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Releasing the photos of the Hussein boys
Shortly after the war started, Al Jazeera showed some pictures of some dead American soldiers on TV. We called them to task on it, saying it was against Geneva Conventions to do so. Pretty much the same thing happened after the gruesome deaths of those soldiers in Somalia.
So how is this any different? Aren't we setting a bad precedent by showing dead enemies all over TV? I realize it is necessary to prove to the Iraqis that these dudes are history, but surely there could be a better way? |
I think the primary difference is, when our guys died, no one doubted (contested?) it.
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Didn't the Iraqi citizens say that they wouldn't believe it unless they saw it for themselves?
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They were not soldiers in combat.
They were John Dillinger coming out of the theater. And their cousin was the lady in red.;) |
Intent is a part of law, and it's easy to make the case that this was the right thing to do from the standpoint of intent.
Frankly I didn't quite get the problem with showing the US POWs. Sure it's a war crime to humiliate, but humiliation is nothing, it's more important that they not face torture or death. And frankly, although I avoided the Daniel Pearl tape and don't care for things like Faces of Death, I can watch those two assholes dead all day and love it. If there was a "Uday and Qusay Dead" 24 hour cable channel, I would have it on right now. Seeing the videos of them while they were alive is far more gross and offensive. |
Weird situation all around...
I understand why the US did it. They saw immediate skepticism and wanted to prove to the Iraqis that Odai and Qusai (or however the hell you want to spell their names) were dead. I don't mind seeing the pictures of dead people...but given the Geneva Convention, it shouldn't have been done in this case. But the Bush administration will probably mention something about "illegal combatants," tell us that the discussion is over (like your mom or dad might have done to you back in the day), and then it disappears. The US has pretty much proved that it will do what it has to do. The Bush administration said they would come over and remove Saddam...and voila! (more or less) But the US seems to be simply unbelievable...untrustable...for a combination of reasons. Bottom line: No win situation for the US...they should have just said, "They're dead, now shut the fuck up before we send your civilization back 25,000 more years." :) |
Our Gumint showed Iraq the pictures for credability reasons .
The press showed us the pictures for monetary reasons. Who's the bigger culprit?;) |
The thing that pisses me off most is that before the photos had been released, and this was all unconfirmed, all the news organizations were saying things like, "We've heard reports that Uday and Qusay may be dead."
MAY be dead? MAY??? What the fuck? Since when is guesswork news? Is there something wrong with waiting for confirmation before you run with a story? I mean, really, why the hell don't I just read the inquirer? |
That's The National Enquirer, not to be confused with The Philadelphia Inquirer.
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Juju, it's the old "breaking story, film at 11" game. If they don't say something, they'll be remembered as the one that didn't.
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In the grocery store is a composite Time-Life book of pictures from the war. In the distance, a US convoy moves down a road. In the foreground a dead Iraqi soldier, violently killed, with a tortured expression on his face, and it quite clear who this man was. Geneva violation?
Been waiting for weeks for someone, anyone, in any forum, to complain about this Geneva Convention violation. Most certainly not the George Jr administration since human rights only need be honored upon Americans. But what surprised me is the numbers of us - we - people who would complain about dead Americans from an ambushed convoy, but not complain about same picture of a dead Iraqi soldier. This, my friends, is the same emotion that creates racism. The double standard. That Iraqi soldier deserved the same complaining from those who complained that Al Jezzera showed dead American bodies. Double standards that make me embarrased of some of our peers. Lets see the dead bodies in car accidents complete with the facts why that body was killed, in gruesome detail - so we learn. And shoot those who watch only for the thrill OR who are appalled at the carnage. They are both an enemy of truth because they are emotional. I still want to see those dead American bodies from that ambush. That was the Best Evidence. Evidence desired even more as we discover how the event was twisted into lies in Washington. And I want to see the Hussein Bros. so that lies by our administration would be more difficult. Stop the emotional foolishness and lets see the facts - blunt and bloody. For that matter, I am not so sure that the US military attack on Al Jazzera in Baghdad was an accident - because the facts are not being exposed in bloody detail. But American not complaining about that dead Iraqi soldier in that Time-Life coffee table book - demonstrates how many American have a double standard - are patriotic Americans only when it is convenient. |
But what surprised me is the numbers of us - we - people who would complain about dead Americans from an ambushed convoy, but not complain about same picture of a dead Iraqi soldier.
In a single sentence, you've summarized the emotional and intellectual disconnect that will lose the the 2004 election for the persistently anti-war Democrats. |
TW, I was pissed about the pictures of the dead Americans, not because they showed them but that the wounds looked like they had been executed. You know, single hole in the middle of the forehead.
