saxitoxin wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:The protesters were running around the compound just looking for Americans, they just wanted to find an American so they could catch one."
AMERICON - Gotta catch 'em all!

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saxitoxin wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:The protesters were running around the compound just looking for Americans, they just wanted to find an American so they could catch one."
AMERICON - Gotta catch 'em all!
John Adams wrote:I have come to the conclusion that one useless man is called a disgrace, that two are called a law firm, and that three or more become a Congress! And by God I have had this Congress!
Woodruff wrote:Night Strike wrote:Congratulations America for supporting the "peaceful" Arab Spring (and the rebels in Libya)
So you don't believe that the people of a nation should be able to form their own government? You're ready for the United Nations to tell America what kind of government we can have, are you?
thegreekdog wrote:Woodruff wrote:Night Strike wrote:Congratulations America for supporting the "peaceful" Arab Spring (and the rebels in Libya)
So you don't believe that the people of a nation should be able to form their own government? You're ready for the United Nations to tell America what kind of government we can have, are you?
Actually, I think he's saying that we shouldn't have gotten involved.
fadedpsychosis wrote:actually patches, my comment wasn't aimed strictly at the people in Libya... there are plenty of fanatics in the US that are just as high on my list (starting with the guy who made the damn movie). And honestly I freaking WORK for NATO and I wasn't terribly sanguine about what we did. You'd think with what happened in Afghanistan the 1st time we'd have learned our lesson about arming rebels to take out the govt. but apparently not...
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
thegreekdog wrote:Woodruff wrote:Night Strike wrote:Congratulations America for supporting the "peaceful" Arab Spring (and the rebels in Libya)
So you don't believe that the people of a nation should be able to form their own government? You're ready for the United Nations to tell America what kind of government we can have, are you?
Actually, I think he's saying that we shouldn't have gotten involved. Which is equally applicable to, I don't know, fucking Iraq.
Without knowing too much about foreign policy, I support the president's non-interventionist policies with respect to these two incidents as well as his apparenty denial of a meeting with any Israeli officials.
BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Woodruff wrote:Night Strike wrote:Congratulations America for supporting the "peaceful" Arab Spring (and the rebels in Libya)
So you don't believe that the people of a nation should be able to form their own government? You're ready for the United Nations to tell America what kind of government we can have, are you?
Actually, I think he's saying that we shouldn't have gotten involved. Which is equally applicable to, I don't know, fucking Iraq.
Without knowing too much about foreign policy, I support the president's non-interventionist policies with respect to these two incidents as well as his apparenty denial of a meeting with any Israeli officials.
That surprised me.
Of course, a meeting in person could be substituted for a phone call, or a quick Txt:
Netanyahu: yo, Osama. let get these guys.
Obama: Osama?
Netanyahu: sorry, Obama, damn that auto-correct.
Obama: yeah sure, i'm definitely not holding meeting with you
thegreekdog wrote: I would expect a strong response given that A FUCKING AMBASSADOR WAS KILLED!!! But, nationalism and anger aside, who knows?
thegreekdog wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Woodruff wrote:Night Strike wrote:Congratulations America for supporting the "peaceful" Arab Spring (and the rebels in Libya)
So you don't believe that the people of a nation should be able to form their own government? You're ready for the United Nations to tell America what kind of government we can have, are you?
Actually, I think he's saying that we shouldn't have gotten involved. Which is equally applicable to, I don't know, fucking Iraq.
Without knowing too much about foreign policy, I support the president's non-interventionist policies with respect to these two incidents as well as his apparenty denial of a meeting with any Israeli officials.
That surprised me.
Of course, a meeting in person could be substituted for a phone call, or a quick Txt:
Netanyahu: yo, Osama. let get these guys.
Obama: Osama?
Netanyahu: sorry, Obama, damn that auto-correct.
Obama: yeah sure, i'm definitely not holding meeting with you
I was being marginally sarcastic. Drudge is screaming about how Obama won't meet with Netanyahu. I suspect the administration doesn't really know what to do yet and will make a decision today or tomorrow. I would expect a strong response given that A FUCKING AMBASSADOR WAS KILLED!!! But, nationalism and anger aside, who knows?
patches70 wrote:thegreekdog wrote: I would expect a strong response given that A FUCKING AMBASSADOR WAS KILLED!!! But, nationalism and anger aside, who knows?
I suspect Obama would send a strongly worded letter to whomever is charge of whatever particular province.
