el retorno
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Plus you're advocating hostile operations against a nation that has not attacked anyone.
Hezbollah, Iraqi militants, Hamas, hostage crisis, planning to attack on US soil.
Plus you're advocating hostile operations against a nation that has not attacked anyone.
maharg said:Er... Out of curiosity, what country has successfully enacted (or even, for that matter, visibly attempted) regime change because of international embargo?
There's some pretty obvious counterexamples (Iraq, North Korea).
Off the top of my head, the most notable example might be South Africa, though I think there was already widespread and violent opposition before embargos started happening, iirc.
Alpha-Bromega said:absolutely not, abso-lute-ly not. Embargos make the nationalism even stronger, and the dedication the regime far stronger as the population is now far more dependant on the state for everything, and the rest of the world is now far, far, far more easier to demonise.
maharg said:So what's the other part of the machine in Iran?
Also, in this case, the rhetoric on the US' part sounds disturbingly like the rhetoric used in the leadup to the invasion of Iraq. It's a little disturbing.
If the regime change option is used, I believe the US should keep the cruise missiles mainly out of the cities and not to target major infrastructure pieces (power plants, bridges, etc.). The primary targets would be Iran's offensive missile launchers, anti-air weapons, and IRG bases. Nudge the regular army into taking on its rival in the Revolutionary Guard.
Thomas Nagy of Georgetown University unearthed a Defense Intelligence Agency document entitled "Iraq Water Treatment Vulnerabilities," which was circulated to all major allied commands one day after the Gulf War started. It analyzed the weaknesses of the Iraqi water treatment system, the effects of sanctions on a damaged system and the health effects of untreated water on the Iraqi populace. Mentioning that chlorine is embargoed under the sanctions, it speculates that "Iraq could try convincing the United Nations or individual countries to exempt water treatment supplies from sanctions for humanitarian reasons," something that the United States disallowed for many years.
Combined with the fact that nearly every large water treatment plant in the country was attacked during the Gulf War, and seven out of eight dams destroyed, this suggests a deliberate targeting of the Iraqi water supply for "postwar leverage," a concept U.S. government officials admitted was part of military planning in the Gulf War (Washington Post, 6/23/91).
A Dow Jones search for 2000 finds only one mention of this evidence in an American paper--and that in a letter to the editor (Austin American-Statesman, 10/01/00). Subsequent documents unearthed by Nagy (The Progressive, 8/10/01) suggest that the plan to destroy water treatment, then to restrict chlorine and other necessary water treatment supplies, was done with full knowledge of the explosion of water-borne disease that would result. "There are no operational water and sewage treatment plants and the reported incidence of diarrhea is four times above normal levels," one post-war assessment reported; "further infectious diseases will spread due to inadequate water treatment and poor sanitation," another predicted.
Combine this with harsh and arbitrary restrictions on medicines, the destruction of Iraq's vaccine facilities, and the fact that, until this summer, vaccines for common infectious diseases were on the so-called "1051 list" of substances in practice banned from entering Iraq. Deliberately creating the conditions for disease and then withholding the treatment is little different morally from deliberately introducing a disease-causing organism like anthrax...
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=1084
Lesley Stahl: We have heard that a half million children have died. I mean, that's more children than died in Hiroshima. And, you know, is the price worth it?
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright: I think this is a very hard choice, but the price--we think the price is worth it.
--60 Minutes (5/12/96)
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and the UAE
While those deaths were horrible the blame goes to Saddam, who wouldn´t comply. Same with Iran. If anybody is hurting over there its their own government´s fault.
I agree Iran as the right to nuclear power. The US does too. It doesn´t have the right to hide stuff from inpectors, conduct tests and computer similations about nuclear weapons, threaten to reduce cooperation with the IAEA and play games with the IAEA. Iran could open up its program completly and be done with this.
utter bullshit, flatly contradicted by the two UN guys that ran the fucking sanctions regime! And guess what? Dennis Halliday and Hans von Sponeck, both responsible for running the fucking oil for food program, both categorically denounced it as genocidal. what do you say to that? That the US government is being falsely maligned by not one, but two consecutive UN representatives, one Irish, one German, that ran the program?
Is there no end to your apologetics for the US government?
How is that not true? What would have happened if Iraq would have done what the UNSC was asking for?
The sanctions would have ended.
