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![]() "Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Kevin Brooks" wrote in message ... "Tuollaf43" wrote in message om... "Keith Willshaw" wrote in message ... "robert arndt" wrote in message m... The US postwar history: Facts arent your strong point are they ? Korea: stalemate South Korea was saved from the invading forces of the DPRK and now a prosperous democracy and ally. Meanwhile the DPRK moulders in a prison of its own making. Cuban Missile Crisis: stalemate Nope, the Soviet missiles were withdrawn as the US demanded. And the Jupiters from Turkey as Russia demanded, along with assurances that US would not invade Cuba. Stalemate. Older missiles already planned for removal--we had a new program coming online about that time which you may have heard of...Polaris? We also removed the Thors from the UK at about the same time, and for the same reasons--they were liquid fueled and had been made superfluous. Are you disputing the fact that missiles in turkey were removed on the insistence of the soviets? Then you are utterly wrong. If you read the account by Andrei Gromyko you will find that the Kennedy administration did indeed agree to eventually remove the Jupiters from Turkey, as a sop to Khrushchev. Interestingly, that subject is not even mentioned in notes from participants in the closed door Kremlin meetings regarding how to wiggle out of the dilemma the Soviets found themselves in: millercenter.virginia.edu/resources/ print/kremlin/kremlin_two_views.pdf On the other hand, notes from high level US meetings at the same time indicate: "The President recalled that over a year ago we wanted to get the Jupiter missiles out of Turkey because they had become obsolete and of little military value. If the missiles in Cuba added 50% to Soviet nuclear capability, then to trade these missiles for those in Turkey would be of great military value." www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/diplomacy/ forrel/cuba/cuba090.htm So we gave away missiles we had already been planning on removing--big deal. More interesting is the fact that the Kennedys wanted to keep the Jupiter removal portion of the deal secret (which is about par for the Kennedy clan). The fact that the removed system was obsolete and due for removal anyway is immaterial. All you can claim is that the soviets could have bartered de-nuclearization of Cuba for some more useful concession - not that there was no concession. Is it a "concession" when it agrees with your own internal desires and plans? I think not. I'd call that more in the line of a bargain (and be aware that my views on this have changed over the past year or two, after this subject was previously discussed and I had reason to peruse Gromyko's book, followed by a bit of reading on where the Jupiter program was going at the time). I am not a big Kennedy fan, to put it mildly--but in this case he gave up what we already wanted to rid ourselves of and in the process swecured what we *wanted*, namely the removal of those SS-4's from Cuba. snip Afghanistan: attack on another unworthy adversary. Taliban and Osama escape into Pakistan. International force needed again. Failure. Success , Afghanistan is no longer a safe haven for terrorist groups Terrorists out, drug lords in. And I suppose all those reports of Taliban resurgence in the Pashtun areas are all propaganda. Uhmmm... the key at this point is,as Keith pointed out, it is no longer serving as an open bazaar and training ground for terrorists-- If Taliban comes, can Osama be far behind? "If 'ifs and buts' were candy and nuts..." It appears that the majority of Afghanis are quite happy to be rid of the Taliban leadership; deposing them from power was a *good* thing. AQ is not able to use Afghanistan as a free-movement area and training base--that too is a good thing. and that a few other nations took note and became a bit less receptive of other terrorist operations. This is undoubtedly true. And certainly a good achievement. Considering the fact that the opposing cost, in terms of casualties and even reconstruction aid/support to Afghanistan, has not been very high, OEF has been a significant success. snip Germany had a larger population than any 10 states combined LOL! Tell us more. Uhmmm...the total population of Germany in 1940 was some 80 million, the US population was about 130 million, with the top four states (NY, PA, TX, CA) only accounting for some 34 million--so you can run the numbers further if you like, but it appears Keith's statement is in fact correct. www.ciaonet.org/book/schweller/appendix.html and controlled the combined industries of western europe and couldnt even beat Britain. Before the War Germany was a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Today it still is a major (but not predominant) power in Europe. Thank goodness for the Marshall Plan, huh? Before the war Britain was a major world power with a globe spanning empire - today it is a mere lackey to the US. That's not correct. The UK remains an independent nation; There are degrees of independence. And I never said UK is not independence, merely a US lackey. Uhmm..in most peoples minds, the two terms are sort of opposites. The UK remains capable of determining its own course. In fact, Blair has reportedly had some success in steering our own policy in a slightly different direction at times over the past few years. Most USians still have a great deal of respect for the UK, and while it cannot any longer muster the level of