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Greetings, and welcome to the World Affairs Board! The World Affairs Board is one of the premier forums for the discussion of the pressing geopolitical issues of our time. Topics include foreign & defense policy, international security, military developments, weapons proliferation, terrorism, international strategic affairs, and politics. Our membership includes many from military, defense industry, and government backgrounds with expert knowledge on a wide range of topics. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so why not register a World Affairs Board account and join our community today? |
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#76 (permalink) | |
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Patron
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Also in the 90s, the yanks were test launching a Trident missile in the Atlantic, they have notified Kremlin but the memo was lost, we were 20 seconds away from ordering a full retaliation strike, but the guy in charge luckily for all of us decided not to do it. I luckily enjoyed the bliss of ignorance since i been a child during those years at the end of Cold War which i did experience. But if you think about how many times the world was a second away from ending, its scary. Last edited by Rusky : 01-23-2006 at 02:23 AM. |
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#77 (permalink) | |
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I thank you for expressing your concerns about my opinions. I do realize that most soldiers and commanders (history does have its psycopathic characters) have basic senses of morality and justice. At the very least, most men have a physical disgust of the battlefield and massive amounts of death. It is interesting and unfortunate that you do not take me seriously, but I am by no means offended. It is not the first time my arguments have been dismissed as sociopathic. However, think first: is what I am saying really so radical? I have made only two main assertions concerning nuclear war: 1) The United States made the right decision in using nuclear weapons on Japan in World War II. 2) The United States should keep a nuclear option open in regards to Iran. Also, you may be misinterpreting my frank discussion about nuclear war as an advocation of nuclear war. This could not be further from the truth. I am fully aware of the catastophic effects of nuclear war. Nonetheless, I believe it is important to have an honest discussion about the subject. We can't just ignore it because it is too horrible to think about. However, I do view an army as a machine. The soldiers are often not wittingly part of the machine, but the commanders at the top are often calculating and shrewd, viewing their mens' lives exactly as machine intelligence would. How merciful and compassionate were Hitler, Julius Caesar, Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan? I wonder sometimes about the 'humanity' of the army, especially looking at the savage episodes of history. Don't you? Pardon me if I have mistaken ideas about the machinery of the military. I try to think like a machine, dispassionately and with calculation. As a result, I view the world as a collection of systems with specific purposes. Logically, if I view an army as a machine designed to kill, all objectives must be geared towards perfecting that system's purpose. In short, increasing amount of enemy deaths while minimizing damage to the army. |
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#78 (permalink) | |
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Military Professional
Moderator Scotch taster |
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__________________
Chimo |
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#79 (permalink) | |
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Patron
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#81 (permalink) | |
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Patron
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#83 (permalink) | |
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Military Professional
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And that in order to properly plan a nuclear conflict, the soldiers doing the planning must be dispassionate and emotionally disconected from what they are doing in order to be effective. |
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#84 (permalink) | |
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I do not believe that you are a sociopath as the responses you have posted on other threads, specifically your creativity, preclude that you are. It's easy in a hypothetical situation to divorce your emotions from your decision making, another thing entirely in reality. I like you have not had to face war and I pray I never do, but I do know from my own experiences that you cannot divorce your emotions or humanity from your decision making. I have saved peoples lives, I have watched people die and I have made decisions that directly contributed to two peoples deaths. Even though the decision was the right one I can nevertheless not recall that time without literally having my brain cringe. OoE has faced those decisions and actions on a scale I can only guess at, and he tells you that you can't divorce the consequences from your actions yet you won't listen to someone who has actual experience of this and continue to debate in a hypothetical realm. Why? Surely someone who can relate actual experience should modify your opinion? |
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#85 (permalink) | |
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Military Professional
Moderator Scotch taster |
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#86 (permalink) |
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Banished
Senior Contributor
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Commando
Israel does not have the capability to guarantee that a surgical strike will destroy Iranian nuke facilities, all of them, and certainly the biggest challenge will be the distance and the choice of waypoints to Iran, again check out your handy atlas for details... ![]() People seem to think that Israel will use tactical nukes, it wont, unless Iran launches a full scale biological/chemical attack via missiles on Israel, it will not go down that path. There are many reasons for this but most of them are common sense if you follow Israeli millitary mindset. |
