In a country that is in war where the military cannot handle the security (or be everywhere), civilians being armed is in my view understandable. Otherwise the positive aspects can be marginal to the negative one's: like starting from the fact that if people carry loaded guns that otherwise wouldn't use them and aren't basically interested in shooting, a lot of accidents will happen. People who can handle guns are fine, but usually it's those who have other problems end up being the one's that have accidents and use guns to harm themselves or others.It does not give the desire to create a life of fear, quite the opposite happens, it allows a sense of security that is yours to uphold, if you chose to do so. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I have to say that this long article is in my view basically propaganda-talk and not the greatest articles. Yeah, they (the ISIS folk) are murderous, intolerant religious zealots with great expectations of their abilities. I think everyone has gotten that. But if that's the only reason to go there and bomb people, it's very lousy reasoning.My limited understanding of ISIS was challenged by this article in the Atlantic: http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2015/03/what-isis-really-wants/384980/ . Graeme Wood has done some careful research and challenges some commonly held beliefs. — photographer
You can dismiss this that it's only a reaction because of IS, but I wouldn't be so sure. Because this is basically an internal war in the Muslim community. And thus to talk about the loonies on one side, how about the Shiite militias loyal to Iran in Iraq?A report from Amnesty International, released on the anniversary of Isis’s capture of Mosul, gave details of deadly attacks on Sunni Arab communities by Shia and Yazidi militias which Amnesty says are in revenge for Isis’s crimes in northern Iraq.
According to the report, Yazidi militia targeted Jiri and Sibaya, Sunni villages in the Sinjar region, on 25 January. They killed 21 of the inhabitants and looted and burnt homes. In a separate incident on 26 January, at least 46 Sunni men were killed in the village of Barwana, in Diyala province. In Jiri and Sibaya, approximately half of those murdered by the Yazidi were elderly, disabled, or children. One man told Amnesty his 66-year-old father was shot dead in his wheelchair.
Those alternative claimants to the territories are the state of Iraq and the state of Syria. So, you want to help Assad, the Shiite regime in Iraq and basically Iran? What about the Kurds? Are you going to give them land (and infuriate Turkey)?2. As the caliphate depends on holding territory, give maximum aid to alternative claimants to the territories they have a legitimate claim to and can control. — photographer
Because the Russians want to have a foothold in the Middle East and a customer for their weapons. Especially after Libya Russia won't likely start putting it's cards on some FSA and dump it's old ally. If the US had true statesmen at it's helm, this situation could be solved. At least Obama is meeting Putin. Yet to get a ceasefire in Syria will likely mean that Assad will stay.To be more on topic, now seems like a great time for the world's military powers to unite against a common enemy.
The US certainly has an interest. Russia lost over 200 in the airliner attack. France has now been attacked on home soil(twice). Japan has had journalists executed. the UK has had journalists/aid workers executed. Almost every country or people in the vicinity have been negatively effected by ISIS.
They're making an already complicated situation in Syria even more complicated, which is causing the refugee crisis to become even worse.
It would seem that the only reason Assad is being supported by Russia is because Russia wants to retain its leased naval base in Tartus. So why doesn't the US make a deal with Russia and the FSA to ensure they'll get to lease it for another decade so long as they help rid the world of ISIS? — ProbablyTrue
As long as certain versions of creationism willfully distort established scientific facts, then it might be seen as the duty of a state to protect its citizens from fraud, the same way it ought to do it for products, such as power balance bracelets, which make fraudulent claims. — Πετροκότσυφας
I'm talking about deliberate attempts to present creationism as a theory accepted by scientific consensus. — Πετροκότσυφας
Sorry, misspelling. Of course I meant minority (of 20% or so). With a Sunni majority Iraq would be a totally different place. I'll correct that.You seem to have some basic facts wrong ssu. The Sunnis are a minority in Iraq. — photographer
Let's put this in some historical perspective to really see what all this "emotion" is getting us... The backdrop is a lot of Western intervention in ME since around 1900 (not wanting to drag the Crusades into this) consisting of: direct and indirect support for oppressive regimes and attempts to overthrow other regimes we don't like, many conflicts in the area and harsh sanction against several nations in the area that are predominantly Muslim.
