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Je n'arrive pas à me l'expliquer, ok mentir et cacher la vérité est dur voir impossible, mais j'ai jamais vu de propagande aussi mauvaise. Du calendrier arabe avec el famosos les noms des gardes du rhamas noté dessus (les gars devaient s'appeller mecredi, samedi ou dimanche) à dire que c'est la faute du rhamas et leurs roquettes faites maisons si Gaza n'existe plus en passant par nier la famine je n'arrive pas à croire que cet empire qui controle tous les politiques et médias en occidents, dans le monde arabe et ailleurs n'ai pas mieux pour sa propagande. Et ne me parlez pas des bots partout sur internet (même ici)

ça me choque encore plus de voir qu'une infime minorité voit à travers cette propagande, je suis loin d'être le plus malin mais je ne suis pas aveugle et j'ai horreur d'être pris pour un con (les faux 40 bébés décapités pour justifier le génocide ça ma choqué). Vous avez des explications à tout ça?
il y a 2 mois
Parce qu'ils n'ont pas compris qu'aujourd'hui il faut passer par tiktok et s'exprimer comme un desco pour réussir sa propagande et ça le hamas l'a bien compris et arrive à monopoliser les soutiens de tous les bougnoules, enfin sauf ceux des pays voisins qui savent que ce sont des déchets et qui n'en veulent pas chez eux
:Hautain:
il y a 2 mois
Parce qu'ils n'ont pas compris qu'aujourd'hui il faut passer par tiktok et s'exprimer comme un desco pour réussir sa propagande et ça le hamas l'a bien compris et arrive à monopoliser les soutiens de tous les bougnoules, enfin sauf ceux des pays voisins qui savent que ce sont des déchets et qui n'en veulent pas chez eux
:Hautain:
les sionards vous méritez de retourner dans les chambres, vous êtes l'engeance du démon
il y a 2 mois
:selection_naturelle:
il y a 2 mois
les sionards vous méritez de retourner dans les chambres, vous êtes l'engeance du démon
Gneugneugneu sionard shlomo

Aucun argument, allez va te faire enculer + je te bloque
il y a 2 mois
les sionards vous méritez de retourner dans les chambres, vous êtes l'engeance du démon
Ayaa mais mon petit bog de merde tu va rien faire et rien dire, on vous ravage le cul a gaza et dans le monde, chiale et couine mais ca changera rien on vous baise bien
After me the deluge
il y a 2 mois
Car l'occident leurs donnes tout les droits et n'applique jamais de sanction. Donc ils s'en foutent ils peuvent faire ce qu'ils veulent quand ils veulent ils ont même pas besoin de perdre du temps avec une bonne com
il y a 2 mois
Ayaa mais mon petit bog de merde tu va rien faire et rien dire, on vous ravage le cul a gaza et dans le monde, chiale et couine mais ca changera rien on vous baise bien
le monde voit que les j sont l'engeance du démon, vous ne serez jamais traité comme des humains, bientôt la 110ème expulsion
il y a 2 mois
Leur propagande est mauvaise pour une raison simple. Ils s'en foutent totalement car ils savent que de toute façon ils auront toujours les boomers à leurs côtés, du moins aux USA.
:zidane_lunettes:



How the Viet Cong Smoked American Soldiers

Brigadier General Salve H Matheson said : " he biggest problem in fighting the enemy in Vietnam is finding him in order to fight him. " American planners could have used as precedent the futility of using such metrics as body counts and firepower tonnage of bombs to measure success in war. Of course even before the end of the war American planners knew that bombing wouldn't win the war. Defense secretary Clark Clifford admitted as much in 1969 that bombing by itself would not stop the war. We had already dropped a heavier tonnage of bombs than in all the theaters of World War II during 1967. An estimated 90 000 North Vietnamese had infiltrated into South Vietnam. In the opening of 1968, infiltrators were coming in at three to four times the rate of a year earlierDespite the ferocity and intensity of our bombing campaign, heavy firepower continued to be the grand strategy for all future American wars. The success of which would vary between ambiguous and outright catastrophic. Iraq and Afghanistan are no exception. Irak proved to have a boundless will to resist. And despite clobbering the country with unrelenting Firepower the Iraqis were never subdued. The Americans goals were never met and the Iraq Fiasco proved to be a massive and costly failure.The cleverness of the Iraqis also knew no bounds who had no Army to speak of by April of 2003 no Navy No Air Force no helicopters and by arming themselves with simple assault rifles machine guns rockets and mortars and by utilizing scraps of metal and electronics, they were able to outfit themselves into a formidable Force against all the odds stacked against them. Iraq was guerrilla War as was Vietnam In Robert B. Asprey's Mammoth history of Guerrilla warfare the author describes the mentality that the Americans were operating from
" Not understanding basic tenets of Guerrilla warfare American Senior officers converted fatalities into victories. This was a great mistake. Dead bodies do not mean destroyed infrastructure. Dead bodies particularly those of innocent peasants mean a strengthening not a weakening of the Insurgent cause. The colonial enemy of the Iraqis were the British in Vietnam the French. In their pacification campaign the French arrested nationalist leaders and executed them via Guillotine even displaying their severed heads publicly to terrorize would be revolutionaries. Many were imprisoned and shipped off to kundao a prison that would be maintained through the American occupation and would come to have a brutal reputation . Those imprisoned at kundao would form the early foundation of the Communist revolutionary movement and included multiple future Prime Ministers. When the United States took over from the French in 1954, they as had happened in Iraq nearly 50 years later would make a series of blunderous errors that by all means created a guerrilla Army that took up arms to fight them. After the French were defeated on the battlefield a Geneva conference split Vietnam in two and created the country of South Vietnam. It is no exaggeration to say that the country of South Vietnam was a creation of the United States. The U. S would even hand pick an exile named no denzim and import him directly from the United States. Despite the Geneva conference's guidelines for a national election to be held in 1956, ZM and his American handlers blocked Democratic elections and with the introduction of such laws as the public meetings law which banned assembly and the bill for the protection of morality effectively Banning free speech and causing total censorship of press, ZM was now a full-fledged dictator in 1963. ZM refers to Ngo Dinh Diem. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge would Express his dismay at the inefficiency of Diem's internal Police service.