And to counter your two quotes from polticians here is the head of the worlds oldest human rights organization "one of the key elements of a crime against humanity and of genocide is intent. The embargo wasnt imposed because the United States and Britain wanted children to die. If you think so, you have to prove it."
I there no end your "america is coupable for everything in the middle east"?
Would it not have been obvious to both governments that children would die?
LOL. the NPT has no jurisdiction whatsoever on a computer simulation or a missile program of a sovereign state. it is concerned with two things and two thing only. No proliferation of nuclear technology and no highly enriched uranium being used for weapons development. The IAEA categorically states that Iran is NOT doing the latter and Iran hasnt been accused of doing the former. everything you said is just politicized crap. The US National Intelligence estimate, as of 2011, says Iran isnt building nukes.
The nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, of which Iran is a member, recognizes a states inalienable right to a peaceful nuclear energy program as long as non-nuclear-weapon state membersabide by their commitment not to pursue nuclear weapons.The treaty does not reference specific nuclear activities such as enrichment.
andOne central judgment from the 2007 NIE that Clappers statement did not address was the intelligence communitys assessment of Irans nuclear warhead development and covert uranium-conversion and -enrichment activities. In 2007 the intelligence community judged with high confidence that Iran suspended such efforts in the fall of 2003 and concluded with moderate confidence that Iran maintained that halt through mid-2007. (See ACT, January/February 2008.)
Statements from senior intelligence officials over the past year have suggested that Iran has engaged in research on nuclear weapons designs at least since the 2007 NIE. I think they continue to work on designs in that area, CIA Director Leon Panetta told ABCs This Week June 27.
The public disclosure of a previously secret uranium-enrichment plant under construction near the city of Qom in September 2009 also raised questions about Irans renewed pursuit of covert enrichment facilities.
Would it not have been obvious to both governments that children would die?
So long as they disclose any new nuclear sites within the IAEA deadlines and allow inspectors full access, there isn't a problem.
Do you personally think that Iran shouldn't have any nuclear program?
So what changes exactly would you suggest?Yes, full access and no development of weapons.
And I have no problem with an Iranian civilian nuclear program.
Yes. But the goal for the UNSC was to have a disarment of Iraq. The sanction would have been lifted if Saddam had complied. Saddam held everything in his hand.
World Police, fuck yeah.
So what changes exactly would you suggest?
Iran being honest about its program. And not hiding anything.
What exactly are they hiding at the moment?
As recent as 2009 a secret uranium enrichment facility was uncovered right?
Edit: point being they aren't beyond hiding things.
If you think so, you have to prove it.
"There are no operational water and sewage treatment plants and the reported incidence of diarrhea is four times above normal levels," one post-war assessment reported; "further infectious diseases will spread due to inadequate water treatment and poor sanitation," another predicted.
el retorno de los sapos said:The sanctions would have ended.
All possible sanctions will be maintained until he is gone. Any easing of sanctions will be considered only when there is a new government.
Hussein Kamel, the man who'd run Iraq's WMD programs, defected in 1995 and told UNSCOM that Iraq had nothing.
We do not agree with the nations who argue that if Iraq complies with its obligations concerning weapons of mass destruction, sanctions should be lifted. Our view, which is unshakable, is that Iraq must prove its peaceful intentions...And the evidence is overwhelming that Saddam Hussein's intentions will never be peaceful...
Clearly, a change in Iraq's government could lead to a change in U.S. policy. Should that occur, we would stand ready, in coordination with our allies and friends, to enter rapidly into a dialogue with the successor regime.
What exactly are they hiding at the moment?
