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#121
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Lisakbernacchia wrote:
They kicked our ass. Rasimus hasn't tthe guts to admit it. They may have kicked your ass, Lisa my dear, but Ed and I came home winners, just as we left. LBJ, MacNamara and a host of other losers just like yourelf lost that war. It is also untrue that the country has been divided ever since. Only a relatively few unrepentant fools, as they have grown older, still hold on to their sophomoric and unquestioning hatred of the flag and the people who defend it. Jack |
#122
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In message , Jarg
writes "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... You lost no wars? I was under the impression that after we left that sad, unfortunate country, the only thing we had to show for our efforts was that big, black wall in Washington and a grievously divided nation that apparently exists to this day. What was it that we supposedly won? The United States certainly did not achieve our political objectives in Vietnam. On the other hand, it is a stretch to say the US lost the war since it won all the military actions, and left several years before North Vietnam overran the south. But wasn't the whole point of the US presence to prevent the North grabbing the South? They kept fighting until the US withdrew, then moved on to achieve their goal. Sounds like a success to me, even if the end result wasn't the Socialist Worker's Paradise they'd hoped for. You're absolutely right on the military success side (though some of the victories were expensive: on the other hand, there were lessons learned and put to use) but the final objective - an independent non-communist South Vietnam - was lost. There's a supposed a quote I'd like to get a proper source for (and to know it correctly) that goes along the lines of a senior North Vietnamese being told that the US never lost a battle in Vietnam, and replying that this is quite true, but also quite irrelevant. (It's got a lot of resonance for current "effects-based" doctrine) Finally, if you have been to Vietnam recently, as I have, you would be hard pressed to say they won, or it was a Pyrrhic victory at best. Perhaps: but by that argument, wouldn't the US victory be even greater if back in the late 1940s it had told the French to get out of their ex-colony and offered generous aid and support to Ho Chi Minh? Communist or not, I'll bet he'd rather have sold rubber to Firestone and Goodyear for hard dollars than to the USSR for roubles. (Fifty years of hindsight applies, of course) Anyone saying there's an easy simple answer to this discussion hasn't studied it ![]() -- He thinks too much: such men are dangerous. Julius Caesar I:2 Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
#123
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In message , Ed Rasimus
writes "War crimes" need to be defined as violations of international accords regarding the conduct of armed conflict. We can't ascribe the term to whatever offends our particular sensibilities or suits our political needs of the moment. Certainly there are some who "might make the argument" that I "most certainly did commit either an atrocity or a war crime (that's either an interesting distinction or a redundancy) IF your bombs landed on innocent enemy (oxymoron???) civilians." As I understand it, there would be a need to prove either recklessness or intent for there to be a crime. Proving "Intent" would be difficult because the prosecution would have to show that you deliberately intended your jettisoned weapons/tanks/racks to strike the victim, knowing they held protected status. (Not necessarily that you aimed at a particular person, but that you knowingly and deliberately dumped them where they would be more likely to hurt noncombatants than if they were dumped elsewhere) Proving "recklessness" is easier in some ways because you just had to be careless about the danger: on the other hand, it requires that you be shown to owe a duty of care to the victims. I'm not a lawyer, nor an expert on military law: but from the limited study summarised above, I don't think there's a case against Mr Rasimus. For example, one example I've heard of his "jettisoning ordnance recklessly" involved him cleaning up his aircraft to avoid an attacking enemy fighter, and aiming what he dropped in the direction of an AAA site that was also engaging him. I'll be *very* interested in meeting the lawyer who can show that a pilot owes a "duty of care" to gunners trying to shoot him down! The purpose of military operations is to "kill people and break things". Doing anything less is a sure route to defeat. Too much can be bad, as can too little. Trouble is, you never get the answers: you just find out whether you got it "right enough" or not. -- He thinks too much: such men are dangerous. Julius Caesar I:2 Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
#124
