Fred1new
- 07 Dec 2005 16:40
This board has been a little to quiet for while.
Is it time that Bush and Blair who is a close friend and confidant of Bush were tried for War Crimes?
Do you think the use by the American Administrations of renditions are War Crimes and committed with full knowledge of American and British leaders ie. Blair and Bush and they are ultimately responsible?
Also in the aftermath of the illegal invasion of Iraq are should their action seen to be as the provocation for the rising toll of British, American and Iraqi deaths.
As a result of the military intervention in Iraq do you think you are safer in Britain to-day?
Do you think one should expect government leaders and ministers who have been responsible for massive foreseeable casualties should visit the hospitals to meet the casualties they have produced directly or indirectly by their actions?
hewittalan6
- 11 Feb 2006 19:54
- 293 of 1327
Just to add that the cost of action in the middle east would probably be enough to research and eventually commercialise non-oil alternatives, so to spend that much on the basis of grabbing the last (?) of the oil is probably an economic nonsense anyway.
blinger
- 11 Feb 2006 20:39
- 294 of 1327
the answer to the fuel problem lies in your kitchen cabinet, if everyone here used vegetable oil in their diesel tank, the authorities would be banjaxed- a 50/50% blend will do nicely, at about 60p a litre, unfortunately as we are a nation of cowards- cowed by years of government intervention, nannying and hand outs, few of us have the balls to stick two fingers up to Gay Gordon and his Highland Fuseless-ires- including myself, although I know a few who dare.
http://www.pistonheads.com/doc.asp?c=104&i=6545
Haystack
- 11 Feb 2006 20:50
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It might turn out to be a good idea to invade Iran; invading Iraq was.
Kivver
- 12 Feb 2006 10:12
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al - you always talk common sense giving the other side of the argument but im not sure Iran could threaten the west from where they are. I thought missiles only had a certain range and with new technology surely they wouldnt get near us. You also said i was anti millitary, which i am not, i was against the Iragi war for the reasons i mentioned before the country is in absolute chaos, and the reasons we went to war have be proven to be lies, WMD (where are they). Are the west saying the same lies about Iran????? its hard to know what the truth is.
Do you think that if we do start running out of oil or we are rationed because these countries want to keep their own resources for their own countries the west are going to stand back and let this happen including the countries you have mentioned. By the way if we need to that for the survival of our own countries i would be behind it. Also think we need to be working much harder on our renewable sources.
hewittalan6
- 12 Feb 2006 10:40
- 297 of 1327
I agree about the renewable resources, certainly, but I detect, in government, a simplistic thinking of looking for THE answer. I don't believe there is a THE answer. I believe the answer lies in a multi-discipline approach of Hydro, Solar, Hydrogen, Nuclear and organic solutions. None of these are capable of satisfying our needs on their own and some are stupidly expensive, but a mix and match approach may just eke out enough power at an economic enough rate to provide AN answer.
Alan
hewittalan6
- 12 Feb 2006 10:42
- 298 of 1327
BTW. The delivery system doesn't have to be a missile. It can easily be a young bloke with a desperate desire to get his hands on a few virgins!!!
Ever read "The Fourth Protocol"?
Fiction, I know, but nevertheless possible.
Alan
Fred1new
- 12 Feb 2006 11:32
- 299 of 1327
It is interesting to me, that a country which has proven track record of using Atomic bombs and nuclear arm remnants in their armaments, in war outside its own borders. ie. America, has the gall to try and justify its stance that other states have not the right to their own independent nuclear research program.
America has supplied and supported armed insurrection in states throughout the world since the 1950s. Then supporting horrendous governments in those countries. (It is seeing the backlash of those actions in the South American countries now.)
As far as Iran is concerned, America and Britain supported and Iraq in its bloody war against Iran, while also providing arms to Iran. This was after it supported and instigated the downfall of an Iranian democratically elected government, replacing it with the puppet regime of the Shah, which was responsible for torture and murder of any opposition to the said government.
The international policies of America and to a certain degree Britain throughout the last fifty years has stank. The results of which we are beginning to see.
Oil will probably become a more expensive commodity and eventually to expensive to use as a basic simple energy resource. Whether or not we like it ,Nuclear energy in one from of another will be its replacement and I think every country is entitled to develop such for its own needs.
It was shown in the Iraq war that it was America and to a lesser degree Britain had the WMD and America were prepared and actually did use them.
hewittalan6
- 12 Feb 2006 11:55
- 300 of 1327
I have the greatest respect for your views, Fred, but if WMD have to exist (and we can't un-invent them) then I feel more comfortablr with nuclear weapons existing where they do, with nations who could have used tham at any point in the last 60 years, and haven't than with a nation whose stated aim is to wipe Israel off the map.