" Vietnam is not a thoroughly strong police state because unlike Hitler's Germany it is not efficient ". But don't think the American involvement was merely at an advisory level. DIem's special police was secretly managed by the CIA who did so through a contract with Michigan State University. Beginning in 1955, MSU spent 15 million dollars of U. S taxpayer money building up South Vietnam Security Services. In 1959, Diem passed the 1059 edict which made quote infringements on the National Security punishable by death with no appeal. By the end of the year, Diem and his secret police had imprisoned 50 000 to 100 000 people. Diem's forces would embark on Expeditions in the south in order to round up communist sympathizers and namely the vietmen. These expeditions were very very violent and between 1957 and 1961, nearly 70 000 people were killed giving Diem's secret police the fair categorization of a Latin american-style Death Squad. John F Kennedy saw a huge escalation of the war authorizing Napalm chemical weapons and in violation of troop limits set at Geneva thousands of new so-called advisors. By 1962 there were nearly 12 000 US troops in the country. The escalation was part of an effort to drive scores of Vietnamese into concentration camps or what the U. S military and to this day many historians and journalists call Strategic hamlets. The program had already been tried under CM who along with his many other failed Ventures had forcibly transferred 200 000 people into these camps with America's help. That number would jump to over 8 million. Upon arrival, civilians were made to dig ditches and wrap barbed wire around the perimeter of the camps and build a wall of sharpened bamboo stakes.
All this ostensibly to protect the villagers from the resistance who many of them supported and by forcibly uprooting the people from their ancestral homes, the program also created scores of new insurgents. A report on a strategic Hamlet from the U. S general Accounting Office concluded : " During our inspection we observed there were no latrines no usable wells, no classrooms and no medical facilities. The shelters were crudely constructed from a variety of waste material such as empty ammunition boxes and cardboard. The American Refugee advisor stated that there were no plans to improve the living conditions at this site. " These violent expeditions damaged their own cause. Same can be said for mass imprisonement. The so called hamlets became the symbol the the despised Diem's regime and were target in attacks by guerillas. Their prisoners freed leading the charge was a group calling itself the National Liberation Front and by dismantling the camps which by 1963 held 67 percent of the rural population. The NFL made gains and were approaching majotiry control of the countryside. The Viet Cong initially sought a non-violent political strategy. But following the introduction of Diem's concentration camps and 1059 edict, the guerillas mounted an organized widespread and popularly supported Rebellion. NFL's liberation army was organized into 2 principles groups of combattants : a main force organized into companies and battalions in standard army fashions. And irregular paramilitaries. These local forces were farmers by day and guerillas by night. They engaged combat wheere they had combat advantages.
A captured military document tells fighters to : " Carry out assassination missions right at the center to immobilize the enemy. rime targets should be security forces and civil action District officials Hooligans and thugs. Diem was seen by the US as too costly to keep so Diem was shot and stabbed by a military assassin inside of a car. By 1964 The Liberation Army had become capable of wiping out entire units of Saigon troops or about a hundred men but it wasn't often that they were able to take out entire battalions which numbered between 500 and 700 troops . In 1964 they managed to wipe out eight of them toward the end of the year the fighting escalated when NLF forces commenced a series of attacks on Saigon troops and in December they would wipe out two and a half battalions out of just 11.

A standard price for a month's survival was 10 000 rounds of ammunition a month. As in Irak, Vietnam became overflowry with weapons. But not from the weapon depots that were already here. It was the Americans who were supplying their enemy. Wilfred burchett who lived among Vietnamese Communists in South Vietnam for six months during the war described in detail the degree to which the Americans were supplying them : " W hen one looked at a regular soldier of the front the extent of U. S gifts became even more impressive. "
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il y a 2 mois
L'objectif est juste d'inonder les réseaux sociaux de bots vite fait.

How Iraqis Got So Good At Smoking American Soldiers

Saddam's police, while brutal, ensured that street crime was almost unheard off. Prior to the invasion Iraq had a crime rate that was among the lowest in the entire world. On October 2002, Saddam Hussein, bracing for a US invasion, emptied prisons in what was seen as an attempt to Garner support on the international stage and at home president Saddam officially declared : " All jailed prisoners detainees and sentenced fugitives for political reasons are granted a complete comprehensive and final amnesty. " This amouted to thousands of people. Mostly political prisonners but also included thousands of common criminals and some of Iraq's most violent those imprisoned for murder or armed robbery. Following American bombing campaign, all order had evaporated. he so-called shock and awe campaign was so overwhelming that by mid-april the Iraqi Army had ceased to exist. With criminals roaming, carnage ensued. Although amid the chaos lines began to blur with the breakdown of societyCommon People moms and dads became Petty criminals themselves. As in the first Gulf War the aerial campaign had once again targeted water and sewage treatment plants along with the electrical grid that powered them. As a result even bottled water became scarce. Starvation and disease became a serious danger for the population. William R Polk, middle eastern historian : " Looting became a form of shopping; The desperate poor driven by hunger and criminals driven by greed formed gangs that proud the streets looking for targets. The police had drifted away from their stations to join either the Vigilantes or the gangs. Crime including homicide became rampant. Source : " Voice of America " : BAghdad crime rate rises dramatically " October 2003. Donald Rumsfeld ran the defense department like a corporation in the US. lashing employees and using the bare minimum of troops hoping to fill the rest via contracts awarded to defense contractors.

Among the first fissures in the military was a very public feud between Rumsfeld and army Chief of Staff General Eric Shinseki. Shinseki thought that Iraq should follow America's so-called Bosnia model, or one U. S troop for every 50 bosnians. That would amount to 300 000 US troops in Irak. But Rumsfeld scoffed nd allowed less than half that amount. The french during the Algeria's war of independance, used 3 times more to fight the same number of insurgents that the US would fight in Irak. Dr Faiq Amin Batir, in charge of the city morgue of Baghdad back then in 2003 spoke about the gravity of the situation. www.voanews.com https://www.voanews.com/a[...]hdad-67585742/389194.html " "There are a lot of criminals because of the lack of security, lack of police control, lack of security people," he said. "You know, Iraq was controlled by many security systems." " The lack of security reflected poorly on the Americans. One of the main factors undermining their credibility was to choose the Iraki people as the people to pacify and subdue. It proved to be unwise. Outside the national pride, it was the same people who kicked out the Brits and gained their independance 70 years ago back then. Iraq was also historically a Hardy Agricultural Society. Another way of putting that would be they were heavily armed. Irak was one of the most heavily armed societies in the world. Irak per capita rivaled clans like those Yemen and Somalia. Almost everyone was armed. But those corroded rifles and pistols passed down generations were the least of American problems.