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![]() "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... Ed Rasimus wrote: On Fri, 11 Jun 2004 09:59:56 -0400, "George Z. Bush" wrote: I committed no atrocities, am guilty of no war crimes, ..... If, in your entire career flying bomb-carrying combat aircraft, you ever jettisoned your bomb load for whatever reason on other than your assigned bona-fide target (let's say in a free fire zone), there are some who might make the argument that you most certainly did commit either an atrocity or a war crime if your bombs landed on innocent enemy civilians. I personally don't care to pursue that point, but you ought not be shocked to learn that some people might, and they're not necessarily unpatriotic because they feel that way. "War crimes" need to be defined as violations of international accords regarding the conduct of armed conflict. We can't ascribe the term to whatever offends our particular sensibilities or suits our political needs of the moment. Jettisoning weapons in emergencies, for personal defense, etc, is NOT a war crime. There is considerable difference between jettisoning a weapons load and targeting innocents. One is acknowledged as an unavoidable risk of a combat zone while the other is most assuredly proscribed. A "free-fire zone" is, in its entirety an area of unrestricted weapons employment with only small exceptions, such as hospitals, refugee camps, churches (religious buildings), and white flags exempt. Delivering in a free-fire zone is not a war crime. Certainly there are some who "might make the argument" that I "most certainly did commit either an atrocity or a war crime (that's either an interesting distinction or a redundancy) IF your bombs landed on innocent enemy (oxymoron???) civilians." But making the argument isn't following the definition of a war crime. Some might even accuse the military of genocide or wholesale murder, but they would be employing a despicable level of hyperbole. The purpose of military operations is to "kill people and break things". Doing anything less is a sure route to defeat. Ed, I expected you to argue all of the points I posed as a matter of self-defense, and you didn't disappoint me. The point that I was trying to make, and it does not require a response from you, was that there are people who don't see things the way you do, and they're not necessarily wrong just because they differ with you. I could argue some of the points you make, as for example your referring to "innocent enemy (oxymoron???) civilians", by asking how you would categorize the three day or week or month old Vietnamese infant blown apart by one of your jettisoned weapons in his or her own home, but I'll let others more qualified than I deal with that. Did you really retire from the military? It is hard to believe that you did, based upon the above drivel. War results in death, and sometimes the deaths are of noncombatants. As Ed has already told you, however, intent matters. Even you, with your obvious incapacity for handling reality, should be able to get a grasp of that incontrovertable fact. Brooks George Z. |
#125
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"Paul J. Adam" wrote in message
... In message , Jarg writes "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... You lost no wars? I was under the impression that after we left that sad, unfortunate country, the only thing we had to show for our efforts was that big, black wall in Washington and a grievously divided nation that apparently exists to this day. What was it that we supposedly won? The United States certainly did not achieve our political objectives in Vietnam. On the other hand, it is a stretch to say the US lost the war since it won all the military actions, and left several years before North Vietnam overran the south. But wasn't the whole point of the US presence to prevent the North grabbing the South? They kept fighting until the US withdrew, then moved on to achieve their goal. Sounds like a success to me, even if the end result wasn't the Socialist Worker's Paradise they'd hoped for. Well, you could make the arguement that the US objective changed at the end. You're absolutely right on the military success side (though some of the victories were expensive: on the other hand, there were lessons learned and put to use) but the final objective - an independent non-communist South Vietnam - was lost. There's a supposed a quote I'd like to get a proper source for (and to know it correctly) that goes along the lines of a senior North Vietnamese being told that the US never lost a battle in Vietnam, and replying that this is quite true, but also quite irrelevant. (It's got a lot of resonance for current "effects-based" doctrine) Yep, I've also seen the quote to which you are referring: You know you never defeated us on the battlefield,' said the American colonel. The North Vietnamese colonel pondered this remark a moment. 'That may be so,' he replied, 'but it is also irrelevant.'