The US needs to talk to the people they are supporting because right now the rebels are killing each other and the SAA is steamrolling them in Aleppo and Hama.
Unfortunately, it is not because the rebels are fighting each other that they are losing ground, it is because the SAA and Russia have unrestricted airspace. MANPADS really is the only thing U.S can do to aide them at the moment.
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so because Russia is "more evil", the U.S.' actions are justifiable? I'm not sure if that's really an achievement to be proud of. From your point of argument, no matter what the U.S. does it cannot be seen as intentional as it will always pale in comparison.
Not quite sure how you came to this conclusion. I was telling you how you differentiate intentional and accidental loss of life. This has nothing to do with good vs evil, however when you say something with no substance, then I will respond.
also I never disputed anything, not sure why you believe that. All I ever said was, that in a situation like this, one's own side is always painted in a way more favourable light. and your excuse ridden answer is no exception... "reducing casualties" and "accidents". If "the west" wanted to reduce casualties, if this was really about Syrians, than this conflict would look vastly different or would probably over by now. But it is not, this is a global power game, a proxy war, a prime example for neo realism, and nobody gives a shit about the Syrians, the west included. There have been countless opportunities to end this, but every party involved is under internal and external pressure to stick it to the bad guy. This certainly has nothing to do with reducing casualties there, but with reducing casualties at home in terms of votes.
You do yourself a disservice by thinking this is a proxy war only between Russia and the West, this is also a proxy war of Sunni vs Shia.
I am not sure what you mean by "this conflict would look vastly different". The West is filled with war weary populace in democratic settings, which hampers any decisive decisions on conflicts like this. Not to mention Russia controls UN veto votes, which effectively stops any international intervention The only way this would be over right now is if there was an intervention by the West years ago, as I do not believe the gulf states would stop supplying the rebels.
Unless you are one of those that think an Assad controlled Syria can be peaceful at this stage?
"no one besides the one trying to defend their actions in civilian deaths believe the self-investigation bull..." so is this why the U.S. insisted on self-investigations in the Kunduz case and prevented every attempt by doctors without borders for an independent one? I'm sure if this was done by Russia, it would not be an accident but intentional, and the prevention of said investigation is just as good as admitting guilt. but in the U.S. case it is fine I guess...
nothing but double standards and own-side bias, sry.
What are you talking about? We are talking about the differences in airstrikes and what makes one worse than the other.
You would need a better example than Kunduz airstrike, because it was obviously an accident. Again you ignored my entire last post which is how we define accidental loss of life and intentional
If Russia bombed one hospital and goes on a long time before another incident of it again, then it can definitely be accidental, but when you have a country constantly bombing hospitals in spans of months, then there is no way it is an accident.
One more time I will say it; indiscriminate attacks are deemed intentional when they kill civilians, because that is what an indiscriminate attack is going to do.
Also please stop acting like there is no one condemning U.S's bombing of civilians, there are plenty of examples of it and you will find it rare for any legit media to immediately defend it. There is also the fact that U.S military owns up to such strikes whereas Russia, says "I do not know of such a strike" almost all the time.
just like the example above, as long as this conflict continues, reports will sugar coat the "good guys'" actions and accusations may be based on biased data. And I think it's incredibly dangerous to buy into that, getting fired up to support the good cause from some sort of moral high ground that is nothing but an illusion. But maybe that's exactly the lesson the the U.S. learned from the negative press it got during the Vietnam war?
The first casualty of War is Truth. And that is not one-sided.
There will be bias from all sides. The difference here is there are also critics of U.S policy within U.S and the West as well via media, politicians, and other organizations, this is not the case for Russia.