economic or military power that the US can wield, it is considered to be a partner as opposed to a "lackey". Common language (for the most part) and a lot of common history makes for a pretty strong relationship between the two nations. that it has happened to agree with the US in more cases than it disagrees is as much a product of common values than anything else. ummm. I dare say you could be right. Both seem to value oil over life, No. That would be your rather infantile characterization. We *do* value stability in a region that controls such a significant portion of a commodity vital to most of the rest of the world. You act as if this is some sort of colonial conquest--but in fact we are trying to disengage from Iraq just as quickly as we can, and let the Iraqi people get back to running their own government and affairs. That would be another one of those "good things", when compared to what they have had to endure over the past thirty years or so. propaganda over facts. It would appear that you are the one valuing propaganda over facts, since you have bought into the "US wants the Iraqi oil" whacky conspiracy theory. You seem to accept the propaganda put out by the former Iraqi regime without question. Reading anything further into it merely indicates a degree of paranoia on your part. Perhaps reading anything less indicateds a degree of myopia on your part? No. And why in the world would anyone be afraid of the UK? I doubt the UK's goal is to be feared. But I can't think of any nation, other than the US, that could contemplate going toe-to-toe with the UK in a military confrontation without coming out of it hurting a hell of a lot worse than when it went into it, and most would outright lose. Fear of US is understandable - its rich, powerful Yep, we are. snip inane whining But why would US+UK be particularly more frightful. It is like arguing that you are afraid of the gorilla because a chipmunk is backing it up. That "chipmunk" has some of the best light infantry troops in the world. It has an extremely professional and capable (despite its diminished size) naval force. The RAF is likewise very professional, on a par with the USAF. During OEF the RAF offered some capabilities that were rather handy to our CENTCOM folks--additional ISR assets, including the venerable Canberra PR9 and IIRC their SIGINT Nimrods, and a very valuableaerial refueling contribution that was especially of value to our USN assets. Their SOF are truly world class. That is one mean little chipmunk you have there. Germany might not have won, No, there is no doubt--she did not win. Thank goodness for that, huh? You feel very grateful, perhaps with cause. I dont have any particular reason to feel happy or unhappy about the German loss. Really? Very few folks in this world can claim to be ambivalent about the spectre of Nazism being triumphant in that war; those that do have a serious morality flaw. To me it is a story of distant land in a distant time. Personally it is as emotionally immediate to me as Napoleans loss in Russia or Roman razing of Carthage; I dont grit my teeth at massacres of the assyrians, the golden horde, nazis or the bomber command. It is just sad but engrossing history to me. My, it must be nice (or should i just say naive?) to be able to ignore the gas chambers, the ovens, the Einzatsgruppen, etc., or to consider that the defeat of the regime that championed those developments during our parents lifetime (for many of us) was "no big deal", so to speak. I have seen sufficient bad stuff in my own life time - I dont need to weep for generations long past. Learning from them is enough. Despite the untold tragedy and suffering the second world war wrought, there is atleast one shining bright point about that whole tragic affair. Thanks in large measure to Hitler and Roosevelt, the British Empire is now history. One has to wonder what your nationality and background is to have all of this pent-up hostility towards the British that you demonstrate. Odd that you are so forgiving, or uncaring, regarding the cause of Nazism, yet so willing to cling to your own archaic hatred of the "British Empire". snip but Britain sure seems to have lost. Lost what? Are you sure you are not confusing the UK with *France*? I am talking about the fortunes of nations on a larger scale, not battles and wars. Think big (if at all possible). France was crushed in the first world war. It is yet to recover from that beating. UK was smashed in the second world war, not as badly as france, but smashed non the less. Odd, in that they were on the winning side. The disintegration of their former "empire", in the real sense of the word, was well underway before the war. And I note that the Brits did not put a great deal of effort into retaining control of its old colonial holdings. Time marches on and the world changes; the UK accepted that and has maintained a rather important place in the greater scheme of world order. That would be another "good thing", by the way, especially when you consider the alternative had they not been on the winning side during WWII. Now France *did* lose, just like Germany eventually lost... Indeed Germany lost. But it seemed to have bounced back pretty much to the same stature it had before the war. Cant say the same for France or UK can you? In the case of the UK, yes I can. Brooks sorry if that all upsets you, but them's the facts. So nice of you to be concerned about my happiness Grofaz. Thanks. Brooks Keith |
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