Along with emptying prisons Saddam also made life difficult for the Americans by dumping small collections of weapons and explosives among the Iraqi population and distributed rifles. But some weapons dumps were massive, like the size of small cities. There were also Irak military arsenal right for the picking with the army effectively non existent and a lack of US troops. To guard these depots, Irakis began breaking into them. The result was that Irak became even more overflowing with weaponry. Estimates put the number at up to 1 million metric tons.
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CENTCOM Commander General John P. Abizaid. There is more ammunition in Iraq than any place I've ever been in my life and it is all not securable. THese weapons would be sold or simply passed out to friends for free. Almost every Iraki bad a kalashnikov or a variant. Many even had machine guns or RPG's. The public would not be informed until the end of October of 2004 more than 18 months after the War Began that a cache of over 380 tons of artillery, shells, plastic, explosives, mortar rounds, TNT and other powerful conventional explosives was cleaned out by looters. The USA failed to emulate the so called Bosnia model. They adopted another bosnia-era policy which would come to uniquely define the American occupation. Known as dab or driving around Bosnia U. S forces would adopt patrols as a routine daily exercise It was thought that the presence of soldiers on the ground would bring an air of security to cities and populated areas. But these ground operations also bought troops door to door, conducting constant raids to Irakis homes. Otherwise known as cordon and sweep operations the Cavalier and often cruel nature of these raids became another major point of contention among the Iraqis. These sweeps were indiscriminate nabbing so-called military-age males which included young teens and children up to adult or even older men. These men without any due process were hauled off to American Military prisons including the notorious Abu grave prison. The saddam-era torture chamber which was reopened by the Americans who even reinstituted the old prison warden from the Saddam era. Along with the ensuing torture Scandal was yet another rage-inducing insensitivity which made many Iraqis ready to take up arms.
Iraq was a socially conservative society and placed great importance on not only National but also personal and family dignity/ Iraq's social norms of honor and privacy especially for women and girls was thoroughly violated by strange foreign men busting down doors and violently arresting the head of the household. An independent report sanctioned by the defense department would conclude that : " " they reverted to rounding up any and all suspicious looking persons all too often including women and children " As many as 120 000 Iraqis would be detained. John Bruhns of third Brigade, First Armored Division, First battalion. took part in 1 000 Iraqi home raids. He summarized a typical Iraki home raid as followed :" You grab the man of the house you rip him out of bed in front of his wife you put him up against the wall then you go into a room and you tear the room to shreds. So you've just humiliated this man in front of his entire family and terrorized his entire family. And then you go right next door and you do the same thing in a hundred homes. Now next week 10 roadside bombs go off and nobody can understand why. According to Colonel Thomas Hammes, the Marine expert on counter Insurgency who worked for the American occupation : " Many of the arrests were done with a boot on the head in front of his woman. You've created a blood debt when you do that. The firing of half a million of Irakis state workers was the most davastating move for the American occupation. On May 16th and May 23rd the occupation's leader Paul Bremer III would issue CPA orders number one and two respectively. CPA stands for the Coalition provisional Authority the name given to the American occupation. These orders were known collectively as de-bathification and went a long way toward fueling the growing resistance. Order number one fired anyone who worked in the top three management layers of all government of all government Ministries, state-owned Industries, universities even hospitals.
These employees were deemed automatically to be senior bath party members and they would be banned from future employment in the Iraqi government. Charles Seidel, CIA Chief of Station in Irak back then, worried that : " By Nightfall you'll have driven 30 000 to 50 000 baathists underground and in six months you'll really regret doing this. " In fact, the number would be as high as 85 000 people just fired outright order.

