Intervention in Middle East

Bulerias

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I'm debating some conservatives on a different forum at the moment, and thought you guys might be interested in participating in the debate on TBT. Here's what one of them wrote in defense of the "war on terrorism"...

"For a definition of a just war we turn to Saint Thomas.
#1. A war must be started and controlled by the authority of a state or ruler.
#2. The war must be fought for a just cause.
#3. The war must be fought for good, against evil, to restore law and order.
Church authorities later added two additional conditions.
#4. The war must be a last resort.
#5. The war must be fought proportionally. No more force than necessary may be used, and the lives of civilians must be safeguarded.

Unfortunately, some of the wars my family participated in did not fulfill all of those conditions. I sincerely believe that our war against worldwide terrorism is a just war that must be fought to insure our survival."

And my reply:

"It is an unjust war. The "war against terrorism" is an extremely broad blanket term the government uses to justify its actions, which are inherently unjustifiable. Which war are you asking about, Adrienne? The one in Iraq? We invaded that country on false pretenses. Hussein never had any nuclear weapons, and I don't think it was our place to meddle in his affairs. As mangaman correctly noted, we depend on the Middle East for oil. Considering that many Bush cronies, such as Rice, held prestigious positions in oil companies prior to their work in the government, it is not surprising that we invaded Iraq for oil.

As for possible upcoming wars, such as a confrontation with Iran, they will also be for naught. Iran's threats are meaningless; they will not dare to launch a nuclear weapon, because they understand that they risk complete annihilation if they do so. If the US wanted to, they could wipe Iran off the map within hours. Ahmadinejad may talk a lot, but his bark is considerably worse than his bite.

I support Ron Paul's call for non-interventionism, which is different from isolationism. We should stop invading countries and start worrying about our own problems, instead of foreign problems we barely understand. The Arab-Israeli conflict has been going on for longer than the U.S. has been in existence, but for some reason our government officials are haughty enough to say they have a profound understanding of it. Until we can get our act together and put the economy back on track, I think we should stay out of conflicts that don't concern us.

Do you guys realize WHY "innocents" are being killed by "terrorists"? We have a long history of meddling in affairs that don't concern us, and taking sides in conflicts we don't understand. We would not be targeted if we did not have such a prominent role in Middle Eastern conflicts. This isn't the first series of U.S. campaigns in the Middle East, and sadly, it will not be the last. Until we stop intervening, we will be targeted by terrorists. I am not justifying their actions, but they are at least understandable. So no, I don't believe U.S. soldiers are "defending innocents" by fighting in Iraq. In fact, I think it's the opposite; they are endangering civilians by prolonging U.S. intervention."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Where do you guys stand on the subject?
 
Bulerias said:
I'm debating some conservatives on a different forum at the moment, and thought you guys might be interested in participating in the debate on TBT. Here's what one of them wrote in defense of the "war on terrorism"...

"For a definition of a just war we turn to Saint Thomas.
#1. A war must be started and controlled by the authority of a state or ruler.
#2. The war must be fought for a just cause.
#3. The war must be fought for good, against evil, to restore law and order.
Church authorities later added two additional conditions.
#4. The war must be a last resort.
#5. The war must be fought proportionally. No more force than necessary may be used, and the lives of civilians must be safeguarded.

Unfortunately, some of the wars my family participated in did not fulfill all of those conditions. I sincerely believe that our war against worldwide terrorism is a just war that must be fought to insure our survival."

And my reply:

"It is an unjust war. The "war against terrorism" is an extremely broad blanket term the government uses to justify its actions, which are inherently unjustifiable. Which war are you asking about, Adrienne? The one in Iraq? We invaded that country on false pretenses. Hussein never had any nuclear weapons, and I don't think it was our place to meddle in his affairs. As mangaman correctly noted, we depend on the Middle East for oil. Considering that many Bush cronies, such as Rice, held prestigious positions in oil companies prior to their work in the government, it is not surprising that we invaded Iraq for oil.

As for possible upcoming wars, such as a confrontation with Iran, they will also be for naught. Iran's threats are meaningless; they will not dare to launch a nuclear weapon, because they understand that they risk complete annihilation if they do so. If the US wanted to, they could wipe Iran off the map within hours. Ahmadinejad may talk a lot, but his bark is considerably worse than his bite.

I support Ron Paul's call for non-interventionism, which is different from isolationism. We should stop invading countries and start worrying about our own problems, instead of foreign problems we barely understand. The Arab-Israeli conflict has been going on for longer than the U.S. has been in existence, but for some reason our government officials are haughty enough to say they have a profound understanding of it. Until we can get our act together and put the economy back on track, I think we should stay out of conflicts that don't concern us.