Considering the backdrop it's not entirely unlikely that some people from that region will blame the West and wish to harm it. This happens rather spectacularly on 9/11. Spectacularly but ineffectually, less than 3,000 US citizens are killed and two very large, symbolic buildings are destroyed. Two other planes crash killing their passengers but otherwise ineffectively. These men are not affiliated to any country. The hijackers are mostly from Saudi-Arabia, two are from United Arab Emirates, 1 from Egypt and 1 from Lebanon. Saudi-Arabia is a long standing "ally" from the US. They happen to be Muslim. Did they attack because they were Muslim and hate our freedoms or is it more complicated than that, given the backdrop?
Probably the latter but hey, we need a soundbite. An attack on our freedoms it is. Somehow the nuance gets lost that this was a fringe movement, Al-Qaeda not consisting of more than 1,000 persons. Suddenly Sikhs (not Muslims) must fear for their lives across the West because they wear turbans, along with Muslims in general. Such a wonderful job the governments and media did back then. Racism the likes of which we haven't seen since the Nazis runs rampant throughout Europe and the US (probably Canada and Australia too). All Muslims raus! Hooray!
As a result, the US picks up suspects outside of the rule of law, tortures them and gets fales intel that Iraq was involved. the US goes to the UN and doesn't get the support it needs and therefore goes at it outside of the legal framework with support from the UK. A grave blow to both the US legal system and an undermining of the shaky international legal order - although I'll grant not everyone believes the latter is a bad thing. Along the way though I noticed a steep decline in my privacy rights as an EU citizen, which is ten times worse in the US.
The US and the UK governments, despite majority opposition from their own constituency because of the common-sense that Iraq couldn't have anything to do with it, attack Iraq.
The biggest irony of course is that the invasion and occupation of Iraq has cost more US soldiers' lives than that were lost on 9/11. The economic cost is absolutely staggering in comparison to the material damage of 9/11. Oh yeah, before I forget, it also violently killed at least 100,000 Iraqis and due to the disintegration of health care and infrastructure, the knock-on effect is estimated at an additional 1,5 million deaths. But who cares about a bunch of sand niggers right? I mean, it's really far away!
So, please, can someone walk me through the rationale behind this all please because I'm not seeing it.
And if we're not careful, and listen to the stupid little people claiming it is all about Islam it indeed will be all about Islam eventually - as a self-fulfilling prophecy. If we continue to treat that religion as the cause of everything we perceive as evil then it will become true. Many people already treat Muslims as enemies; if enough people do that they will become the enemy. So my questions in the earlier posts are to show the other side of the coin.
[..] from where I'm standing it's extremists all around, the same hate, the same stupidity, the same lack of empathy.
If it is so easy to explain why the West gives so much attention to the Paris attacks, then surely it shouldn't be too hard to understand why the attacks happened? We are reaping what we sow, what we've been sowing for a century. At the personal level I can feel sorry for these victims but at a much larger scale I see the West as carrying the most blame.
Not only the century of oppression and intervention that created the conditions that gave rise to militant extremists, but in particular because it was the West that escalated what were attacks from a fringe movement into a full blown war against a country. That it so cavalierly decided on the fate of millions of people. If 9/11 was indiscriminate killing then we need a new word for the attack on Iraq because "more indiscriminate" doesn't exactly cover it. I could go on and on about how we've cajoled, threatened, intervened, attacked and manipulated in that region well before 9/11 and for the life of me, I cannot make a list of Muslims or ME-countries, whether individually or organized, having done the same thing. — Benkei
In your estimation:
Is it theoretically possible (I don't personally have the technique) to identify, infiltrate, and disrupt cells that plan and execute terrorist attacks?
[It seems to me the best bet, but is it possible?] — Bitter Crank
Is there an acceptable defense that can stand at the ready?
[This would probably require an onerous, burdensome, and inconvenient public deployment of a large military presence. The benefits might very well be nil.]
Is there an acceptable social strategy for France to become less of a target?
[France must not cease being France. No nation should redecorate in order to make terrorists happy.]
Is there an acceptable social strategy for France (or Japan or Luxembourg, or Russia, or Peru...) to become less of a target? Who in the world of Islam lends the most support to terrorism, directly and indirectly--Iran or Saudi Arabia? My guess is that it our ally and not our nemesis. Is it Wahhabism that underlies the most radical versions of Islam? (The Saudis certainly have the most money...)
