Do You Support The Coalition Troops?, Well... Do You?

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How do you feel about the war in Iraq?

I condemn the war and refuse to take sides
4
13%
I support the coalition troops
13
43%
I don't necessarily want anyone to die, but I want the US & its allies to lose
4
13%
I condemn coalition soldiers and want them to get their asses kicked by Iraqis and/or insurgents
9
30%
 
Total votes : 30

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Oct 29, 2006
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/talking_point/6091532.stm

An interview with BBC's David Loyn, regarding the re emergence of the Taleiban.

The BBC's David Loyn had exclusive access to Taleban forces mobilised against British forces in Helmand Province in southern Afghanistan.

He answers some of your questions about his trip.

Q: In the UK, the Taleban are depicted as a harsh oppressive regime which ruled by fear. You associate closely with them. What are your feelings about them?
Raymond Mcalpine, Gravesend, UK

I am not sure about the word 'associate', which seems to imply approval, but if it means that I have spent a fair amount of time with them, then yes that is true, both in the late 90s and since.

As far as their regime was concerned, it is worth remembering that it was popular in many parts of the country - particularly the Pashtun rural areas in the south, although deeply resented in the north, the west and urban areas everywhere. It was popular because it was seen as not corrupt, and brought law and order so it was possible for Afghans to travel safely around the country in ways that have not been possible before or since. Their new leadership do admit that some mistakes were made in terms of the harshness of their rule, but they have not changed their profoundly conservative religious austerity, nor their desire to impose severe restrictions on women.

Q: Where are the Taleban getting their funding from and why are they fighting the Nato forces?
Mohammed Baba Iddrisu, Ghana

Travelling with them in Helmand I was struck by how much they do have, in terms of new vehicles, ammunition, and well-maintained weapons. They claim to have recently bought 8,000 Thuraya mobile satphones. So they are not short of money. The leadership deny that they are directly funded by Pakistan, although little happens in Afghanistan that does not have some Pakistani intelligence element in it. Their money comes from sympathisers, including governments in Arab states and collections from mosques around the world, raised from people who see them as fighting a 'jihad' - a holy war.

Q: Are the Taleban motivated more by Islam or a sense of nationalism? Additionally, do they discuss their war as part of a wider conflict which includes their 'brothers' in Iraq?
James Flynn, London, UK

It is nationalism fuelled by Islam. They draw considerable strength from painting themselves as the heirs of Afghanistan's warrior traditions. Even the most uneducated foot soldier will quote the dates of the battles in the nineteenth century when they beat the British. They do not see themselves as part of a wider world ''jihad', but an Afghan solution to an Afghan problem. However there are clear tactical links. For example, they now adopt suicide bombing as a weapon. This is quite new in the Afghan context, but they have seen how it works in Iraq.

Q: You mentioned that the Taleban often stop at villages demanding food. How do they treat the villagers, especially the women? I have read that some Taleban warlords are very fond of western goods like branded sunglasses, cigarettes etc.
Delnavaz, Haryana, India

None of the Taleban I spent time with had any western consumer goods, cigarettes etc. In fact, while they were showing off a cache of captured military equipment, a commander found an expensive pair of American sunglasses. But after playing around with them for a while, he tossed them aside. As far as the villagers are concerned, the Taleban treated them with respect and familiarity. A Taleban commander told me that the fact that villagers are willing to provide them with food shows their support. Along with the core of fighters, they recruit from local villages, and all wear the standard loose shirts and trousers (salwar kameez), so it is impossible to say who is a soldier and who a farmer - many are both. Of course, since I was travelling with armed Taleban fighters, it is impossible to know what the villagers really think of them (as it is equally impossible to find out the truth if a reporter jumps out of the back of a British or American armoured vehicle on an embed) I did not see any women during my stay. They always remain behind closed doors when men are around. These may look like severe restrictions. The Taleban see them as a mark of respect.

