- Jun 16, 2009
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The Hitch said:Was it the internet that robbed you of a moral compass or were you just born without it?
Who is that in reference to? Me?
The Hitch said:Was it the internet that robbed you of a moral compass or were you just born without it?
you might be on to something here...though i'd replace 'the best', with 'the most efficient and calculating'.Echoes said:Putin is the best political leader on this planet at this moment. A real pro.
He has no equivalent. Forza Putin !
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UMlsbB33QSc
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P0TEPO9jomE
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcnIBBFPSUU
The Hitch said:Was it the internet that robbed you of a moral compass or were you just born without it?
movingtarget said:Many Australians just want to forget about the Rudd/Gillard disaster. Labor will now ramp up their scare campaign about changes to GST, mass sackings, cuts to services, possible recession etc.... We heard about the "new" Julia and now the "New" Kevin. Rudd seems to be slipping further behind. It will also be the end of Peter Beattie and Bob Carr as well, thankfully.
darwin553 said:Agree. It's time to draw a line in the sand for what has been a terrible period of governing federally.
thrawn said:Oh and btw, Bob Carr will still be a senator. He's Labor's #1 candidate in NSW.
thrawn said:Sadly a change to the coalition won't make it any less horrible, as at present the party is full of morons.
Oh and btw, Bob Carr will still be a senator. He's Labor's #1 candidate in NSW.
(Reuters) - U.N. human rights investigators have gathered testimony from casualties of Syria's civil war and medical staff indicating that rebel forces have used the nerve agent sarin, one of the lead investigators said on Sunday.
The United Nations independent commission of inquiry on Syria has not yet seen evidence of government forces having used chemical weapons, which are banned under international law, said commission member Carla Del Ponte.
"Our investigators have been in neighboring countries interviewing victims, doctors and field hospitals and, according to their report of last week which I have seen, there are strong, concrete suspicions but not yet incontrovertible proof of the use of sarin gas, from the way the victims were treated," Del Ponte said in an interview with Swiss-Italian television.
"This was use on the part of the opposition, the rebels, not by the government authorities," she added, speaking in Italian.
Earlier, several Turkish newspapers had reported that 12 people from Syria's al Qaeda-linked al-Nusra Front who allegedly had been planning an attack inside Turkey and were in possession of 2 kg (4.5 pounds) of sarin, had been detained in Adana.
Nusra is one of the most effective forces fighting President Bashar al-Assad and last month pledged allegiance to al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri.
Experts have long said Nusra is receiving support from al Qaeda-linked militants in neighbouring Iraq.
Iraks försvarsdepartement uppgav på lördagen att en terrorcell med kopplingar till al-Qaida har avslöjats i Irak. Gruppen var sysselsatt med att tillverka giftgas som sarin och senapsgas på tre olika platser i Bagdad.
Gruppen med fem medlemmar hade byggt produktionsenheterna efter instruktioner från andra al-Qaidagrupper. Cellen förberedde attacker i Irak, i grannländer och i Västeuropa och USA genom olika nätverk, hävdade al-Askari.
Iraq's defense ministry said on Saturday that a terror cell with links to al-Qaeda have been uncovered in Iraq. The group was engaged in the manufacture of poisonous gas such as sarin and mustard gas at three different locations in Baghdad.
The group of five members had built production units following instructions from other al-Qaeda groups. The cell was preparing attacks in Iraq, neighboring countries and in Western Europe and the United States through various networks, alleged al-Askari.
 