Do you guys realize WHY "innocents" are being killed by "terrorists"? We have a long history of meddling in affairs that don't concern us, and taking sides in conflicts we don't understand. We would not be targeted if we did not have such a prominent role in Middle Eastern conflicts. This isn't the first series of U.S. campaigns in the Middle East, and sadly, it will not be the last. Until we stop intervening, we will be targeted by terrorists. I am not justifying their actions, but they are at least understandable. So no, I don't believe U.S. soldiers are "defending innocents" by fighting in Iraq. In fact, I think it's the opposite; they are endangering civilians by prolonging U.S. intervention."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Where do you guys stand on the subject?
Our goal there should be stopping crimes against humanity, which we accomplished for the most part when we removed Sadaam. Unfortunately, our action was because Iraq started to threaten our "precious" oil. By continuing to fight a war on terrorism, we are giving them the attention they crave. The terrorists like the limelight, which we are giving them.
 
So, aside from pear40's contribution, it seems that this topic isn't very TBT-friendly. I'll give it one "pity bump"...
 
pear40 said:
Bulerias said:
I'm debating some conservatives on a different forum at the moment, and thought you guys might be interested in participating in the debate on TBT. Here's what one of them wrote in defense of the "war on terrorism"...

"For a definition of a just war we turn to Saint Thomas.
#1. A war must be started and controlled by the authority of a state or ruler.
#2. The war must be fought for a just cause.
#3. The war must be fought for good, against evil, to restore law and order.
Church authorities later added two additional conditions.
#4. The war must be a last resort.
#5. The war must be fought proportionally. No more force than necessary may be used, and the lives of civilians must be safeguarded.

Unfortunately, some of the wars my family participated in did not fulfill all of those conditions. I sincerely believe that our war against worldwide terrorism is a just war that must be fought to insure our survival."

And my reply:

"It is an unjust war. The "war against terrorism" is an extremely broad blanket term the government uses to justify its actions, which are inherently unjustifiable. Which war are you asking about, Adrienne? The one in Iraq? We invaded that country on false pretenses. Hussein never had any nuclear weapons, and I don't think it was our place to meddle in his affairs. As mangaman correctly noted, we depend on the Middle East for oil. Considering that many Bush cronies, such as Rice, held prestigious positions in oil companies prior to their work in the government, it is not surprising that we invaded Iraq for oil.

As for possible upcoming wars, such as a confrontation with Iran, they will also be for naught. Iran's threats are meaningless; they will not dare to launch a nuclear weapon, because they understand that they risk complete annihilation if they do so. If the US wanted to, they could wipe Iran off the map within hours. Ahmadinejad may talk a lot, but his bark is considerably worse than his bite.

I support Ron Paul's call for non-interventionism, which is different from isolationism. We should stop invading countries and start worrying about our own problems, instead of foreign problems we barely understand. The Arab-Israeli conflict has been going on for longer than the U.S. has been in existence, but for some reason our government officials are haughty enough to say they have a profound understanding of it. Until we can get our act together and put the economy back on track, I think we should stay out of conflicts that don't concern us.

Do you guys realize WHY "innocents" are being killed by "terrorists"? We have a long history of meddling in affairs that don't concern us, and taking sides in conflicts we don't understand. We would not be targeted if we did not have such a prominent role in Middle Eastern conflicts. This isn't the first series of U.S. campaigns in the Middle East, and sadly, it will not be the last. Until we stop intervening, we will be targeted by terrorists. I am not justifying their actions, but they are at least understandable. So no, I don't believe U.S. soldiers are "defending innocents" by fighting in Iraq. In fact, I think it's the opposite; they are endangering civilians by prolonging U.S. intervention."

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Where do you guys stand on the subject?
Our goal there should be stopping crimes against humanity, which we accomplished for the most part when we removed Sadaam. Unfortunately, our action was because Iraq started to threaten our "precious" oil. By continuing to fight a war on terrorism, we are giving them the attention they crave. The terrorists like the limelight, which we are giving them.
I agree. As being a part of the same world, we should do each other good. Like Pear said we should be stopping crimes against humanity, not having war for oil. It is just feeding the terrorists. They're getting more and more attention. Which is exactly what they want. I guess you could call it "Not looking at the big picture."
 
When I was referring to the oil thing, I was talking about the gulf war mostly.
 
Bulerias said:
So, aside from pear40's contribution, it seems that this topic isn't very TBT-friendly. I'll give it one "pity bump"...
Well, I see that the war is just. After all, years ago the US screwed up with the CIA or something by assisting Hussein take over. They gave him weapons and a bundle of things. We went over, only to find out half that stuff it gone. And I don't think it's fought for oil. But the War on Terror will more than likely be something that will never end.
 
Tom said:
And I don't think it's fought for oil. But the War on Terror will more than likely be something that will never end.
This. I do think the Gulf war was oil motivated though.
 
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