In November of 2011, IAEA officials identified a "large explosive containment vessel" inside Parchin.[146] The IAEA later assessed that Iran has been conducting experiments to develop nuclear weapons capability.[147]
In July 2010, Iran barred two IAEA inspectors from entering the country. The IAEA rejected Iran's reasons for the ban and said it fully supported the inspectors, which Tehran has accused of reporting wrongly that some nuclear equipment was missing.[144]
In May 2010, the IAEA issued a report that Iran had declared production of over 2.5 metric tons of low-enriched uranium, which would be enough if further enriched to make two nuclear weapons, and that Iran has refused to answer inspectors’ questions on a variety of activities, including what the agency called the “possible military dimensions” of Iran's nuclear program.[142][143]
In February 2010, the IAEA issued a report scolding Iran for failing to explain purchases of sensitive technology as well as secret tests of high-precision detonators and modified designs of missile cones to accommodate larger payloads. Such experiments are closely associated with atomic warheads.[141]
In November 2009, the IAEA's 35-nation Board of Governors overwhelmingly backed a demand of the U.S., Russia, China, and three other powers that Iran immediately stop building its newly revealed nuclear facility and freeze uranium enrichment. Iranian officials shrugged off approval of the resolution by 25 members of the Board, but the U.S. and its allies hinted at new UN sanctions if Iran remained defiant.[140]
In September 2009, IAEA Director General Mohamed El Baradei that Iran had broken the law by not disclosing its second uranium enrichment site at Qom sooner. Nevertheless, he said, the United Nations did not have credible evidence that Iran had an operational nuclear program.[139]
Iran is entitled to pursue a peaceful nuclear program, which in part includes enriching uranium, a process that is used both for nuclear power and in people's fantasies nuclear weaponry.
In September 2009, IAEA Director General Mohamed El Baradei that Iran had broken the law by not disclosing its second uranium enrichment site at Qom sooner. Nevertheless, he said, the United Nations did not have credible evidence that Iran had an operational nuclear program.[139]
That´s proving the UNSC has the intent to kill people?It's on the record. In the link I posted above-
Not only were the treatment plants and dams deliberately targeted and destroyed during the Gulf War, the government's post war assessment directly preceded sanctions on chlorine, antibiotics and vaccines against infectious diseases. There was Knowledge, intent and execution.
Yes there are things that say there is no "proof" Iran has been building nukes and other contradictory evidence that says they aren´t but the point remains clear that they are hiding things from the IAEA.
In November of 2011, IAEA officials identified a "large explosive containment vessel" inside Parchin.[146] The IAEA later assessed that Iran has been conducting experiments to develop nuclear weapons capability.[147]
In July 2010, Iran barred two IAEA inspectors from entering the country. The IAEA rejected Iran's reasons for the ban and said it fully supported the inspectors, which Tehran has accused of reporting wrongly that some nuclear equipment was missing.[144]
(Reuters) - Iran has barred two U.N. nuclear inspectors from entering the Islamic Republic, increasing tension less than two weeks after Tehran was hit by new U.N. sanctions over its disputed atomic program.
Iran, which has declared the two inspectors persona non grata, made clear it would still allow the Vienna-based U.N. watchdog to monitor its nuclear facilities, saying other experts could carry out the work.
"Inspections are continuing without any interruption," Iran's IAEA envoy Ali Asghar Soltanieh told reporters in Vienna.
"(But) we have to show more vigilance about the performance of the inspectors to protect the confidentiality," he said, criticizing alleged leaks by inspectors to Western media.
In May 2010, the IAEA issued a report that Iran had declared production of over 2.5 metric tons of low-enriched uranium, which would be enough if further enriched to make two nuclear weapons, and that Iran has refused to answer inspectors questions on a variety of activities, including what the agency called the possible military dimensions of Iran's nuclear program.[142][143]
In February 2010, the IAEA issued a report scolding Iran for failing to explain purchases of sensitive technology as well as secret tests of high-precision detonators and modified designs of missile cones to accommodate larger payloads. Such experiments are closely associated with atomic warheads.[141]
In November 2009, the IAEA's 35-nation Board of Governors overwhelmingly backed a demand of the U.S., Russia, China, and three other powers that Iran immediately stop building its newly revealed nuclear facility and freeze uranium enrichment. Iranian officials shrugged off approval of the resolution by 25 members of the Board, but the U.S. and its allies hinted at new UN sanctions if Iran remained defiant.[140]
In September 2009, IAEA Director General Mohamed El Baradei that Iran had broken the law by not disclosing its second uranium enrichment site at Qom sooner. Nevertheless, he said, the United Nations did not have credible evidence that Iran had an operational nuclear program.[139]
That´s proving the UNSC has the intent to kill people?
None of this is evidence of anything close to claims that they're involved in a nuclear weapons program. Some of it is suggestive but the innocuous explanation is entirely plausible as well.
That´s not what happened though. Saddam held the cure.If you contract a disease, and I have the power to withhold treatment of that disease and knowingly do so, am I acting with intent?
That´s not what happened though. Saddam held the cure.
Are you being purposefully obtuse?
