tzor wrote:saxitoxin wrote:I'm interested to hear more specifics of exactly what he was wearing. If he was attired in a uniform of some type, even a makeshift one, had declared his allegiance to a de facto foreign state which Canada is currently attacking, and confined his attacks to Canadian army targets, on what basis is he being described as a terrorist instead of a soldier engaged in a military operation?
Are you suggesting that IS(IDGASWTC) has formally "invaded" Canada with a military expedition of one? Because, if this is the case, Canada, being a country just invaded has the right to bomb that region
you got the attack/counter-attack thing right, just not in the correct order
Oct 8:
the Canadian parliament has approved sending up to six CF-18 fighter aircraft to participate in airstrikes in Iraq against ISOct 22: IS commando strike on Canadian military targets and regime leadership compound (Centre Block)
tzor wrote:into the stone age
considering the dilapidated state of the RCAF, the most Canada can shoot for is bombing Iraq into the Age of Disco
tzor wrote:Merely wearing a uniform does not switch a person from unlawful combatant to lawful one. One must be an actual member of the armed forces of the party to the conflict, and I don't think he was a proper member of IS military. Especially since there is no formal declaration of war between IS and Canada.
No, that's incorrect. By this logic, Canadian soldiers are themselves unlawful combatants since IS hasn't declared war on Canada either.
You seem to be under the misperception that there is a special custom by which war occurs under conditions and at times and places determined by the English-speaking belligerent. When a nation makes a choice to war (declared or not), as Canada has done, it is customary it will be subject to violent and relentless attacks against its territory until it either prevails, surrenders, or is wiped out of existence. The west is so accustomed to safely* warring on foreign territory it has forgotten this fact.
The current state of the CF leaves Canada in no position to face this reality. Those six decrepit old CF-18s Canada is sending to Iraq won't make a lick of difference to the USAF; they're a political prop, not some useful contribution. And the Canadian government just learned that token contributions for the sake of a few right-wing votes don't come without risk. Harper needs to decide what's more important to him - winning a by-election in Buttfuck, Manitoba, or making sure the Governor-General keeps his head attached to his torso.
* edit - except for the ones doing the fighting