Originally posted by Serial_Apologist
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Damascus gas attack - who did it and how will the west spin it ?
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by ahinton View PostWell, first of all, I wouldn't go walking down there in the first place. Then again I might just use a pepper spray on him; you know, chemical weapons and all that. More seriously, however, at least I would know who was doing the hitting. That said, what happens between two adults in a city high street is hardly to be considered on the same level as a government taking its taxpayer funded armed forces - in possible disregard for the majority wish of its electorate - en masse into another country to attempt to deal with something that it has not started and when it has not itself been the victim of aggression on the part of that country.
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by ahinton View Post.....
....; for that, RM deserves all due credit.
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by zoomy View PostGenocide has now entered the western lexicon on syria.
Or has this entire thread been simply a smoking gun instigated by you - a trap into which the usual suspects have fallen ?
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostAh well, the 'cop-out' reply was to be expected. I did have a little bet with myself that this would be the case. Maybe you should continue to sit back comfortably,
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostI thank you for that. If you look at the exact wording of the OP and confirmed by subsequent posts by the OP you will see that, in fact, he isn't asking questions but stating (and without any evidence to back up the statement) that it was not Assad's forces but the rebels.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI noted from it that, whilst the notion of one's enemy's enemy being one's friend is dangerous enough, it becomes increasingly so when it is ever more difficult even to identify with certainty who one's enemy's enemy is.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostDon't be daft "Hinton" (is that "Hinton Major" ? or "Minor" or even "Hexatonic" ? ......... is it just me or is calling people by their surnames just bloody rude ?) it's obvious who the goodies and baddies are........ now stop wingeing and join Team America you know it can't possibly go wrong !
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The discussion, with events, might move on. The UN has said: "It's the biggest displacement crisis of all time." Two million refugees have fled Syria, most to Lebanon, the smallest neighbour and least able to cope. This is surely where the international humanitarian community can - and will - step in.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostDon't be daft "Hinton" (is that "Hinton Major" ? or "Minor" or even "Hexatonic" ? .........
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Postis it just me or is calling people by their surnames just bloody rude ?)
Originally posted by MrGongGong View Postit's obvious who the goodies and baddies are........ now stop wingeing and join Team America you know it can't possibly go wrong !
That said, there's plenty of evidence around to suggest that "Team America" is as wary of full scale military intervention in Syria as "Team GB" is...
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe discussion, with events, might move on. The UN has said: "It's the biggest displacement crisis of all time." Two million refugees have fled Syria, most to Lebanon, the smallest neighbour and least able to cope. This is surely where the international humanitarian community can - and will - step in.Last edited by ahinton; 03-09-13, 10:56.
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I wonder whether many would agree that, rather than being diminished by last week's Parliamentary vote, as some have claimed, in the light of developments in other countries the UK and its Parliament have in fact underlined their status as a functioning democracy which leads. Of course I know that some on these boards would rather gnaw through their arms than say anything positive about the UK or other 'Western' 'liberal' 'democracies'. Also that 'we' will sometimes tie our own hands when dealing with those states where politicians have no such constraints in their often-cynical foreign policy gaming. But perhaps it is a price worth paying.
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Originally posted by JimD View PostI wonder whether many would agree that, rather than being diminished by last week's Parliamentary vote, as some have claimed, the UK and its Parliament have in fact underlined their status as a functioning democracy. Of course I know that some on these boards would rather gnaw through their arm than say anything positive about the UK or other 'Western' 'liberal' 'democracies'. Also that 'we' will sometimes tie our own hands when dealing with those states where politicians have no such constraints in their often-cynical foreign policy gaming. But perhaps it is a price worth paying.
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Originally posted by JimD View PostI wonder whether many would agree that, rather than being diminished by last week's Parliamentary vote, as some have claimed, in the light of developments in other countries the UK and its Parliament have in fact underlined their status as a functioning democracy which leads. Of course I know that some on these boards would rather gnaw through their arms than say anything positive about the UK or other 'Western' 'liberal' 'democracies'.
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