No. I´m saying Iraq held the end of the sanctions in its hand.
Iran refuses to give oil to Whitey. That's all it boils down to. They kicked out some British oil company in the 50's and UK/US has been pissed off since.This might seem like a stupid question, but what the fuck has Iran done to anyone?
Why is a Showdown required?
Iran refuses to give oil to Whitey. That's all it boils down to. They kicked out some British oil company in the 50's and UK/US has been pissed off since.
Iran refuses to give oil to Whitey. That's all it boils down to. They kicked out some British oil company in the 50's and UK/US has been pissed off since.
It's not about US needing oil, it's about U.S. investors making a profit.Yes since the US has been struggling for oil since 1979.
Iran refuses to give oil to Whitey. That's all it boils down to. They kicked out some British oil company in the 50's and UK/US has been pissed off since.
And... where does that say that Iraq didn´t hold the keys of it´s own future?
It shows they are playing games and not being forth right.
And you´re jumping to the innocuous explanation because that´s what you want to believe.
You asked what they are hiding. Does not revealing a plant not count. That´s just worth a "ok and?" You don´t think they could have done anything before they revealed it you don´t think that hints that they are not above having other secret plants?
That the the IAEA report which says they´ve been computer testing nuclear devices. Yes that leads might right to the "innocuous explanation."
I'd like to point out that if I were Iran and trying to build a nuclear power plant, for peaceful or otherwise purposes, I'd be thinking a lot about what happened to Iraq's in 1981. For good reason.
I am not debating. The animus towards Iran for the most part is they are scary moooslems, simple as that. I'm wondering about the people in powers' motivations, not the racist asshats on the ground.The race card will surely win any complex debate...
I dunno about nationalism, but a siege makes dissidents, along with everyone else, more reliant on the regime for basic goods and services and allows the regime to consolidate its power, even as the economy falters. As was the case in Iraq.
Two different situations, but whatever makes you happy, dude.
lol. You can continue quote mining and throwing out all manner of bullshit, but it doesnt change the facts.and simulating nuclear bomb tests doesn´t raise any alarms which is what the IAEA said Iran did.
And actively bulding nukes is different than having a nuclear weapons program and designing weapons.
And this is what I found out about the US National Intelligence estimate update
http://www.armscontrol.org/act/2011_03/Iran
and
Seymour Hersh said:A government consultant who has read the highly classified 2011 N.I.E. update depicted the report as reinforcing the essential conclusion of the 2007 paper: Iran halted weaponization in 2003. Theres more evidence to support that assessment, the consultant told me.
It shows they are playing games and not being forth right. And you´re jumping to the innocuous explanation because that´s what you want to believe. You asked what they are hiding. Does not revealing a plant not count. That´s just worth a "ok and?" You don´t think they could have done anything before they revealed it you don´t think that hints that they are not above having other secret plants?
That the the IAEA report which says they´ve been computer testing nuclear devices. Yes that leads might right to the "innocuous explanation."
Quit acting like Iran is some sort of outlier on this.armscontrol.org said:Brazil Oct. 19 granted International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors limited access to crucial uranium-enrichment technology, increasing the prospects for an end to a nearly six-month-old standoff over the South American giant’s nuclear program.
The dispute broke out in April when IAEA inspectors arrived at Brazil’s uranium-enrichment facility in Resende, near Rio de Janeiro (See ACT, May 2004) and were barred from viewing many of the plant’s centrifuge components. The inspectors were restricted to the vicinity of the plant and to monitoring the arrival and departure of uranium.
Two holes in your argument:
1) Iraq (or any other country for that matter) has already said they wouldn't allow Israel to use its airspace if they intend to bomb Iran.
2) The F-16s that bombed the Osiraq plant were already spitting fumes, and Iran, being an even a larger country and further away from Israel, they would have to refuel in mid-air. Not going to happen. Israel will not violate another country's sovereignty, and if they do, Israeli fighter jets will get shot down, and deservingly so.
Two holes in your argument:
1) Iraq (or any other country for that matter) has already said they wouldn't allow Israel to use its airspace if they intend to bomb Iran.
2) The F-16s that bombed the Osiraq plant were already spitting fumes, and Iran, being an even a larger country and further away from Israel, they would have to refuel in mid-air. Not going to happen. Israel will not violate another country's sovereignty, and if they do, Israeli fighter jets will get shot down, and deservingly so.