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il y a 2 mois
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Order number 2 fired the entire Iraqi armed forces and the interior Ministry which included the National Police. Together these two orders would put out of work over 500 000 people . Marine Colonel Thomas Hammes summarized the move like this : " Now you have a couple hundred thousand people who are armed because they took their weapons home with them, who know how to use the weapons, who have no future and who have a reason to be angry at you. " Colonel R. Alan KingFormer Commander Civil Affairs Battalion in Irak. said : " When Bremer did that the Insurgency went crazy. May was the turning point according. " According to an official US study, of the war, just over a day into the Invasion on March 22nd " " expecting a positive reception " Sergeant First Class Anthony Broadhead led a hunter killer team of three Bradleys and two M1 tanks toward the bridge where some Iraqis had assembled as his tank approached the bridge. Broadhead waved at the Iraqis but rather than waving back the Iraqis responded with AK-47 fire. The fight quickly escalated as paramilitary forces engage from pickup trucks armed with small arms machine guns rocket-propelled grenades and mortars. The study maintains that this was a significant event since : " For the first time but not the last time well-armed paramilitary forces indistinguishable except for their weapons from civilians attacked the Squadron. " A week later saw the first suicide bombing against Coalition forces since the War Began. A taxi cab laden with explosives would kill four U. S soldiers of the third infantry division in the city of Nadjaf. Bombing and explosions became rampant by mid summer. The Irakis sought to target not only American but their allies and partners.
On 7th August, a bomb-filled van parked outside the embassy of Jordan. The blast through a nearby car onto a roof. 17 people died. Among the most momentous and successful attacks Fighters targeted the canal hotel which housed the offices of the United Nations. Driving a cement truck filled with explosive artillery shells, a suicide bomber crashed into the outer wall of the hotel sending a shock wave so powerful that it blasted the windows of the second armored Cavalry Regiment a half mile away. The attack killed 23 people including the chief U. N officer in Iraq. The effects of the bombing were dramatic. The UN mission in Iraq drew its staff down from 800 International staffers to just 15. Colonel Thomas Hammes describes the fallout in a report for the National Defense University. : The august 19 2003 bombing of the UN headquarters in Iraq convinced the organization that continuing to operate in Iraq would be too costly. " In the following weeks numerous other International organizations including the IMF and the World Bank would pull out of Iraq which was seen as a massive victory for the resistance. That was a brilliant campaign according to Thomas Hammes. They hit the U. N the Red Cross the Jordanian Embassy and the Iraqi police.
Thomas E. Ricks " Fisco : The American Military Adventure in Irak " said : " This was the first time since the invasion that the foe turned fully on US forces. " On the 26th October, a mortar attack on a Baghdad police station killed private first class Rachel boseveld. THen rockets were fired at the Rasheed hostel which housed CPA offices. The next day, 4 police stations were bombed simultaneously using truck bombs painted to look like police vehicles and filled with over one thousand pounds of plastic explosive. These attacks marked the beginning of what would become the Ramadan offensive. It would be the highest american fatalities since the beginning of the invasion. During the summer of 2003 there were roughly 15 attacks on U. S soldiers a day. By mid-november, that number jumped to 45 a day and it was also at this time that Iraqis became Adept at attacking aircraft. In October and November they managed to shoot down 3 helicopters. Helicopters had to frequently fly back to to guerillas. On November 15th, 2 Blackhawks collided into one another while trying to evade rifle fire killing 17 Soldiers. The Army even had to conclude that the Apache helicopter was so vulnerable to Rocket and machine gunfire that it would no longer have a major role in attacks. The Iraqis were learning and adapting quickly using what they had at their disposal but they would kill many many American soldiers through a simple device that littered many roads frequented by American.
IEG, standing for improvised explosive devices is one of the key Hallmarks of the war in Iraq. Its Simplicity is both a symbol of the disproportionate Firepower that the Americans wielded as well as the cleverness of the Iraqi resistance to use all manner of essentially scraps of electronics and weapons to Fashion devices that proved to be especially lethal to occupation forces. So lethal in fact than in the first year of the Iraqi Guerrilla war against the Americans one-third of dead US troops were killed by these low-tech and inexpensive roadside bombs. They weren't just good at Killing American soldiers but also wounding them. Two-thirds of soldiers wounded so badly that they needed to be evacuated from Iraq were hit by IEDs . Aside from the human cost the monetary cost was staggering. In 2006 the Pentagon set up an office to deal with the threat of IEDs called The Joint IED defeat organization. By 2011 the yearly budget was 2. 8 billion dollars and that's not counting the roughly 45 billion dollars spent on mine resistant vehicles all to fight a bomb that cost roughly 30 dollars to make. IEDs were very crude. All one had to do was put a Detonator on a bomb or artillery shell and you've essentially made one. In the summer of 2003 nearly all IEDs were hardwired meaning they were connected directly to the Detonator a fighter would have to hold the Detonator which was connected by a long wire to the explosive.
In this instance U. S forces were able to locate the wire then follow it until they found the fighter. On the other end and liquidated them but then guerillas figured out how to detonate these devices remotely using RC car controllers, car alarm transmitters and especially cell phones. The people who detonated these bombs also known as trigger men were the front line troops of the resistance and the cell phone became one of the most important Tools in their Arsenal. l IED explosions would reportedly be videotaped by attackers in order to improve their techniques and use the footage for propaganda and recruitment purposes Though the US spent billions outfitting Humvees with armor to resist IED explosions, the Iraqis again adapted their ways and began placing IEDs and tree branches and light poles since armor plates were placed on doors the blast would be downward facing in order to blow windows in and also to hit the machine Gunners poking out on top of the vehicles. " We got better armor they started getting better Ordnance. " said Colonel Bob Chase of the Second Marine Division Chase was commentating about an IED attack near Haditha who killed 14 Marines with a single explosion hitting an amphibious assault vehicle. This was at the time a new development in IED technology called the underbelly bomb detonated from deep inside the ground and Blasting vehicles from underneath. These bombs were also massive able to utterly destroy a Humvee or even a tank. Just 100 pounds of explosives detonated under an armored vehicle was the equivalent of a direct hit from a Six-Gun artillery battery. Yet even a single 155 millimeter artillery round containing just 18 pounds of explosives could easily destroy a tank on its own. IEDs were so effective that attacks increased steadily in the Year 2005. An IED attack occurred every 48 minutes twice the rate of the year. Brigadier General Joseph Anderson said about IED attacks : " That's just a damn difficult thing to defeat. "
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IEDs was also sending another message to the occupation. Since they were so widely distributed on roads throughout the country this could only mean that they were unreported by local Iraqis. A major blow to morale for U. S forces who of course went into Iraq thinking they'd be welcomed as liberators. Along with the UN World Bank Oxfam and the IMF all pulling out , other countries militaries also found Iraq ultimately uninhabitable. Spain would leave in May 2004 then Honduras, the Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, the Philippines, Hungary the next year. The Netherlands Ukraine also Poland Bulgaria and Italy, probably the three most important European allies in Iraq would announce their plans to get the out in 2005. In the end a 30 dollars bomb was enough to kill probably half of the U. S war dead. The resistance was so overwhelming against such an awesome occupying force that it should indeed be studied in Insurgency in Revolutionary circles for many years to come.
Micharl Leeden, American Enterprise institute : " Every 10 years or so, the United States needs to pick up some crappy little country and throw it against the wall just to show the world we mean business. "
il y a 2 mois
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The Iraq War Wasn't About Oil