Q: The Taleban appear to be an indomitable force, disappearing and re-forming. Would the current government of President Karzai consider discussions with them and the possibility of a coalition or power sharing scenario?
Barry Derbyshire, Brisbane, Australia

They did disappear after 2001, and found it very hard to reform and recruit. Their re-emergence is very much as a force designed to beat foreign 'occupiers', and they express contempt for Karzai. The last real attempt to have any kind of meaningful dialogue with outsiders, remarkably enough, was in 1998, but it collapsed after an American cruise missile attack. The current leadership would not be likely to be interested in dialogue, and it is hard to see the United States agreeing to any power-sharing agreement, although there is increasing talk among analysts in the region about the possibility of Afghanistan splitting up, leaving the Pashtun south in Taleban hands.

Q: There seem to be a notable difference between al-Qaeda and the Taleban. What are the differences between the Taleban and al-Qaeda's political ideology?
Abdullah, Surrey, UK

The Taleban are very keen to point out the differences. They see al-Qaeda merely as 'guests' in their country and do not share their foreign policy or desire to export 'jihad' . But they do share the same austere iconoclastic view of the Islamic way of life.

Q: When the Taleban first started to take Afghanistan I remember reading reports of them being welcomed by cheering locals as they rid the country of the scourge of the war lords. Is there any support among the Afghan population for a return of the Taleban?
Dirk Dil, Luxembourg

There is growing support for a variety of reasons: firstly they see the Karzai government as corrupt and too keen on promoting the old warlords - I was shocked to see soldiers from the newly-formed Afghan national army taking money at gunpoint from every car that passed. This was happening on the main road linking Iran to Pakistan across the south of Afghanistan, and has powerful resonances since it was to stop corruption on this very road that the Taleban first emerged, with some popular support, in 1994. The trucking companies are paying the Taleban again to see if they can clear the road for them again. The Taleban are also winning support because of the failure of the international aid effort to make enough difference to people's lives. Civilian casualties in the worsening conflict also play into their hands.

Q: Since the Taleban forces are employed fighting and killing British troops, I am at a loss to understand why the BBC feels that it is using our licence fees well by giving their propaganda oxygen? If you were killed during an attack by Nato, who would accept responsibility for your death?
Paul Jewell, Ivinghoe, Buckinghamshire

I took an assessment of the risks, well aware of the possibility you talk about. The BBC would not have blamed Nato forces for my death in these circumstances. Like Churchill I rather think jaw-jaw is better than war-war, and feel that my job as a reporter is to explain best what is going on. Indeed in a democracy I have not just a right but a duty to do this as comprehensively as possible. 'Our licence fees' did indeed support what was actually rather a cheap trip by the standards of these things (I was both the cameraman and reporter). But on a separate point, 'our taxes' are paying for 'our soldiers' to fight a difficult conflict, and I rather wanted to know what they are up against and why. Don't you, Paul?

Q: Does the current Taleban force have intrinsic links to the Taleban political wing (in a similar manner to the IRA and Sinn Fein)? If they are only interested in ousting corruption, why can't they be given an official role working alongside the UN forces to re-build the country?
Jay Willcox, Barcelona, Spain

There isn't really a 'political wing' like the IRA - the whole Taleban movement atomised after the fall of the government. The military revival this year is the first real sign that they are still a potential force. I did suggest to a number of their commanders that since they share much of the same agenda as foreign interests in the country - fighting corruption, ending the opium trade and so on - they might join forces. They were contemptuous. To them the British-led forces in the south are foreign invaders, and they see them as infidels, (although there have been British Muslim military casualties). There is no compromise on this. But given the way they have been demonised by the world, I wonder too if the Karzai government would be willing to make the compromises necessary to offer them an official role.

Q: You mention the fact that soldiers of the Afghan Army are demanding payment at gunpoint for access through vehicle checkpoints. Are these the same soldiers that have been trained by British and coalition forces? Why have the British led coalition not put a stop to this?
Adrian Lewis, Newcastle, UK

Beats me, Adrian. This was the most surprising thing I saw. They are the same soldiers whose training has been paid for by western taxes. And frankly there seems to be little point in sending good British soldiers to fight in this kind of political context. They are fighting with one arm tied behind their back. Every time government checkpoints steal from a motorist the Taleban recruit another soldier. The trucking companies are now paying the Taleban again.

