JMS on Usenet
Message
Subject: Re: And So It Begins... Date: 08 Apr 2003 21:34:45 GMT From: jmsatb5@aol.com (Jms at B5) Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5.moderated >I do have a question though, is there any development that would cause you to >change your mind and support the war in Iraq? If there were clear, compelling evidence that there was an attack in the works, or if an attack had been launched against us. So far neither has been the case. And here's another thing...we're now in the last phases of the battle. The military has now searched many of the places where chemical or other WMD were supposed to be kept, finding nothing. Those weapons were, at one time, the whole reason for the attack (before it became more about regime change in the constantly changing story from the Bush administration). Neither have these alleged weapons been used. So we have here a very odd situation. If those weapons are there, then we have a scenario in which the Iraqi government, even knowing their days are numbered, have deliberately chosen not to use those weapons...which puts the allegation of their intended use into grave doubt. Or those weapons are not there...which puts the whole justification of the war in grave doubt. So which is it? Look at the war...we were told that Iraq represents a great threat, comparisons to the great German war machine pre-WW2 were made...but in fact we have rolled in with pretty fair impunity. We demolish the opposition, we receive reports of "small arms fire" being used to protect the palaces, the worst fighting being in Basra, but as one General said the other day, "We can go and come pretty much however and whenever we want." Is this the bogey-man of which we were warned so many times? Poorly armed and supplied troops using pick-up trucks against tanks? That's it? That's what we were supposed to be afraid of? No...back in March 2002, Bush was very clear that we were going in to take out Saddam, period, as noted at: http://www.time.com/time/covers/1101030331/wroad.html Iraq has so far not used chemical weapons against us, though we were told that once we entered Baghdad that would happen... but now we are ourselves preparing to use banned weapons -- http://www.guardian.co.uk/Iraq/Story/0,2763,931960,00.html -- it just seems very troubling to me. The motives behind this have shifted constantly from the beginning. (And what to make of this article -- http://the-news.net/cgi-bin/story.pl?title=US%20arms%20group%20heads%20for %20Lisbon&edition=697 -- I don't quite know, I leave this one to others to figure out. I honestly don't know where this fits in.) The thing about the truth is that it tends to be fairly straightforward. We blockaded Cuba because we didn't want Russia to send in nuclear missiles. Clear and straightforward. We didn't say we were blockading to keep Cuba from exporting terrorism, or to help the people of Cuba. We said the facts, provided the photos, end of discussion. First we were going after Iraq for vague and unproven connections to Bin Laden...then it became about exporting terrorism (even though more is exported from places like Iran and Syria)...then it became about WMD (even though they have still not surfaced)...now it's about Iraqi freedom and regime change. Our soldiers are fighting well and bravely in the execution of their orders. It's the thinking and, perhaps, the morality of those giving the orders at the top that I have reservations about. jms (jmsatb5@aol.com) (all message content (c) 2003 by synthetic worlds, ltd., permission to reprint specifically denied to SFX Magazine and don't send me story ideas)