One of the msot controversial assertations made in the book " The Israel Lobby and US foreign policy " by 2 universities, John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt is that members of this lobby played an important and necessary role in the US invasion of Irak. They argue that without them, the invasion would not have happen. Rather than oil, the group contend that it was a powerful group within the Israel Lobby that was the most important factor. Michael Ledeen, a prominent neoconservative, said :
" Every 10 years or so, the United States needs to pick up some crappy little country and throw it against the wall just to show the world we mean business. " Ledeen was once a consultant for National Security. Norman Finkelstein a key critic of Israel as they carry out a genocide was at the time of the book publishing, openly at odds with both authors. Israel Lobby, mainly the neoconservatices were the main driving force behind the war in Irak. They need Bush and Cheney to be on board. That happened after September 11th. Normal G Finkelstein devoted an entire chapter in his book " Knowing too much : why the american jewish romance with Israel is coming to an end. " Here he gives a brief history of neoconservatives. " The founding fathers of neoconservatism such as Irving Kristol rode the Marxist grave wave in the 1930s. Irving Kristol, Normal Podhoretz, Midge Decter. " The neoconservatices then rode the new left wave in the early 1960s. When it crested in the mid 1960d, they again joined the establishment backlash to it. " " As the spectrum of respectable opinion in the US shifted steadily rightward, the jewish neoconservatives galloped yet more swiftly, eventually crossing the rubicon from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party. " As Finkelstein writes, the collapse of USSR shifted the focus of the neoconservatives and indeed, US defense policy makers generally on Middle East.

However he disagreed about an argument about the Israel Lobby. " The msot sensationnal item on Mearsheimer and Walt's charge sheet alleges that the disastrous decision of the Bush administration to invade Irak in 2003 was orchestrated by the Israel Lobby. " He argues that if the principal architects of the war, Bush, Cheney and Romsfeld were motivated by Israel, why in the first and second hand account of the prewar behind the scenes debates, of the Bush administration, Israel barely gets a passing mention. He says that in her memoirs " Condoleezza Rice who was National Security Advisor of Bush administration, does not list or even allude to, Israel security as the, or even a motive behind the attack. " In Donald Rumsfeld's memoirs " Known and Unknown ", Rumsfel,d who was Secretary of Defense in the Bush Administration, also does not list , or even allude to, Israel security as the, or even a, motive behind the attack.
Same for DIck Cheney's memoirs.
il y a 2 mois
Et de contrôler la politique des USA notamment, ce qu'ils arrivent à très bien faire.
:zidane_lunettes:



Why Does North Korea Hate the US?

Due to the Korean war, both North and South Korea became one of the most heavily bombed countries in history. The tonnage of bombs dropped in Korea was the equivalent of all bombs dropped in the Pacific theater of WW2, which includes the 2 atomic bombs. By US own estimates, the destruction of Korea proportionately greater than that of Japan after the atomic bombs. The US entered the war after the north invaded the south, capturing Seoul and nearly the entire Korean peninsula. The US sent tens of thousands of troops. They then cross the border to the North. This was the trigger for the Chinese to enter into the war. In the first few months of the war, the US was hesitant to bomb cities population centers because of the fear that it would pull both China and the Soviet Union into the war. But the Chinese were secretly here the whole time. In November of 1950, the United Nations would be in for a surprise when they got into a skirmish with the Chinese Communist Forces. This stunned american officials and the US would retreat back down to the 38th parallel. The barrier was lifted and the bombing campaign would commence. The philosophy behind the bombing was the successor to the firebombing of Japanese cities in WW2. In fact, it involved the same people, Emmett O Donnell Junior and Curtis Lemay. In Korea, firebombing came in the form of napalm. The US would drop over 30 000 tons of the stuff over Korea. The fire engulfed and destroyed quite literally anything in its path. and completly wiped villages and cities out of the map. Villages were considered by General McArthur as a legitimate military target. : " Every installation, facility and village in North Korea now becomes a military and tactical target. "

By 1951, the AIr Force said they destroyed 145 000 buildings. With napalm, victims are presented with a hard black crust where their skin used to be the burns would become infected, causing a spattering of yellow pus to grow. Journalist George Barrett of the New York Times would report on a destroyed village in February 1951 : " Throughout the village and in the fields, were caught and killed and kept the exact same postures they had helf when palam struck. A man about to get on his bicycle, boys and girls playing in an orphanage, a housewife strangely unmarked holding in her hand a page torn from a Sears Roebuck catalog. There must be almost 200 deads in the tiny Hamlet. James Ramson Jr described the effects when his unity accidentally was struck by a petrol jelly Ransom. He said that his man began writhing aroud in the snow. on the groud and begged for him to shoot them. Their skin burned, charred and dried out then flaked away. " Like fried potatoe chips " Private First Class James Ramson Jr. The US flattened so many structures that they soon started running otu of targets. So in July of 1952, the US began a bombing campaign starting to target hydroelectric dams. An official US Air Force study would report that in May of 1953, 20 F 84 fighters bombers slammed the toxong irrigation dam with high explosives. The dam subsequently erupted. And water came cascading down, flattening everything an area 27 miles long, who was completly obliterated. The US would ultimatly attack 20 irrigation dams that provided water for 75% of North Korea's food production. And that was precisely the target. The Official Air Force study would boast about the attacks : " To the communists, the smashing of the dams meant primarily the destruction of their chief sustenance rice. " Source : Robert F; Futrell et all " The attack on the irrigation dams in North Korea " AIr University Duarterly interview ( 1953 ).
" The western can little conceive the awesome meaning which the loss of this stapple food commodity has for the Asian - starvation of death -.