Q: If Nato is failing in its promise to rebuild and modernise, how does this effect the morale of the British troops who are having to face the brunt of violent frustration?
Richard V Evans, Neath , South Wales

Read their blogs. On this trip I did not meet them, since I was behind Taleban lines throughout, although I have been embedded with British forces in Afghanistan this year. But I did talk to a lot of local people, and their perception that the international community has brought only bloodshed and not aid is a hard one to shift with guns and tanks. A farmer who I spoke to (not a Taleb, but a refugee who had fled to safety with his family after his father was shot and wounded in crossfire) said that the Taleban are the only people to gain from this situation. Military vehicles do brutal things just by being in villages made of mud houses. He is worried about his orchards and vineyards. He saw tanks breaking down the walls and setting up a military position in his village. Does he think they have come to deliver aid? On the record British troops, the bravest and best in the world, talk the talk. But given that the defence secretary who sent them in said they might not have to 'fire a shot' - put yourself into the shoes of a soldier who is going in for the next tour - knowing that his predecessors went in to provide goodwill and a secure environment for aid, and found themselves fighting one of the most intense conflicts of the last half century.

Q: How significant is Pakistani assistance with regards to the return of the Taleban? Is the ISI (Pakistan's Inter Service Intelligence) still providing them with funding and logistical assistance and, if so, what can be done to pressure Pakistan to cease this assistance?
Jonathan Hall, London, UK

This is the hardest question. The Taleban deny it - strongly and vehemently. They portray themselves as Afghan nationalists and successors of a warrior tradition. The easy answer is that there is considerable 'soft' support in Pakistan, ie in allowing the madrassas - religious 'schools' to function. The Taleban are not just educated here, but go back for R&R between trips. The international border - the Durand line - was drawn up by a British colonial administrator more than a hundred years ago in a hurry - and has been blissfully ignored since. So there are a lot of men who are Pakistani nationals who fight for what they see as a Pashtun cause. Pakistan's biggest security concern is to the east - India. Of course the ISI need to know what is at their backs when they look at the threat from India. But I do not know if they are behind the new rise of the Taleban. I do know that they are not short of money. Their vehicles, communications equipment and weapons are new.

Q: Do you think that the Taleban will win the war? Can Afghanistan really become a democratic country with the help of the West?
Ramon Garway, Monrovia, Liberia

I am short of a perfect crystal ball, Ramon. The Taleban were under-rated by everybody in the late 90s but they took most of the country. As it stands the war is unwinnable for Nato. Afghans say the West has had five years to install a functioning democracy and Afghanistan is still waiting.

Q: Is it justifiable and correct to speak of the Taleban as one cohesive force? How do they perceive themselves in terms of identity? Finally, did you ask them whether they know Osama bin Laden and what was their reaction?
Daniel Maier, Stuttgart, Germany

Apart from the main Taleban under Mullah Omar, still their leader, there are a number of other militias based in the tribal areas of Pakistan who have an ability to operate. But his central force is the strongest. I did not meet anyone who has met Osama, and they claim he was only a guest.

Q: Are the Taleban happy with the Afghanistan borders as they stand?
Charles Trimnell, Bournemouth, UK

The Durand line, the Afghan border, is not a major issue for them - nor indeed a problem . They can cross it at will, and never really agreed with it. (When I was crossing it once about 10 years ago on the main road, we had to wake up a customs officer to put a stamp I needed in my passport, only because I would need the exit stamp for the next time I went into Afghanistan. There is no more porous border on the planet) Their hero is Ahmed Shah Durrani, who first united Afghanistan in the eighteenth century. The exact border is immaterial.

Q: Are the Taleban aware of the fact that many people in Britain disagree with the war in Afghanistan and Iraq?
Craig Eastman, Birkenhead, UK

They have no idea of any of the complexities of the debate in Britain.

Q: Do the Taleban foresee a time when they will lay down their arms and stop fighting? What is their objective and can they see a time when there will be peace?
Edward McCarthy, Edinburgh, UK

'Islam' means 'the way of peace'. That is their dream. But it may not be achievable in any normal human context, Edward. Rather like the dreams of communism the struggle may be as important as the result. They were very surprised that when they brought relative security to most of the country in 1996 the international community did not congratulate them.