I was glad to see the live ones on TV. One, because it showed they were alive. Two, because I figured, from the same pictures, the Gumint could tell even more. |
But pointedly to the topic, the original Baghdad blogger Salam Pax puts it in perspective:
http://dearraed.blogspot.com/2003_07...04124855867747 He wrote this before the photos and videos were released: Quote:
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And the other side, from Afghanistan via Instapundit.
http://www.instapundit.com/archives/010614.php Quote:
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We live in a society which accepts and worships violence. We have a nation full of folks who don't want to upset the economic applecart, assuming or wishing that our leaders know whats best. The defense sector is about the last of American manufacturing so nobody wants to kill that off. Our economic house of cards rests on violence and oil, so who wants it to collapse? The Bush wars are not about self defense but rather global hegemony and corporate capitalism, which to me isn't an acceptable use of violence. Unfortunately, to America this violence is necessary to feed and clothe us. This is our culture of death. |
I agree that the images had to be shown to the Iraqis. But the manner in which it was done seems a bit tacky. I agree with that Pax guy -- why not just release the photos to Al Jazeera?
But Griff, I think you're projecting when you say that TV has desensitized us. I remember that photo that tw mentions in the Time book (at least I think it's the same one). A farmer was shot because he ran through a checkpoint. This was a no-win situation. Believe me, not being able to tell friend from enemy is a horrible burden for these young soldiers. I remember feeling overwhelming sympathy for that man and his family. No amount of gruesome pictures on TV or in a magazine will take away my appreciation of basic human rights, and my desire to protect them. |
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Thats why I'd never call for censorship. These images can be quite valuable if we can keep in mind that we're talking about people. The problem I see is among the folks vsp is trying to understand over on the scratch two dummycrats thread. Folks that are not committed to educated voting are the ones I worry about not keeping their perspective. |
The Bush wars are not about self defense but rather global hegemony and corporate capitalism, which to me isn't an acceptable use of violence. Unfortunately, to America this violence is necessary to feed and clothe us. This is our culture of death.
No, this is YOUR culture of death, because everything you've said is based on YOUR take on the events and politics and so forth. |
Ehh, I don't get it. Is that a fancy way of saying it's only his opinion? 'Cause if not, how can one man have a culture?
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Like this?
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I am trying to reach to my liberal side and see the other point of view and look at the Clinton scandals, in particular the body count, and compare them to the current administration. I have to give Bush some latitude for action related to 9/11, and I'll throw in Afganistan as possibly justified. I'm still not comfortable with absolutes such as 'cuture of death', but I do see some of what the user is saying. Many people think the phrase 'military-industrial complex' was invented by hippies, but it can be found in a speech by Dwight Eisenhower. The reality is that with the collapse of the Soviet Union, which is being credited to Ronald Reagan since it happened on his watch, we were supposed to be enjoying a 'peace dividend' as we brought our military deployments down from Cold War levels to one capable of handling regional conflicts. We were supposed to begin dismantling the 'MI complex' and move to a peace economy. Afghanistan did not do much to change this. The country in effect had no organized army and a paper-mache government. The taliban were internationally recognized assholes who were definitely shielding terrorists responsible for 9/11. We had the credibility to take them on and noone complained. The country had no real wealth, so motives were clear and everyone could share in the cleanup without being accused of trying to engineer a takeover for private gain. The Bush adminstration messed up with Iraq. Economically, politically, and militarily, it is a disaster. I say it is a military disaster in that we have to commit about 150k troops for the long term with no international backup at a time when our economy is already weak. We can't 'cash in' because our credibility is already razor-thin and if we make any sweetheart deals we'll be accused of 'carpetbagging'. Having an oilman president and vice-president with rich oilman friends making large campaign contributions to an adminstration which invaded an oil-rich country pretty much has us looking less like the Lone Ranger and more like one of the black hats in a bad Western. Morally speaking, I'm not going to talk about civilian deaths or the motivation behind the war, which have already spawned any number of conspiracy theories. All I can say is that the Bush adminstration is using 9/11 to recover and exceed levels of presidential privilege and authority which were rightly limited after the Nixon debacle and which even Clinton could not sucessfully invoke. No secret can be kept forever, and my prediction is that Bush and friends are going to have two choices. Either come clean in a Republican (maybe a GW or Jeb Bush adminstration) and get a pardon, or wait for the story to come out in a Democratic adminstration. The good news for them is that if Bush is in his second term he can do almost anything he wants, especially since Karl Rove and company have paved the way for an elected king. Cheney is not going to run for office and he doesn't owe anything to any Republican candidate other than his brother so he can issue any pardons or executive orders he wants with no real fallout to anyone he really cares about. Thats what really scares me. If it does turn out that the Iraq invasion was really being planned pre-9/11 or even immediately after, and it can be shown that Bush had no intention of allowing a peaceful solution, then the 'culture of death' charge has a much firmer foundation and the president fully deserves to stand in a dock in the Hague and offer explanations, assuming of course that we do not 'take care of our own' mess and drop him in Leavenworth. Of course, presidents deserve and get a very high burden of proof. Reagan proved this when he slid out from under Iran/Contra. But it is not absolute, and the stonewalling the Bush adminstration has been pulling makes me and a lot of other people wonder what is behind the stone wall? For now. however, the 'culture of death' charge would probably not stick in a court of law, unless you want to talk about indigenous populations. If so, then all I can say is that what happened in America was not unique and was a reflection of the brutality of the world at that time. |
Bread and Circuses...