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Earth shattering bombs dropped from the B 29. B 29 would turn North Korea into a pockmarked lunar landscape. As there were few structures remaining, the Korean population largely lived in holes or in caves. In fact a whole life was created underground which became crucial to the base of support for reconstruction effort after the war. The explicit targeting of civilians was called by the US Air Force " Bringing the war to the people. " FEAF : " Plan for employment of FEAF bomber command against North Korea " ( 1950 ) It's an indicatino for the targetting ofcivlians in North and South. The target of South Korean civilians approaching the American lines was officially mandated due to fear that guerrillas would be among them. Whether they were civilians or not didn't seem to matter to many GIS since the Koreans were painted with the same brush, called the deshumanizing G slur. When William J Jorden interview interview an Air Force pilot, he expressed his dismay at not knowing whether or not he had killed people. : " We dropped all our bombs and hit the assigned areas but it doesn't mean that we killed gooks because we just don't know whether they were here. " William Jorden " Eyewitness report : B 29 Armadas Rain Death on 60 000 Reds ' Los Angeles Times. August 17, 1950. The areas deemed to be harboring communists, anything was fair game. Reported exposed orders from up chain of the command. : " They got orders to destroy all buildingss showing signs of occupancy and hit anything that moved. " John Tirman quoting Charles J.Hanley. " Korean War Pilot, We are not Lily White " Associated Press. August 4, 2008. Targeting food sources, bringing the war into people, targeting civilians and anything that moves for that matter is all evident of a pattern of targeting North Koreans.
There are 4 victim groups. In the UN genocide convention, national, ethnical , racial and religious are all 4 cases of possible genocide. Here the ethnic part can apply because Koreans from both North and South are from the same ethnic group. Even perhaps nationality can be argued, certainly with regard to North Korea but nearly all South Korea was destroyed. " It is no exeggeration to state that South Korea no longer exists as a country. " Brassey's Annual, the Armed Force year book 1951 times. August 17, 1950.
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Certainly deshumanization was achieved by way of racism. So race could reasonably be argued to be another targeted category. The experience of criminal tribunals for Rwandan and Yougoslavia provide a bedrock for precedent. These tribunals have found 4 keys factors in determining genocidal intent. 1 : Statements of the accused and his or her associates. 2 : The scale of atrocities in question. " I would say the entire, almost the entire Korean peninsula is just a terrible mess. Everything is destroyed. There is nothing standing worthy of the name. " 3 : Systematic targeting of the victim group. " Every installation, facility, and village in North Korea now becomes a military and tactical target. " DouglasMcArthur. 4 : Evidence that atrocities were planned. " Unfortunatly, this area will be left a desert. " Douglas McArthur. Massively killing members of the Korean ethnic group and by deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part. " The bombing straffing and machine gunnings meet the threshold, in my opinion, of genocide. It occurred in a geographically limited area and act asubstancial scale. The bombing campaign produced one of the highest civilian death tolls in history.
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There Was a Genocide in Korea and Nobody Cares.

Korean war is one of the msot overlooked war of the 20th century. After all, it's referred to as the Forgotten War. The Korean war from 1950 to 1953 had one of the highest numbers of Civilian casualties of any War since World War II, killing three million people in just three years. That's roughly the number of people that died in Vietnam and that were lasted decades. North Korea and South Korea became some of the most heavily bombed countries in history with four times the tonnage of bombs dropped on Japan including the two atomic bombs. After the bombs there are probably a few reasons why the United States government and the society at large have made such a concentrated effort to forget the war in Korea. The lack of reporting on civilian casualties which is seen by some as a consequence of McCarthyism which ran rampant in the 1950s. Today, North Korea is held up firmly as an enemy of the United States eliciting sustained criticism from the state and American Media its development and testing of nuclear weapons has been portrayed as an aggressive and unjustifiable threat to the world. This is important to upholding the view of North Korea as an enemy of the United States which justifies the aggressive policies of the U. S and South Korea like their routine war games which boldly simulate a full-scale invasion of the North. The reason why the war became relatively forgotten in the US is that it contradicts important US policy in South Korea.
There are 2 things to know. 1 : North Korea is Justified in creating and maintaining a nuclear Arsenal and 2 : the North Korean population is Justified in their negative opinion of the United States. At 4am on the morning of Sunday June 25th 1950 North Korea embarked on a surprise full-scale invasion of the South the weak and poorly trained South Korean troops didn't stand a chance. North Korean troops rapidly advanced South and quickly captured Seoul. This prompted a U. S invasion. That's the narrative. Now in reality, it's not often talked about there were already frequent and sizable incursions and battles fought between the North and South prior to the war. The U. S state Department even said as much in their bulletin in 24th April 1950, page 627 : The boundary at the 38th parallel is a real front line. There is constant fighting. There are very real battles involving perhaps one or two thousand men. Even more interesting is that South Korea reportedly invaded North Korea prior to June 25th. It's a controversial statement. While reading a 1973 article about the Korean war in" the China quarterly . Some myths about June 1950." written by a Robert R Simmon, Simmons had been highly critical of the claim of a South Korean invasion of the North Korean town of Haeju. " American military histories lack any account of the South Korean attack on Haeju. The reason appear to be that no such assault took place. " But an edit at the end of the article bring new information to light. " The story may be bizarre but it rings true. " Simmons concedes that the so-called rumor was actually traced to the official military history of the Korean War published by the ministry of Defense of South Korea. So who really fired the first shot and in the end does it even really matter given the context? The advance of the DPRK would prompt an ugly period of war, one that has been provably erased from history.
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After the surrender of Japan in WW2, he U. S occupation plucked Syngman Rhee who had lived in the U. S for decades. He was a fervent Christian and anti-communist and would lead the US army military government and Korea. He would use his Newfound powers to imprison at least 30 000 people. On top of that he'd established an official re-education program for suspected leftists and sympathizers which included up to 300 000 people. The National Rehabilitation and guidance League known as the Bodo League mandated as official policy that left-wingers and Communists had to join in order for the government to keep track of them. It was reportedly modeled after the Japanese internment and re-education system during their occupation of Korea It's known today that the vast majority of Bodo League members were not in fact leftists or even liberals but placed into the program to fill local police quotas. Up to 70 percent of them were non-political, just very poor. In what's been called by Korean authors as the summer of Terror South Korean forces emptied prisons across the country then lined up the detainees and shot them individually in the head. Victims were then thrown into mass graves, dumped into mine shafts or tossed into the ocean. It is believed that 30 000 political prisoners were killed at the time virtually all of them since that was approximately the number of political prisoners that existed at the time. In one single incident on July 2nd truckloads of police entered Daejeon and forced locals to dig six large pits each 200 yards long. Then detainees from the local Daejeon prison were transported and trucks to the pits where they'd be slaughtered mostly with bullets to the head and having their heads chopped off with swords.
The South Koreans took three days to kill all the prisoners. 7 000 Americans were present, supervised the killings and even took pictures of the atrocity which were kept secret for half a century. The Americans were present at many of these massacres making it a matter of policy to keep them secret. So they blamed the killings on communists. The Pentagon even subsidized a film called the crime of Korea narrated by Humphrey Bogard telling their story of what happened at Daejeon. The mass murders were part of a broader effort aimed at killing virtually all Korean leftists. Those identified through their membership to the Bodo League were hunted down not only in prisons but in their homes. They would often dig their own Graves and be shot by the hundreds even thousands. The method of execution was almost always the same the way the remains lie underground show that the victims must have nailed down with their hands tied behind them at the edge of a long ditch before being shot dead. These killings remained hidden away due to suppression as well as fear of speaking out against the right-wing dictatorships of post-war Korea. They would be exposed to the world through the Truth and Reconciliation Commission set up by South Korea in 2005. South Korean investigators have been exhuming Mass Graves and taking testimony as part of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission. The commission would be modeled after the one South Africa created. Kim Dong Chun was appointed to lead the subcommittee on : " Mass civilian sacrifice " Kim believes that an estimate of 100 000 people killed in the summer of 1950 is " very conservative and that it's likely double that or even more comprising up to two-thirds of the total membership of the Bodo League.
" The Americans not only knew about the massacres and were present at many of them. They also conducted hundreds of their own. In the first three years of the Truth and Reconciliation commission's investigation they tallied at least 215 attributed to U. S soldiers, the most famous of which being the No Gun Ri massacre exposed to the world only in 1999The no gun REM Massacre was carried out the day that a directive was issued to US troops simply to fire on approaching refugees. A confidential letter from U. S ambassador to South Korea, John J. Muccio, signed on that fateful day on July 26th 1950.
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en.wikipedia.org https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syngman_Rhee fr.wikipedia.org https://fr.wikipedia.org/[...]Massacre_de_la_ligue_Bodo en.wikipedia.org https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_Gun_Ri_massacre
il y a 2 mois