Alexander the Great would send ambassador's into cities he was approaching. The terms were always pretty much the same, lay down your arms, don't resist, swear loyalty and pay tribute, or something to that effect. The smart rulers of said cities would comply.
One city, however, made the mistake of killing Alexander's ambassador. Alexander marched upon the city, surrounded it and got ready to raze it. The leaders saw the error of their ways and attempted to surrender. Alexander, not surprisingly, told them they had their chance and proceeded to completely destroy the city, kill the entire population and sowed the ground with salt so nothing would grow.
No one else ever killed another of Alexander's ambassadors.....
Baron Von PWN wrote:
I'm not sure what an appropriate response would be. What do you do when terrorists manage to kill your ambassador? I suspect this is what it was rather than an angry mob. I know the USA just deployed some commando's to the area. So presumably they have the job of getting payback.
The US has committed to supporting the Libyan pseudo government, so they can't exactly flip shit at them for a security failure. That would just make the USA look ridiculous as well as seemingly completely counter productive to their helping the rebels win in the first place.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Although the film may have served as a tipping point, what are the fundamental causes of directing violence toward the US?
If it's radical Islam, then why don't they attack other countries' consulates whenever a provocative film is produced within whatever nations' borders?
BigBallinStalin wrote:@ TGD and maybe BVP
Yeah, "who knows" is correct.
That policy process is not transparent, which is understandable. And, it can only be gleaned from rhetoric and observable actions... which is problematic.
Let's make predictions!
Urged on by these assaults on US embassies, the US expands its counter-terrorism/insurgency policies by "asking" the Libyan and Egyptian governments if they would like some "assistance" in matters of national security. As in Columbia, the US will exports its advisers, trainers, weaponry, and elite soldiers to help the foreign government consolidate its control against those evil rebels--not the good rebels, just the ones which the US doesn't like and maybe gave weapons too, but lol whatever!
aad0906 wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:Although the film may have served as a tipping point, what are the fundamental causes of directing violence toward the US?
If it's radical Islam, then why don't they attack other countries' consulates whenever a provocative film is produced within whatever nations' borders?
They have a term for it. It's called Blowback. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=blt9_hy1di4
Baron Von PWN wrote:I'm not sure what an appropriate response would be. What do you do when terrorists manage to kill your ambassador?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Baron Von PWN wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:@ TGD and maybe BVP
Yeah, "who knows" is correct.
That policy process is not transparent, which is understandable. And, it can only be gleaned from rhetoric and observable actions... which is problematic.
Let's make predictions!
Urged on by these assaults on US embassies, the US expands its counter-terrorism/insurgency policies by "asking" the Libyan and Egyptian governments if they would like some "assistance" in matters of national security. As in Columbia, the US will exports its advisers, trainers, weaponry, and elite soldiers to help the foreign government consolidate its control against those evil rebels--not the good rebels, just the ones which the US doesn't like and maybe gave weapons too, but lol whatever!
This is what I would expect to be the reaction from the USA, and would be the correct response. It's entirely possible this was an alqeda operation. We know they've been operating in the area. See their conquest of half of Mali with captured Libyan weapons. http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news ... -dine-coup.
patches70 wrote:Obama is no Alexander the Great.....
saxitoxin wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:I'm not sure what an appropriate response would be. What do you do when terrorists manage to kill your ambassador?
Or they kill your ambassador with grenades you gave them?
This is like living next to a known serial killer. Then, one day, you invite him over to babysit your 16 year old daughter while you go on a vacay. Oh, and before you leave, you give him a duffel bag filled with rope, a gag, and an assortment of knives. Who's really at fault for what happens next?
USA Options#1 - do nothing; send a new ambassador from the pool
#2 - switch sides to the pro-Qadaffi secular Green Resistance you just bombed into smithereens and attack the "NTC" regime
BigBallinStalin wrote:@ TGD and maybe BVP
Yeah, "who knows" is correct.
That policy process is not transparent, which is understandable. And, it can only be gleaned from rhetoric and observable actions... which is problematic.
Let's make predictions!
Urged on by these assaults on US embassies, the US expands its counter-terrorism/insurgency policies by "asking" the Libyan and Egyptian governments if they would like some "assistance" in matters of national security. As in Columbia, the US will exports its advisers, trainers, weaponry, and elite soldiers to help the foreign government consolidate its control against those evil rebels--not the good rebels, just the ones which the US doesn't like and maybe gave weapons too, but lol whatever!
BigBallinStalin wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:I'm not sure what an appropriate response would be. What do you do when terrorists manage to kill your ambassador?