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Rich, what's worse -- invading Iraq WITH congressional authority, or tossing missiles into Iraq WITHOUT it, starting on the first day of the Monica hearings and ending on the last day?*
Was anyone complaining about 70,000 troops in stable Germany during the 90s, post cold-war? Anyone? Was a stable, Democratic Germany a boon to the world and to the US? Would a stable, Democratic Iraq be an even greater boon? There is one thing that the current administration is definitely stonewalling and lying about: Saudi Arabia. Everything else is just bias and spin. The 16 words? A ridiculous media event. They're jumping on it because it's easy and fun, but it's really a big ball of nothing. Hey, to take this to the other thread, I would advise Lieberman to ask leading questions about Saudi Arabia. Why are they our buddies? Why do we treat them with such kid gloves? THIS is where the oilman connection is, not Iraq. Breaching the topic would show the country that a Democratic candidate has a concept of how to coach the offense in the War on Terror. And Lieberman definitely gets it. * on this question: it's a good bet that 9/11 happened because bin Laden and his money men in Saudi Arabia believed that the US had become a paper tiger, unwilling to risk the deaths of US troops in foreign actions. The non-reaction to everything including the 1993 WTC attempt (connected to Iraq btw), the USS Cole, Somalia, etc. showed that the US was weak and political and scared of actually taking it to the enemy. The fact that we've shown, not as a government or President but as a PEOPLE, that we're completely unwilling to accept having the violence extended to our own shores, is the reason why all of the terrorism since then has taken place elsewhere. |
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Robert Baer wrote a new book that says we will have to attack Saudi Arabia. That is the National Inquirer or Daily News summary. At face value it makes no sense. However in interviews, that is only a worst case bottom line. Baer notes a serious internal political instability in Saudia Arabia created, in part, by inferior leadership. Who might be the next Khomeni of Sudia Arabia? Baer is not someone to ignore. If this was from someone with wild ass proposals (ie. Curtis LeMay, Oliver North, Project for a New American Century), then I would not even be mentioning this. Intend to read his book because he has such strong credentials and too much personal experience; even wandering among the warring parties of Lebanon while the USS New Jersey was shelling those people. If Robert Baer says there is serious discontent in Saudia Arabia, then I will listen. History is full of such people who actually come from where reality happens, who told us what would occur, and yet were ignored by people with too much power and no education (ie George Jr). David Halbersham told us what would happen in VietNam before we even committed to the war. Too many American intelligence official with insider experience warned about Kuwait and were ignored (which is why George Sr made a special trip in 1991 to the CIA to apologize). Again, this is the problem. A smart America stays out of internal politics until a smoking gun makes interference necessary. Just another reason why we should, instead, be addressing our global warming problems rather than advocating more consumption. Currently one of the world's top three in oil and natural gas production is also a net world importer. We waste that much making interference in internal Saudia Arabian politics almost a forgone conclusion. Our current leaders advocate brute force solutions rather than admit to and address the real problem. The worst case alternative: the ill informed with too much political rhetoric, like George Jr administration, solve problems by conducting war without any declaration - VietNam, Somolia, Lebanon. Already they are trying to make the US the world's policeman in a world full of domestic disputes and violence. How to avoid a smoking gun scenario. Let people inside solve their problems and encourage the intelligent thinkers to make government work for the little people - not make the people work for the government. We create the quagmire called VietNam because extremist rhetoric could not understand that N VietNam could have been an American ally. Fundamental to intelligent decision making is the Powell doctrine - which our current adminstration is shredding. Will we also make enemies of Saudia Arabia as we did and still do to Iran? If using the intelligence of this administration, then we just may have to invade Saudia Arabia. |
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We'd never let an international court touch one of our own for any reason. Its hard enough keeping an eye on everyones political agenda here, without trying to decipher the intent of a politically motivated international tribunal. |
The Saudi's are coming to Washington tomorrow, to protest the suggestion of their involvement with 9/11/01, to Bush.
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