What They Don’t Tell You About The Iraq War

It''s been 20 years well since the second American invasion of Iraq. To many Iraqis the War Began in 1990 not 2003. 2003 certainly marked an incalculable unimaginably massive and World altering cataclysm. In 2001 Dr W kreisel of the World Health Organization prepared a report titled : " Health situation in Iraq "Before 1990 Iraq with a GNP per capita of 2 800 US Dollars belonged to the group of middle-income countries. The large investments in infrastructures and in Human Resources development had led to the development of an efficient health system that was considered one of the best in the Middle East. Malnutrition was virtually not seen as households had easy and affordable access to a balanced dietary intake. Healthcare Services were guaranteed by an extensive network of well-equipped well-supplied and well-staffed health facilities. The access of patients to higher levels of care was easy and effortless supported as it was by a distributed network of secondary and tertiary hospitals and institutions. Ambulances and Emergency Services were well developed and benefited from a properly maintained network of roads and Telecommunications. Water and sanitation services benefited from large investments in water and sewage treatment plants during earlier decades assuring nearly universal access to abundant safe drinking water and to a relatively clean environment. Electricity had been made available even to remote villages. " He is basically painting the picture of somewhat a modern country would look like. The Ba ath regime in Irak provided free health care and education for virtually everyone.
Proportionally Iraq had a very large middle class but as has been well documentedd the bombing campaign during the Gulf War was one of the most ferocious in modern history. Human Rights Watch would describe the destruction in abysmal terms. : " The recent conflict has wrought near apocalyptic results upon the economic infrastructure of what had been until January 1991. A rather highly urbanized and mechanized Society now most means of modern life support have been destroyed or rendered tenuous. Iraq has for some time to come been relegated to a pre-industrial age. " The air campaign targeted vast quantities of critical civilian infrastructure including water treatment facilities, food processing plants, food and Seed storage warehouses, flower mills and even a dairy plant. Being a modern country Iraq was heavily reliant on electricity and the deliberate bombing of its electrical grid decimated as Central Services such as water purification and distribution, sewage removal and treatment the operation of hospitals and medical laboratories and agricultural production. A Harvard study team would report on the ground on the effects of not only the bombing but also the notorious sanctions placed on the country all the way to the second invasion. According to them War damage and continued sanctions led to a virtual collapse of basic public services such as healthcare, water supply, food distribution sewage and sanitation.
Pathogenic microbes born in the contaminated water supplies are creating epidemic levels of waterborne diseases . Typhoid gastroenteritis and cholera are epidemic. A figure of five hundred thousand children was given to then U. N Ambassador Madeleine Albright by reporter Leslie Stahl. Iraq would hit rock bottom in 1994. Hospitals ran out of medicines and even soap to wash bedding. Malnutrition was widespread infant mortality exploded. Clean drinking water was unavailable. In many areas and runaway inflation virtually wiped out the new middle class but despite this Iraq was miraculously able to make somewhat of a comeback, rebuilding power stations and transmission lines, building bridges and treating sewage. Even oil exports were able to moderately increase and by 2000 Iraq was earning more than 30 billion dollars from oil exports. In many histories of the war 911 is the turning point and in many ways it was but the reality, is that the writing was on the wall for several years.

