Originally posted by bobspud
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Previously on "To all of you still dumb enough to call yourself a Labour supporter..."
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Originally posted by bobspud View PostHad the west invaded Siria then? I thought we had stayed out of that and just sent non violent aid for once...
On this day in 1941, British and Free French forces enter Syria and Lebanon in Operation Exporter.
In May, the pro-Axis Rashid Ali rose to power in Iraq and refused to allow British maneuvers within his country in accordance with the Anglo-Iraqi Treaty of 1930. Britain quickly restored the status quo ante by driving Ali and his followers out of Iraq. And to ensure that German military supplies shipped to Ali via Syria did not result in Axis control of that country and neighboring Lebanon, Britain decided to take preventive action. With Australian and Indian support, as well as that of Free French forces, Britain invaded both Syria and Lebanon, fighting Vichy French garrisons loyal to Germany. Resistance lasted five weeks before an armistice was finally signed on July 14, giving the Allies control of both Syria and Lebanon. Among those wounded in the fighting was the 26-year-old leader of Palestinian volunteer forces, Moshe Dayan, the future hero in the fight for an independent Jewish state. He lost an eye.
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostAnd it just so happened these things increased dramatically after western interventions, and the places who get targeted are totally at random?
Just as an aside I had a passing acquaintance that went on to sell some interesting stuff in Libya and Syria and all that crap was kicked off by middle eastern funding so for once this was not a western thing...
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And it just so happened these things increased dramatically after western interventions, and the places who get targeted are totally at random?
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostDo you think we'd still have all these attacks if we weren't constantly stirring up the hornets' nest?
It's an ideological fight for them. They needed an excuse to hate something or someone. ISIS could start a fight in an empty room
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostTheir current views may be incompatible with compromise and negotiation. That doesn't mean their views can't/won't change and this is where progress might be made. If they wanted peace, they would I'm sure be able to find a way of re-interpreting their views that says war is not essential without in any way saying that past actions and views were in anyway incorrect..
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Originally posted by d000hg View Post
Do you think we'd still have all these attacks if we weren't constantly stirring up the hornets' nest? It seems they want to war with those who intervene, not launch attacks on nations at random.
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostNo. You don't. The Islamic state is intended to be a Caliphate. According to their own rules they must:
a) Always be engaging in armed conflict somewhere
b) Continually be enlarging their territory.
It is the second that gives legitimacy to their cause in the eyes of many Islamic fundamentalists. It is simple logic that if you beat the crap out of them and take their land, they will lose their legitimacy among the extremists, and lose their support.
Negotiating with the IRA was negotiating with people who were after a particular end, and in the end offering them a way of achieving it peacefully.
ISIS is not trying to win freedom for their people. They're not trying to establish a state based on their own values (no matter how abhorent to us). Their goal is war. That's what they want. There is nothing to negotiate. We have to give them defeat.
Originally posted by bobspud View PostWW1/2 is not the same as ISI.S It was fought by recognised _Nation states_ over their view of world order.
Do you think we'd still have all these attacks if we weren't constantly stirring up the hornets' nest? It seems they want to war with those who intervene, not launch attacks on nations at random.
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Originally posted by d000hg View PostNope. That's exactly the environment in which underground movements START. Especially when people view their cause as being worth dying for, the threat of likely death is not an ultimate deterrent.
Even in larger conflicts you're not correct... WW1 did not end in peace and neither did WW2. Neither did quashing Iraq.
WW1/2 is not the same as ISI.S It was fought by recognised _Nation states_ over their view of world order.
Further more: It wasn't sitting down with the IRA that solved that problem. It was some other maniac flying two planes into a pair of buildings on US soil and showing the Americans what the word terrorism actually means.
The funding and support from our best friends in the US dried up over night. It also helped when the Americans started talking up a massive pissing match for hurting their people and stating that supporting terrorism and funding it would no longer be acceptable.
Funny, as up to the point that 9/11 stuck, it hadn't been a problem for the US plastic paddies so fund and help arm the IRA for the previous 3 decades.
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostHe won't be happy having his name used as part of an insult. He's foreign so a bit touchy at the best of times.
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostOnly if you have the intellect of a concussed bee.
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Originally posted by Dactylion View PostThreatening vs Advocating/Supporting
Ironing perchance?
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