The balance has been mantained all this time due to International governing bodies and the threat of Mutually Assured Destruction.
Something we must surely have learned over the last few years is that the Iraqs and Irans of our planet will not bow down to international pleas and pressure in pursuit of their goals. We must also have learned that in the Islamic world, death as part of a holy campaign is not to be feared and in fact is to be greeted.
Without these safety catches, and the checks and balances, I do not feel at all comfortable with the Iranian threat, and while I support dialogue, I am prepared to back whatever action may become necessary in pursuit of this threat.
History also teaches us that we can draw rights and wrongs from any historical event and use it to justify current actions. that is what keeps the Israel / Palestine thing going so well. Our historical support or otherwise (albeit recent) should not detract us from a changing world order and how to keep the planet free from nuclear devastation.
We must deal with the facts as they present themselves now, and in my opinion, a nuclear capable Iran is possibly the greatest threat we have seen since the rise of the third reich.
Do not be mistaken. An Iranian attack on Israel would draw in the majority of the world as the west defended Israel and the Arab states and Indonesian countries rallied to the defense of their Muslim brothers.
What prevents this now, is the knowledge that Israel has the capability to destroy the forces of places like Iran. If Iran had the ability to ensure Israel could not strike back for very long, they may choose to attack.
Finally, a few drawings have led to embassies around the world being torched, people killed and terrorist threats against countries like ours who did not even instigate this.
Who knows what the next apparantly innocent act will trigger a vile and extreme response? I certainly don't.
And the act was innocent. The newspaper story appeared due to the writer of childrens books having problems finding an illustrator for his latest book. The book was aimed at trying to get Danish Children to understand and sympathise with Islam!!
Ironic, but there you go.
Alan
blinger
- 12 Feb 2006 13:54
- 301 of 1327
hands up those who are sick to the bollox of hearing about Islam, the news on BBC
Radio 4 I clocked in the car today- the first 6 YES SIX,sub-headlines were about Iraq, Indonesia, Islamic terrorism, etc. etc. , the BBC is totally obsessed by this lot, for Gods sake lets have some balance, Church of England, Presbyterian Church of Scotland,Wee Frees, Jews, Hindus, Catholics, Budhists etc, etc, lets unite and put an end to this rubbish.If some twat holds up a banner threatening to kill me I really don`t CARE what he represents, lock the pillok up and throw away the key.
What have we allowed to happen?- and I was called a racist on ths bb for daring to opine the view which 80% of a poll in the Sunday times of we Brits confirms, and they wonder why the RightWing are popular.
porky
- 12 Feb 2006 14:59
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All this publicity on Muslims and their problems are going to cause even for problems among the rest of the community, according to polls taken by the Sunday Times today.
A big percentage of people polled were of the opinion that it was getting, and going to get even more difficult for Western people to come to terms living alongside the Muslim community.
Trust is going out of the window, and with the authorities bending over backwards to not upset them will find there will be some kind of backlash eventually.
blinger
- 12 Feb 2006 16:44
- 303 of 1327
Exactly- take away the oxygen of publicity, lets hear about some native stuff, rugby, hunting , the demise of PC, and Blair, the fall of the Labour party, nice things, and leave London to the City papers- who cares what goes on in that poxy place anyway, filthy, full of illegals,terrorists, muggers, dole thieves, foreigners and sexual ambivilants.
MightyMicro
- 12 Feb 2006 18:28
- 304 of 1327
There is some confusion over the right to nuclear power versus the possession of nuclear weapons.
The declared nuclear weapons states are the US, the UK, France, Russia, China, India and Pakistan. Israel is widely believed to possess nuclear weapons, but has not been observed testing a weapon nor has she admitted to possessing them. North Korea may have them. There was a rumour years ago that South Africa under the apartheid regime colluded with Israel in the development of nuclear weapons.
There are two basic types of nuclear weapon: the fission bomb, commonly called simply the atomic bomb which releases energy by nuclear fission of (Uranium-235 or Plutonium) and the fusion, or thermo-nuclear bomb, commonly called the hydrogen bomb which releases the energy produced by nuclear fusion (as in the Sun). The latter is immensely more destructive than the former. A fusion bomb contains a fission bomb as its trigger (to produce the energy needed to cause nuclear fusion).
There is no prohibition on the possession of nuclear power plants providing that the country operating these facilities permits the IAEA of the UN the right to inspect the deployment of the nuclear fuel (which is always fissionable material such as U-235). A by-product of uranium fusion is plutonium which is ideal for the manufacture of nuclear weapons. Accounting for all this material under international inspection helps to ensure the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons.