After the Gulf War, the US spent roughly a billion dollars a year to operate a no-fly zone over Iraq. A strategy known as containment. Things took a dramatic turn in 1998 when President Bill Clinton launched yet another bombing campaign on The Battered country. That same year a letter would be drafted by a small but influential group of conservative Republicans calling for the end to the containment strategyas well as Saddam Hussein's ouster. The letter is significant since several of its authors would come to hold prominent positions in the coming Bush Administration and were key players in planning the war. These included Paul Wolfowitz, Donald Rumsfeld, Richard L. Armitage, future un Ambassador John Bolton and several others who would move back into the government three years later. This clique is part of a small but influential group known as the neoconservatives who pushed relentlessly to turn the tide of Republican opinion in favor of the war which would bleed into the liberal mainstream. Following the invasion of Afghanistan and the subsequent fall of Kabul the formal plans for an invasion of Iraq began. What followed was a sustained years-long disinformation campaign straight from the Bush Administration. Colin Powell already talked in February 2001 about Irak not having, developed any significant capability with respect to weapons of mass destruction. But the asme guy said the opposite in 2003. Not only the Bush Administration but also of course the liberal media most notoriously being the work of Judith Miller of the New York Times. She already back in December 2001 wrote an article about " a so-called Iraqi Defector who claimed to have helped renovate facilities used for weapons of mass destruction ". Miller's article was published three days after the CIA and defense intelligence agency rejected the so-called defectors account as " unreliable . "
It turns out he had even failed their lie detector test. Miller's journalistic standards proved to be particularly sloppy admitting that there was no means to independently verify the defectors allegations. Nevertheless a Pandora's Box had opened and Judith Miller would be one of the most prominent Hawks during the lead-up to the war the Bush Administration.Ahmed Shalabi founded the Iraqi National Congress or Inc, a cia-backed group responsible for fomenting Saddam Hussein's ouster. Halabi would be propped up as a candidate for the future leader of a " liberated Iraq. " In fact chalaby eventually switched his Allegiance and began feeding intelligence to Iran after the invasion. His importance though cannot be overlooked. According to Bush's Chief defense adviser Richard Perle, one of the neoconservatives who was considered to be one of the architects of the Iraq War, Ahmed chalabi's organization the Inc has been without question the single most important source of intelligence about Saddam Hussein and it was chalabi's so-called intelligence that would fill the pages of the New York Times. In an embarrassing internal email to Tom's colleague John Burns Judith Miller admitted that Ahmed shalabi : " has provided most of the front page exclusives on WMD to our paper. The importance of Miller's reporting can't be overlooked either. A quote from Miller's article on 8th September 2002 : " The first sign of a smoking gun, they argue, may be a mushroom cloud. That same day Condoleezza Rice would pair at the same quip on CNN. Combat for the Iraq War Began on March 20th 2003.. Saddam was supposedly at a complex of houses west of the Tigris river called Dora Farms. He wasn't and they lobbed cruise missiles and 2 000 bombs at nothing. In the six long weeks of the 1991 Gulf War the U. S Navy had fired 288 Tomahawk cruise missiles.
On the second day of the 2003 Invasion on March 21st US forces would fire over 500 Tomahawk missies in a single day. From March 20th to May 2nd the weeks of " major combat ", U. S forces dropped more than 30 000 bombs in Irak, as well as 20 000 precision-guided missiles which was 67 % of the total number ever made. 1800 aircraft flew 41 000 sorties in just the first month of the war according to Central Command Chief Tommy Franks who oversaw U. S troops during The Invasion. : " B-52s b1s and a whole range of Air Force marine and Navy fighter bombers would be flying above strike aircraft of all sizes were moving over a wide curve Kill Zone. " This so-called Kill Zone stretched over 100 miles east and west just south of Baghdad. Frank's continues " the bombardment that lasted from the night of March 25th through the morning of March 27th was one of the fiercest in the history of warfare. " 10 000 were probably killed in just the first three weeks of the bombing and whole areas were completely obliterated by the heavy use of cluster munitions. Just 13 000 cluster bombs dropped on the country exploded into two million bomblets and the ones that didn't explode were effectively turned into land mines. Ground troops with close support from helicopters swept through the South and made their way towards Baghdad. A force of about 145 000 troops formed less than three Army divisions. There was also one large Marine Division and a British division about 250 tanks and 250 Bradley Fighting Vehicles made their way up from Kuwait. They were confronting a weak ragged military that was a third the size of what it was during Operation Desert Storm. Roughly a decade earlier they seized airfields Bridges and oil fields on the way.
il y a 2 mois
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On the night of March 28th as U.S troops approached Baghdad, the U. S military destroyed most of the city's telephone Network four. Telephone switches were hit with massive 5 000 pound bunker Busters which instantly cut millions of phones across the city. In all they would Target 12 of baghdad's communication centers. By April 2nd there was barely a phone working in all of Baghdad. In the Frantic Panic of the Air Raids it was now impossible for Iraqis to call family members loved ones to see if they were all right and if they were still alive. And it wasn't just the phones that were targeted but also television and radio transmitters making watching or hearing any news of the assault impossible. Western media whose coverage was heavily tailored by the US military made liberal use of the term smart bomb as they did notably under the first Gulf War referring to precision-guided Munitions. The term smart bomb denotes a highly calculated accuracy but while precision-guided bombs fare well under controlled tests, in the real world on the battlefield so-called smart bombs are vulnerable to all manner of environmental factors that may change its trajectory. These include human error mechanical malfunction, software error, the fluctuating accuracy of GPS weather and just poor Military Intelligence. As noted by an investigation by Human Rights Watch The Real World efficacy of the so-called smart bombs was overwhelmingly negative. : " All of the 50 acknowledged attacks targeting Iraqi leadership failed. While they did not kill a single targeted individual the strikes killed and injured dozens of civilians. "
Marc garlasco said that " the magic number was 30. " Garlasco was the pentagon's chief of high-value targeting during operation Iraqi Freedom. "That means that if you hit 30 as the anticipated number of civilians killed the airstrike had to go to Rumsfelder Bush personally to sign off. " In the opening of the war according to the New York Times over 50 such stikes were proposed and all of them were approved. " The reporting of these casualties was not an undertaking of the military whatsoever which went all the way to the head of Central Command who said : " We don't do body counts on other people. " Thankfully a massive epidemiological study led by Les Roberts of Johns Hopkins University would provide a serious and vitally important figure that would cause a major upset in the liberal press. Les Roberts did a study for the International Rescue committee where he was tasked with estimating the numbers killed as a result of the second Congo War which is now considered the deadliest war since World War II. As a veteran epidemiologist Roberts was uniquely suited to study the Fallout from such a war. The spread of disease is of course one of War's most devastating characteristics so his specialization in studying disease via sampling and surveying was valuable. Roberts and his team would disperse throughout Eastern Congo the epicenter of the conflict and conduct a survey of. Over one thousand households participants were asked various questions including if anyone in their family had died and if so then how the data were extrapolated to Regions across the Congo. The results were grim. They concluded that 1,7 million excess deaths had occurred since the start of the war in 1998 including 200 000 from direct violence and well over a million more who had died of disease, malaria, diarrhea, diseases that otherwise could have been treated had the war not occurred.
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il y a 2 mois