Q: Is life more bearable now, for the average Afghan, five years after the fall of Taleban?
Umar Mukhtar, Kano, Nigeria

It got a bit better. But it has got worse, particularly in the south. Many refugees have returned. More schools have opened. Roads have been built. But corruption, the return of the warlords, and now substantial civilian casualties have turned the debate. Five years is a long time. Five years after Germany's defeat in the Second World War, the country was transformed to the point that it was one of the founder members of the European Union - the most stable economic power bloc in the history of the world. It seems to be harder to make peace now than it was then.

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Nov 10, 2006
article wrote:http://www.commondreams.org/headlines06/1102-04.htm

Published on Thursday, November 2, 2006 by the McGill Daily (Canada)
Pulitzer-Winning Investigative Journalist Seymour Hersh Slams Bush at McGill Address
“There has never been an American army as violent and murderous as the one in Iraq”

by Martin Lukacs

“The bad news,” investigative reporter Seymour Hersh told a Montreal audience last Wednesday, “is that there are 816 days left in the reign of King George II of America.”

The good news? “When we wake up tomorrow morning, there will be one less day.”

Hersh, a Pulitzer-prize winning journalist and regular contributor to The New Yorker magazine, has been a thorn in the side of the U.S. government for nearly 40 years. Since his 1969 exposé of the My Lai massacre in Vietnam, which is widely believed to have helped turn American public opinion against the Vietnam War, he has broken news about the secret U.S. bombing of Cambodia, covert C.I.A. attempts to overthrow Chilean president Salvador Allende, and, more recently, the first details about American soldiers abusing prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq.

During his hour-and-a-half lecture – part of the launch of an interdisciplinary media and communications studies program called Media@McGill – Hersh described video footage depicting U.S. atrocities in Iraq, which he had viewed, but not yet published a story about.

He described one video in which American soldiers massacre a group of people playing soccer.
“Three U.S. armed vehicles, eight soldiers in each, are driving through a village, passing candy out to kids,” he began. “Suddenly the first vehicle explodes, and there are soldiers screaming. Sixteen soldiers come out of the other vehicles, and they do what they’re told to do, which is look for running people.”

“Never mind that the bomb was detonated by remote control,” Hersh continued. “[The soldiers] open up fire; [the] cameras show it was a soccer game.”

“About ten minutes later, [the soldiers] begin dragging bodies together, and they drop weapons there. It was reported as 20 or 30 insurgents killed that day,” he said.

If Americans knew the full extent of U.S. criminal conduct, they would receive returning Iraqi veterans as they did Vietnam veterans, Hersh said.

“In Vietnam, our soldiers came back and they were reviled as baby killers, in shame and humiliation,” he said. “It isn’t happening now, but I will tell you – there has never been an [American] army as violent and murderous as our army has been in Iraq.”

Hersh came out hard against President Bush for his involvement in the Middle East.

“In Washington, you can’t expect any rationality. I don’t know if he’s in Iraq because God told him to, because his father didn’t do it, or because it’s the next step in his 12-step Alcoholics Anonymous program,” he said.

Hersh hinted that the responsibility for the invasion of Iraq lies with eight or nine members of the administration who have a “neo-conservative agenda” and dictate the U.S.’s post-September 11 foreign policy.

“You have a collapsed Congress, you have a collapsed press. The military is going to do what the President wants,” Hersh said. “How fragile is democracy in America, if a president can come in with an agenda controlled by a few cultists?”

Throughout his talk Hersh remained pessimistic, predicting that the U.S. will initiate an attack against Iran, and that the situation in Iraq will deteriorate further.

“There’s no reason to see a change in policy about Iraq. [Bush] thinks that, in twenty years, he’s going to be recognized for the leader he was – the analogy he uses is Churchill,” Hersh said. “If you read the public statements of the leadership, they’re so confident and so calm…. It’s pretty scary.”