-- (On Strategy, Harry Summers, p. 21) And from the point of view of the communist Vietnamese leadership, that view was correct. They did achieve their political objectives, though practically destroying themselves and S. Vietnam in the process. Finally, if you have been to Vietnam recently, as I have, you would be hard pressed to say they won, or it was a Pyrrhic victory at best. Perhaps: but by that argument, wouldn't the US victory be even greater if back in the late 1940s it had told the French to get out of their ex-colony and offered generous aid and support to Ho Chi Minh? Communist or not, I'll bet he'd rather have sold rubber to Firestone and Goodyear for hard dollars than to the USSR for roubles. (Fifty years of hindsight applies, of course) I never said the US won in Vietnam! But if that is victory, I'm not sure it was worth winning. I'm certain Vietnam would be a far better place had the North lost. Anyone saying there's an easy simple answer to this discussion hasn't studied it ![]() Indeed. Jarg -- He thinks too much: such men are dangerous. Julius Caesar I:2 Paul J. Adam MainBoxatjrwlynch[dot]demon{dot}co(.)uk |
#126
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Georgr:
By refusing to acknowledge that there is such a thing as "objective truth," you are ceding much of what it means to be a rational human being- and for that, I pity you. You will never know the joy of rational inquiry. Much of what separates Man from the Animal Kingdom is the awareness of Truth- and the joy in its pursuit. Of course I will let you have the last word- your kind needs it so very much; you have little else. And besides, this whole thing is so far off topic I am beginning to despair of ever getting the newsgroup back. Steve Swartz "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... Yeff wrote: On Fri, 11 Jun 2004 16:00:09 -0400, George Z. Bush wrote: Ed, I expected you to argue all of the points I posed as a matter of self-defense, and you didn't disappoint me. The point that I was trying to make, and it does not require a response from you, was that there are people who don't see things the way you do, and they're not necessarily wrong just because they differ with you. But sometimes they *are* necessarily wrong. People arguing that something is a war crime when what they're arguing about doesn't meet that definition means those people are wrong. Period. You might be right and you might be wrong, and putting "Period" at the end of your comment doesn't mean that the matter's been decided. You might wish it'd be that way, but that's not the way it works. George Z. |
#127
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![]() "Paul J. Adam" wrote Perhaps: but by that argument, wouldn't the US victory be even greater if back in the late 1940s it had told the French to get out of their ex-colony and offered generous aid and support to Ho Chi Minh? Communist or not, I'll bet he'd rather have sold rubber to Firestone and Goodyear for hard dollars than to the USSR for roubles. (Fifty years of hindsight applies, of course) And 50 yrs later, people would be writing about "Another evil dictator that the Americans kept in power" Damned if you do, damned if you don't. Pete |
#128
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![]() "Paul J. Adam" wrote in message ... Perhaps: but by that argument, wouldn't the US victory be even greater if back in the late 1940s it had told the French to get out of their ex-colony Yes. and offered generous aid and support to Ho Chi Minh? No. |
#129
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![]() But wasn't the whole point of the US presence to prevent the North grabbing the South? They kept fighting until the US withdrew, then moved on to achieve their goal. Two years passed between those two events. That's a long time: an entire hitch, for a draftee. There were troops who entered the army after the last American combat unit left Vietnam in March 1973, who served out their term, and who were back in civilian life before Hue fell in March 1975. It is true, of course, that the U.S. accepted in 1975 what it wouldn't have accepted in 1965: a North Vietnamese invasion across the DMZ. There were three U.S. presidents involved in making policy on Vietnam (four if you include Eisenhower), so there is little wonder that the policy changed. Why should Nixon have felt obligated to carry out a policy formulated by the president who preceded the president who preceded him? all the best -- Dan Ford email: (put Cubdriver in subject line) The Warbird's Forum www.warbirdforum.com The Piper Cub Forum www.pipercubforum.com Viva Bush! www.vivabush.org |
#130
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If you want to allege influence, it was over the
length of the drop, not over the fact that he got one. "The official record of Bush's military service indicates that Bush did not report in person for the last two years of his service. In addition, superior officers in both Alabama and Texas say they never saw him during this period. And George Magazine offers no credible evidence to contradict this...." "Bush did accumulate the days of service required for an honorable discharge, but these appear to be no-show days that were credited to him as part of the extraordinary favoritism that characterized his service from the beginning to the end of his service." http://www.democrats.com/display.cfm?id=157 Walt |
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