in 1991, right?)
janc
response 54 of 122: Mark Unseen   Jul 25 19:45 UTC 2003

To be the same war, it would kind of have to have the same armies on both
sides.  The first one was UN vs Iraq.  The second one was US vs Iraq.  It's
different.
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