If Iran agreed to such inspection, it would have the right to operate nuclear power plants (which is what it says it wants). You may have doubts about their intentions, of course, given their hostility to the West, their declaration about Israel, and the odd fact that they are sitting on the world's fourth-largest oil reserves.
hewittalan6
- 12 Feb 2006 18:50
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Yep. I have serious doubts.
There is also the smokescreen about delivery systems and the finding of WMD.
Delivery systems come in two guises. The Multi billion dollar missile type that is easily detected and the 4.99 Argos rucksack.
If I remember my rather shabby "O" Level physics correctly then all one requires for a very respectable bomb of the Atom variety is a lump of Uranium 238 about the size of a football and a method of forcing it under extreme pressure. A crude way is to place it in 2 halfs in a metal cylinder, with simple explosives at one end. The halfs are smashed together and the chain reaction is started.
If this is the case then there could be shedfulls of it in any country and they would be almost impossible to find.
The essence of it is that a fairly trivial amount of depleted uranium, a modestly educated scientist, a passable engineer and a guerilla approach to terrorism is all that is required to spark a major world incident. I believe that Iran have all but one of these ingredients and a declared aim to wipe countries and ideoligies off the map.
I would not feel confident if we handed them the last of these requirements.
Finally, you are right, MM. If the wish is entirely peaceful, then what is the great problem with the UN overseeing it? They do so in ALL countries with nuclear power. What makes Iran a special case?
Alan
blinger
- 12 Feb 2006 19:07
- 306 of 1327
We can only blame governments for the mess of multi-culturalism; to allow totally uneducated and predominantly (lets not mess with PC words) thick people into this country, that was the start of the rot.
In defence of the troublemakers e.g. the half-wits with their " kill WASPS"banners, in London, one can hardly blame them, they have not been tutored in the ways of our country , many don`t even speak English, I am convinced that they don`t know that they are hateful,nobody had the balls to tell them what they did was at least considered to be illegal- that is the depth of their ignorance.In fact I suspect that the dimmer ones probably think this is an Islamic country and we are the outsiders- not so daft when you remember that some 5m Americans thoiught that the UK had invaded Ulster during the troubles!
Add to that the fact that they have been brain-washed by even thicker "priests" , and , well its a simple as that.
Take a bunch of skin-heads to an Islamic country, tell them they are advancing the cause of white supremacy, give them banners appropriate to that,fill them up with drink and drugs, they won`t act any differently, well not until their heads hit the deck- notice the subtle difference in the treatment of such morons though!
Fred1new
- 12 Feb 2006 23:44
- 308 of 1327
mm I feel Iran has as much right as Israel, America, Britain, France etc. to have an "Atomic Weapon". I may not like it, I don't like any of the fore mention having nuclear bombs of any description or other.
I do not feel that the "west" has any more right to inspection of nuclear sites and research centres in Iran than Iran has to inspect similar sites in the aforementioned states, unless done by mutual agreement.
Suggest if you haven't read it Jon Snows' recent book "Shooting History" it is alarming what friendly nations get up to.
At the moment I think the Bush and Blair mentality and approaches to world problems are going to provoke more and more problems.
Kivver
- 13 Feb 2006 08:16
- 310 of 1327
i also see the british soldiers were covering themselves in glory, sick of hearing savages live all around the world apart from britian and the west.
hewittalan6
- 13 Feb 2006 08:31
- 311 of 1327
Personally, I'll reserve judgement on that one.
The last time the media was full of "evidence" of British troops committing tortuous acts it led to front page apologies and editors getting sacked. Many people who jumped on the "I told you so" bandwagon ended up with egg on their faces.
I cannot justify that sort of treatment and do not condond it, but I do understand it. We do not, yet know the facts of the case and the last time we had a case like it presented makes me somewhat cautious in passing judgement.
Even if (and I think it will) it proves to be true, a video starts at a point in time and finishes at one. While not excusing the actions, whatever preceded it may provide mitigation that we should not be too quick to condem, though equally it may not.
While many are suspicious of any pronouncement eminating from a pro-war politico, I hope you understand that I am equally suspicious of the pronouncements of the anti-war press.
Time will tell.
Alan
hewittalan6
- 13 Feb 2006 08:39
- 312 of 1327
PS.
Our MOD will investigate and if necessary punish. They will not accept behaviour like that.
Wonder what Saddam did about the guards responsible for the torturing of Bravo-2-Zero and the beating up and dragging through the streets of the captured pilots.
Perhaps we should judge not on individual acts, but on the nations response to those acts. It may give us a truer picture of what is acceptable to the regimes.