© 2006 McGill Daily
valkyrie
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Nov 25, 2006
I don't want American soldiers to die out of cruelty, or because they're all bad people who deserve it (which, maybe they are and do)

I want them to die so they can't kill any Iraqi soldiers, guerrillas or civilians.

I voted for I condemn coalition soldiers and want them to get their asses kicked by Iraqis and/or insurgents, obviously.
valkyrie
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Dec 01, 2006
rvp_legend wrote:My point is that al qaeda is the b$stard child of the USA in 1973 when they funded the group and helped it become what it was.


Bin Laden was not an employee of the CIA. He was funded by Saudi millionaires, whereas CIA money was funnelled through the Pakistani Intelligence service to their own proxies - of whom Bin Laden was not a member.

The CIA did fund Afghan warlords who have killed considerably more people than Bin Laden however.

"We were never at any time friends of the Americans. We knew that the Americans support the Jews in Palestine and that they are our enemies. Most of the weapons that came to Afghanistan were paid for by the Saudis on the orders of the Americans because Turki al-Faisal [the head of Saudi external intelligence] and the CIA were working together."


http://usinfo.state.gov/media/Archive/2 ... 18760.html

The important thing to remember is not that the CIA gave money to one man or not, it's that they funded hundreds others like him, who subscribed to Islamic fundamentalism.
valkyrie
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Dec 01, 2006
"I support the coalition troops 40% [ 10 ]"

Damn I get disgusted to see that result. Didn't think this was a Swedish poll,
but what da heck, it's the same crap were ever you go I guess.
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Dec 12, 2006
valkyrie wrote:I don't want American soldiers to die out of cruelty, or because they're all bad people who deserve it (which, maybe they are and do)

I want them to die so they can't kill any Iraqi soldiers, guerrillas or civilians.

I voted for I condemn coalition soldiers and want them to get their asses kicked by Iraqis and/or insurgents, obviously.


I haven't read all 5 pages of this but correct me if I'm wrong, the mass killing in Iraq is being done by Muslims against Muslims just now isn't it? Do you think that would stop were the coalition to leave?
scot1870
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Dec 12, 2006
scot1870 wrote:
I haven't read all 5 pages of this but correct me if I'm wrong, the mass killing in Iraq is being done by Muslims against Muslims just now isn't it? Do you think that would stop were the coalition to leave?


It certainly won't get any better with the troops there - everyone now agrees they are part of the problem, and that things are worse for ordinary Iraqis now then before the invasion.

The mass killings are occuring as a direct result of the mess made to the Iraqi infrastructure by the US led invasion.

and to compound the tragedy, all of this was predicted by many countries who opposed the invasion.

Cheers,
Shafique
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Dec 13, 2006
scot1870 wrote:I haven't read all 5 pages of this but correct me if I'm wrong, the mass killing in Iraq is being done by Muslims against Muslims just now isn't it? Do you think that would stop were the coalition to leave?


Iraqis are already fighting Iraqis. Insurgents have killed far more Iraqis than Americans. That’s civil war. We created the civil war when we invaded; we can’t prevent a civil war by staying.
valkyrie
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Dec 13, 2006
And a lot of this is because the top dog was taking out. As evil as he was - Saddam kept order with a rule of fear and he was more then willing to mame and torture anyone who questioned or posed a threat to his rule.

Now he is gone all the disputes and resentments are being settled again.

My answer is that i would like to see an immediate withdrawl and I loath bush and blair for putting troops there in the first place - but bush and blair are just puppets to multi-nationals but no one seems to consider this.

As for valkrie and co who would like to see troops killed (when most of them do not even want to be there in the first place) - you are merely another part of the problem - 'division and hatred ' and no better then bush and blair or shell / BP etc etc. You are no better then someone who would take pleasure from seeing an Iraq insurgent killed.