	ToreBear said:I understand your sceptisism. I share it, but there are some things that should be noted.
Chemical weapons are not easy to use effectively. You have to have a way of delivering them effectively and in the right amount on the target. You have to have the wind in your favor. You need protective equipment for the ones doing the delivery. This takes a huge amount of organization and logistics, and a lot of man power. You cant just have ten guys placing canisters around and setting them off, since dispersal of the agents is difficult. You need munitions that disperse it correctly. And I think we are talking about 100s of liters of chemicals here.
As to your question, why would he be so stupid. Well he was told last year that using cw would be a red line. There was some use of cw last year, but in a much smaller amount and nothing happened. Why did nothing happen? Because no one wants to get involved. This is a mess that is not easily solvable with an intervention. In fact it is only likely to suck lives and resources out of the interveners. No one really wants to use their strained budgets, and risk the lives of their soldiers for an intervention that might not make things better, and might even make things worse.
Perhaps Assad and those around him thought that there is no will in the international community to do anything, and as long as they could keep the issue of who did it confused they could get away with it.
So the question is if the use in this case is worth the risk. The areas in question are to the east of the center of Damascus. The Syrian government has not been able to enter and remove the rebels from this area, and they are a constant thorn in Assads strategic position.
So you combine the belief that there will be no intervention with the need to clear these areas and you have the answer as to why this was done.
Then the question is why would western powers intervene. The answer is that chemical weapons are a taboo for good reason. They were used a 100 years ago to good effect with many casualties. After that the consensus became not to use them. This held even in the second world war. The Germans had huge stockpiles of a new generation of weapons that were even more effective, but even someone as nasty as Hitler did not use them.
The Japanese used them to some extent against the Chinese, but stopped when the US threatened to retaliate. The Japanese did not have advanced CW capability, but used them against the Chinese because they had no capability.
70 years later and the weapons developed in the 50s and 60s are even more deadly.
The thing with CW is that it can be a game changer in this conflict, since there is really only one side that can use them effectively, and the nature of the conflict as it has developed would make their use extremely effective.
This conflict has or is slowly evolving into a war of ethnically divided areas. The villages and towns held by the opposition are extremely difficult to capture for the Syrian Army. They had help from Hizbullah in retaking a town close to Lebanon, but they are not getting this help in other areas. That means there are towns the oppositions can use as fortresses to operate from.
If the Syrian government could use CW without consequences they could use them to max effect.
In this case they could use less persistent agents, and then after the agent has dissipated enter and fight it out with the survivors, or they can use persistent agents, and render areas uninhabitable for perhaps weeks.
Sarin is a quick evaporating agent(low persistence). It's a nice weapon compared to the nasty stuff that is persistent like Sulfur mustard that was used a 100 years ago, and the real nasty stuff that became available in the 50s and 60s, namely the VR and VX agents which contaminates and area for weeks.
So without anything stopping Assad he could order his forces to gas villages and towns when they become infested by the opposition. We are talking about ethnic cleansing on an unheard of scale.
Something IMHO needs to be done to convince Assad that use of these weapons is a very bad idea.
auscyclefan94 said:Putin 2.0?

Hopefully not in a policy sense, but he seems to be above Putin in a physical sense as a political leader!
Alphabet said:I was doing one of those online 'political compass' tests, and I reckon it might be interesting if some of the regs in this thread posted up their results:
http://slackhalla.org/~demise/test/...lackhalla.org/~demise/test/socialattitude.php
It's so easy to score 'leftie points' on that test. ACF will probably come back with a 300 for socialism or something
RetroActive said:You're making a large assumption that it was Assad.
Israel used white phosphorus during cast lead, confirmed, crickets chirping.
The U.S., Britain and Israel use depleted uranium continuousily, confirmed, crickets again.
thrawn said:This is mine:
'Political Values
Radicalism 91.25
Socialism 43.75
Tenderness 50
These scores indicate that you are a progressive; this is the political profile one might associate with a university professor. It appears that you are skeptical towards religion, and have a pragmatic attitude towards humanity in general.
Your attitudes towards economics appear neither committedly capitalist nor socialist, and combined with your social attitudes this creates the picture of someone who would generally be described as a political centrist.
To round out the picture you appear to be, political preference aside, a centrist with few strong opinions.'
Some pretty ridiculous questions though.
Alphabet said:Putin however is the coolest person on the planet (except maybe Ivan Basso), unlike Abbott; so I'm not sure the super fit macho man image suits Abbott as well as it does Putin.
Alphabet said:Why not? Guys like Putin are the reason thesmiley was invented
Besides, Putin is no Stalin/Ceausescu/Amin/Kim. His 'dictatorship' consists solely of his government cracking down on dissidents and on staying in power for as long as possible. He doesn't go around killing millions and actively oppressing people in every aspect of their life for fun unlike most of the relatively recent dictators.
Pretty much every government has to crack down on dissidents (although in fairness, western governments only prosecute the most aggressive/threatening of dissidents, not ordinary people who stand around complaining). Otherwise the US would be under Sharia law by now.
darwin553 said:I'm not much for the sympathetic approach to Putin.
ToreBear said:And your argument is what exactly?
Alphabet said:Why not? Guys like Putin are the reason thesmiley was invented
Besides, Putin is no Stalin/Ceausescu/Amin/Kim. His 'dictatorship' consists solely of his government cracking down on dissidents and on staying in power for as long as possible. He doesn't go around killing millions and actively oppressing people in every aspect of their life for fun unlike most of the relatively recent dictators.
Pretty much every government has to crack down on dissidents (although in fairness, western governments only prosecute the most aggressive/threatening of dissidents, not ordinary people who stand around complaining). Otherwise the US would be under Sharia law by now.
 
		
		 
		
		 
		
		
 
				
		