In October 1985, specialist operators from the KGB's Group "A" (Alpha) were dispatched to Beirut, Lebanon. The Kremlin had been informed of the kidnapping of four Soviet diplomats by the militant group, the Islamic Liberation Organization (a radical offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood). It was believed that this was retaliation for the Soviet support of Syrian involvement in the Lebanese Civil War. However, by the time Alpha arrived, one of the hostages had already been killed. It is alleged that through a network of supporting KGB operatives, members of the task force identified each of the perpetrators involved in the crisis; once these had been identified, the team began to take relatives of these militants as hostages. Following the standard Soviet policy of not negotiating with terrorists, some of the hostages taken by Alpha were dismembered, and their body parts sent to the militants. The warning was clear: more would follow unless the remaining hostages were released immediately. The show of force worked, and for a period of 20 years no Soviet or Russian officials were taken captive, until the 2006 abduction and murder of four Russian embassy staff in Iraq.
However, the veracity of this story has been brought into question. Another version says that the release of the Soviet hostages was the result of extensive diplomatic negotiations with the spiritual leader of Hezbollah, Grand Ayatollah Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah, who appealed to King Hussein of Jordan, and the leaders of Libya and Iran, to use their influence on the kidnappers.
The terrorists did not target symbols of the French state, or of French militarism. They did not even target tourist spots. They targeted, rather, the areas and the places where mainly young, anti-racist, multiethnic Parisians hang out. The cafes, restaurants, bars and music venue that were attacked – Le Carillon, La Belle Equipe, Le Petit Cambodge, and the Jewish-owned Bataclan – are in the 10th and 11th arrondisements, areas that, though increasingly gentrified, remain ethnically and culturally mixed and still with a working class presence.
[...]
What the terrorists despised, what they tried to eliminate, were ordinary people, drinking, eating, laughing, mixing. That is what they hated – not so much the French state as the values of diversity and pluralism. — Kenan Malik
My limited understanding of ISIS was challenged by this article in the Atlantic: http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2015/03/what-isis-really-wants/384980/ . Graeme Wood has done some careful research and challenges some commonly held beliefs. After reading this I'm convinced that the West should:
1. Declare war on the caliphate and treat citizens who have dealings with it under the good old statutes of treason, etc..
2. As the caliphate depends on holding territory, give maximum aid to alternative claimants to the territories they have a legitimate claim to and can control.
3. Selectively destroy munitions, military infrastructure, administrative centers etc. as we would do with any conventional enemy.
4. Above all avoid any rash changes in foreign policy. I see no need to change our policies on Syria, for instance. Assad needs to go, the refugees need help. — photographer
I am sure there are leftists and liberals suggesting that this is the case, but, being a leftist myself, I would modify this statement to the following:But contrary to what is implied in these sentiments, ISIS are not heroic freedom-fighters struggling against oppression, pushed to violence by the military actions of the West — jamalrob
I don't think most leftists would not instantly denounce ISIS for what they represent, but certainly what happened in France is to be expected. At least someone that suffered in the Middle East as a result of Western imperialism would rally the people under some ideology and hammer a series of "let's fight back" propaganda. As Georges Sorel would say: all organizations with power have with it a mythological endpoint in which the people unite under, which provides the hope and purpose for those within the organization. ISIS's myth is the establishment of some bullshit caliphate, and in creating this myth also designed it with anti-Western imperialism embedded into it.ISIS are a group of Islamo-fascists that gained power as a result of Western imperialism who provided an answer to questions that arose in the minds of locals that suffered from Western imperialism.
Well, in fact similar kind of methods of violence that Alpha used against terrorists kept the Soviet system afloat in Russia and it's satellite states until 1989-1992. (Actually I remember hearing this story in the late 1980's of the no-nonsense attitude of the Soviets.)I post this story as a challenge, since it posits a way of dealing with terrorism most of us would find brutal and savage, and against all notions of human rights. Those of you who demand a 'response' might want to start with this one, since it is the most extreme I have heard. — coolazice
you are so quick to try to place a complete moral blame on Muslims and would like to frame ISIS as some sort of group that just came to be in a vacuum because they hate laughter and puppy dogs. — discoii
But remember that the way Americans interventionism to basically everywhere is sold to the American public through fear.Internally, politicians and media have to reevaluate how they address this problem. It has to move away from an "us" versus "them" and away from a military interpretation of this conflict. — Benkei
(Taken directly from your post).What the terrorists despised, what they tried to eliminate, were ordinary people, drinking, eating, laughing, mixing. That is what they hated – not so much the French state as the values of diversity and pluralism.
Yes, that article was an education for me too. It casts doubt on the oft-heard opinion, expressed already in this thread, that military action is useless because the ISIS fighters will just melt away into obscurity for a while to bide their time, i.e. that ISIS is just like al-Qaeda. If Wood is right, everything hinges on their holding of territory. And that is something that can be taken from them. — jamalrob
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