You have made the biggest mistake which is grouping people under the assumption that they all support the ethos of their government or the worlds corporate powers.
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Dec 14, 2006
jabbajabba wrote:when most of them do not even want to be there in the first place


The equivalent of Germans who did what they could to not get stationed at the Death Camps, cursed Hitler, but still fought in his wars. Tough situation, buddy, but you’re on the wrong side.
valkyrie
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Dec 14, 2006
Edit: I'll rewrite later, too much idiocy on here.
scot1870
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Dec 14, 2006
Scot, you don't get it do you? Iraq is refusing to be the colony of the US/UK. So why don't they take their oil and leave? Oh, but they're not there for the oil, they're there to spread democracy (hahaha). Well guess what? The democratic consensus says: Invaders Go Home.
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Dec 14, 2006
valkyrie wrote:The equivalent of Germans who did what they could to not get stationed at the Death Camps, cursed Hitler, but still fought in his wars. Tough situation, buddy, but you’re on the wrong side.


:)

This was just the kind of answer I expected from you,

Quote the only sentence you can take a flimsy poke at such as the above (surely you can do better then that and be half as6sed to propose a comparison founded in reality).

I have finally sussed you and what you crave.......

Attention.

Poor little man.
jabbajabba
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Dec 14, 2006
Iraq is refusing to be the colony of the US/UK.
WE CAN SOON FIX THAT LITTLE PROBLEM :lol:
Bogus-Borgas
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Dec 15, 2006
Bogus-Borgas wrote:Iraq is refusing to be the colony of the US/UK.
WE CAN SOON FIX THAT LITTLE PROBLEM :lol:



You say little problem? How? 8)
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Dec 17, 2006
freza wrote:Scot, you don't get it do you? Iraq is refusing to be the colony of the US/UK. So why don't they take their oil and leave? Oh, but they're not there for the oil, they're there to spread democracy (hahaha). Well guess what? The democratic consensus says: Invaders Go Home.


We don't want them to be a colony, we washed our hands of that sort of thing many moons ago :wink: Bush wanted some stability in oil, but more importantly for him he wanted to do what his dad didn't do and there's no doubting he made a mess of it.

My primary beef is with the people on here saying it's OK to want Western people to die whilst at the same time ignoring the fact that the main conflict is between Muslim sections and it would have come to a head at some point. It should also be noted that there exists the power and influence in other Middle Eastern states to appease the situation (maybe not stop entirely), but they stand by and do nothing.

Nobody deserves to die, not Iraqis, soldiers nor insurgents. People who continue to wish death on people are part of the problem as they refuse to accept any peaceful way out. Withdrawal of the UK and US (which they are working towards) will not stop the killing, so who will be your scapegoat then?
scot1870
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Dec 17, 2006
scot, The reality is that Iraqi on Iraqi bloodshed of this magnitude would not be happening if it weren't for the foreign invasion. That blood is on the hands of the invaders as much as it is on the hands of the Iraqi death squads and criminals. (And there's a lot that we don't know, info that is not being reported about who really is behind some of the death squads).

The whole wishing violence on others thing is irrelevant. Wishing harm on someone doesn't translate into much does it? The problem is the action behind a wish. I don't see your type decrying the thousands upon thousands of deaths of "alleged" insurgents so why do you complain about someone wishing harm on the (should I remind you) illegally invading forces?

What/who is stopping the killing NOW? The invaders are pretending to care about the future of Iraq if they withdraw ... oh my ... why aren't they caring about the present? As if we should believe liars. I don't buy into that, I don't believe illegal invaders who lied to their people and tried to lie to the world (the rest of the world knew better, thank God).
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Dec 17, 2006
[quote="freza"]scot, The reality is that Iraqi on Iraqi bloodshed of this magnitude would not be happening if it weren't for the foreign invasion. [quote]

Right now, no it wouldn't be the same. But the point is it would have come to a head at some point, whether when Saddam died or through some other conflict in the Middle East acting as a trigger. The apparent hatred between Shias and Sunnis cannot be blamed solely on an illadvised decision by Bush and Blair. That the Americans (for it is they based in the main areas of fighting) cannot bring peace is because they are only a small part of a religious war - if the Sunnis and Shias are shooting and bombing indiscriminately at each other directly then how are they supposed to intervene? As I say, there are powers in both religious sects throughout the region who could act to try to pacify but they also do nothing.

Wishing harm on people is an important point here too, as if that opinion is shared widely and often enough then there will be those who believe it OK to act upon it and the war will run for decades, not years, after the coalition has gone.
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