Or they kill your ambassador with grenades you gave them?
This is like living next to a known serial killer. Then, one day, you invite him over to babysit your 16 year old daughter while you go on a vacay. Oh, and before you leave, you give him a duffel bag filled with rope, a gag, and an assortment of knives. Who's really at fault for what happens next?
USA Options#1 - do nothing; send a new ambassador from the pool
#2 - switch sides to the pro-Qadaffi secular Green Resistance you just bombed into smithereens and attack the "NTC" regime
I do not possess an intricate breakdown of all the major players in Libya, but I think we can both agree that there are more options than the pro-Qadaffi group and the homogenous blob of "NTC."
If the US can determine which group is responsible, and if they have the reliable information on that group's location, then they can---oh sorry, with the help of NTC/Benghazi--use a "divide and conquer" policy, by playing local groups against the disliked group.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Just eight months ago, Mali was held up as a model of democracy in Africa. Today, it is practically a failed state with much of the north governed by a consortium of militant groups sympathetic to Al Qaeda.
In the May 2007 presidential elections Toure was returned to office with 68% of the vote. While President Toure was affiliated with no official party, he gained the backing of numerous groups in civil society and 22 minor parties organized under the banner of the Alliance for Democracy and Progress. The opposition parties argued that the voters’ list used in this election favored the incumbent and accused Toure’s supporters of using state assets to fund his election campaign. While foreign observers declared the election to be mostly fair, the opposition parties formally asked the Constitutional Court to annul the results.
Political competition in Mali is strongly influenced by ethnic divisions (50% Mande, 17% Peul, 12% Voltaic, 10% Moor and Tuareg). In 1991, Tuareg groups formed a coalition named the Azawad Liberation Front and, despite government efforts for a peaceful settlement, continued rebel military activities until 1996. By 1999, the government had completed the process of integrating elements of former Tuareg rebel forces into its armed forces, however, Tuareg economic and political grievances continued to go unresolved. In May 2006 Tuareg rebels looted weapons in the town of Kidal, raising fears of a new rebellion. In response, the government signed an Algerian-brokered peace deal. Under the deal, the Tuaregs dropped demands for greater regional autonomy in exchange for a poverty reduction program. The government has promised to do more to develop Mali’s northern desert regions, where the Tuaregs live.
The shocking turn of events worries security officials in the United States, which has been chasing Al Qaeda all over Asia, the Middle East and the Gulf for more than a decade.
Mali’s descent from democracy began in March when soldiers, unhappy with the amount of government resources given to them to fight a band of nomadic Tuareg rebels in the north, gave up that fight and instead staged a coup in Bamako, Mali’s capital.
More from GlobalPost: In-depth series: Al Qaeda in Africa
Seizing the opportunity, and buoyed by weapons and fighters from Libya, the Tuareg rebels swiftly took Mali’s north from the disintegrating Malian army. The three main northern cities fell within 48 hours after the coup.
The Tuaregs, however, had been infiltrated by foreign terrorist organizations, which gave rise to something tantamount to an Al Qaeda-controlled area the size of France in Mali's north. The Tuareg watched their rebellion slip away as Al Qaeda evicted them from their last stronghold, Assongo, in mid-July.
The first to appear was Ansar Dine, which floated its black flag over Timbuktu and declared its own version of Sharia law. It is led by a well-known Tuareg leader, who had converted to Al Qaeda's ideology.
Mali’s north belongs now to two groups aligned with Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, which operates primarily in Algeria but coordinates with both Al Shabaab in Somalia and Boko Haram in Nigeria.
Days before Ham’s statement, the US State Department named Boko Haram’s assumed leader, Abubakar Shekau, and two other associates, “Specially Designated Global Terrorists.” But unlike Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, the United States has yet to deem Boko Haram a “Foreign Terrorist Organization.”
qwert wrote:I just wonder who are going to be blame now when Quadafy are killed and Government troops not exist anymore?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:Baron Von PWN wrote:I'm not sure what an appropriate response would be. What do you do when terrorists manage to kill your ambassador?
Or they kill your ambassador with grenades you gave them?
This is like living next to a known serial killer. Then, one day, you invite him over to babysit your 16 year old daughter while you go on a vacay. Oh, and before you leave, you give him a duffel bag filled with rope, a gag, and an assortment of knives. Who's really at fault for what happens next?
USA Options#1 - do nothing; send a new ambassador from the pool
#2 - switch sides to the pro-Qadaffi secular Green Resistance you just bombed into smithereens and attack the "NTC" regime
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