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To
30/10/2004 19:23:05
General information
Forum:
Politics
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00952285
Message ID:
00956210
Views:
32
Thanks Charles, you have laid down a wonderful essay on how these forces of evil are really the same. I think George Satayana said, "Those who fail to learn the lessons of history are doomed to repeat it's mistakes." Evil, left alone won't just go away, it grows like a cancer.

Viva Senor Bush!


>
>But the sanctions leaked. Saddam had money. Lots and lots of money. North Korea has nukes, and there may be other coming available on the market. Saddam did not have to develop a bomb. He had the money to buy one. And he certainly had the mindset to use one - or to protect himself with the threat to use one.
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>The world consoled itself in 1936 that Germany would never be a problem because of the restrictions imposed by the Versailles treaty. ( well that and the "international community" having outlawed war with the Kellog-Briand pact. ) Churchill was considered a little crazy for being so obsessive about the idea that Germany was a threatening storm.
>
>The point Perle and Wolfowitz were making was that like Hitler or Stalin Saddam was a danger because of who he was and the power ( money ) at his disposal. The difference was that while France folded like a cheap card table in 1939-40, Israel would have responded a bit more robustly.
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>We won't know, of course, whether they were right or wrong and I dare say if Churchill had been PM in 1936 and stood up to Hitler it would probably have been considered crazy talk by 1945 to say that if Germany had been allowed to finish rearming 6 million Jews would have been killed, but there would have been a lot of people wondering if the two years of war to take out the Nazi regime and all the suffering that had cause was worth it.
>
>Saddam was playing the 'international community'. He was going to get out of the box. Somebody was going to stop him. It was a question of who and when. Ugly as this whole thing has been, and mistaken as some of the tactical decision were, it still may have been the historical branch with the least cost in human misery in the long run.
>
>
John Harvey
Shelbynet.com

"I'm addicted to placebos. I could quit, but it wouldn't matter." Stephen Wright
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