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#87 (permalink) | |
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Senior Contributor
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You have understood my argument well. |
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#88 (permalink) | |
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Senior Contributor
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I suppose the loners and psychopaths have their uses in the government, perhaps as assassins and such. It seems to me a little inaccurate to rule out single and divorced men from nuclear service, but don't make military policy. Many of you are thanking God for that, no doubt. |
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#89 (permalink) | ||||||||||
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Military training can useful in such endeavors but in lieu of that canvass veterans and heed their points as they are great illuminators of the difference between theory and practice. Quote:
As to negotiations, I still believe that a direct contact between Washington and Tehran ought to be tried. This whole thing is too important to US interests to leave to others who have not proven capable of delivering up until this point. The Iranaians may not listen but I have heard it said that "nothing ventured, nothing gained". At worst, this might work out to a big zero. At best, the US might acheive its aims and possibly even put the Iranians in an Euro-American orbit instead of a Russian and/or Chinese orbit. Quote:
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As to political will, I can only call it like I see it: the US has the appearances trying to fight its current wars, battle terrorism and gear up for the next conflict while simultaneously cutting taxes and defense commitments. This is a sign of one of several things and they all bode ill. Quote:
The most credible facility striking scenario I am aware of calls for a minimum of 300 targets and five days of strikes which is a sizeable military operation. The Iranians and sympathetic plane spotters about the region and Europe could probably pick up the telegraphy of an impending strike and act accordingly. While I do not believe the Iranians could seal the Straits of Hormuz per se, any military action in those crowded shipping lanes will have an effect out of proportion to the effort involved . While airstrikes and other operations could quickly neutralize AShM shore batteries, small boats darting out into the darkeness, kicking a half a dozen mines overboard and the dissapearing into the night are hard to counter and though such attacks are militarily and tactically marginal, they have in the past proven to have significant strategic impact. The USN has dealt with this Iranian threat before, however, so there is a body of knowledge with which to formulate a partial solution. If the Iranians were to mine both the Red Sea and the Straits of Hormuz, then the World would have a mess on its hands. Iranian air defenses, to the best of my knowledge, are reasonably capable and cover all important altitudes and ranges. However, they are said to lack national integration which reduces their effectiveness and makes them a local matter at best. Quote:
First, there are conventional weapons in inventory that can burrow deeper and have greater accuracy than many nuclear weapons. Targets that may have required a nuclear response 10 or 15 years ago can be readily destroyed by some of today's conventional weapons. Secondly, there is the possibility that the US will be striking at decoys or targets that are not as significant as intelligence may have us believe. To me, this contraindicates the deployment of nuclear weapons as the stakes are very high and it would suck to take the risk and expend the military, political and diplomatic captial for a net gain of zero. You are correct that it is right and good to debate all options but when you think it all the way through, nuking Iran would suck. It would really suck. It would be the suckiest suck that ever sucked. It would suck more than an implosion at the Hoover factory. Quote:
Extensive strategic bombardment of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan did not reduce the requirement for a costly invasion of the former and still took five years to answer the latter and even then they were working at best possible capacity up until the nuclear strikes. Japan's warlords seemed to feel that they could fight on even after the Hiroshima and Nagasaki attacks; it was only the sagacity of the Emperor that brought the conflict to a conclusion. Quote:
1. Targetting non-combatants with nuclear weapons might be considered a terrorist attack under US statutes and would almost certainly be viewed as such by many international actors including any allies we muster. 2. You would still have to contend with 70% of the workforce and 55% of the industrial capacity. Given how few insurgents it took to tie down forces and cause a bit of disruption in Iraq, the Iranians would still have some sort of capacity to resist an occupation and use terror and espionage to strike at US interests in the Gulf region and beyond. Quote:
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Nuclear weapons, their history, development and proliferation is a fascinating subject with something for everybody: history, philosophy, pure science, applied science, political science, military history, millitary affairs, etc. Too, the cast of characters includes plenty of interesting personalities such as Marie Curie, Khurcatov, Robert Oppenhiemer, Fermi, Hans Bete, Einstein, Leo Sizlard, General Leslie Groves, Andre Sakarov all the way up to the notorious Dr. Kahn and let us not forget the contoversial Dr. Teller. Regards, William
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Pharoh was pimp but now he is dead. What are you going to do today? Last edited by Swift Sword : 01-23-2006 at 10:50 AM. |
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#90 (permalink) |
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Senior Contributor
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Gratuitous Comic Interlude Post
:from Randy Neuman "Political Science": No one likes us I don't know why. We may not be perfect But heaven knows we try. But all around even our old friends put us down. Let's drop the big one and see what happens. We give them money But are they grateful? No they're spiteful And they're hateful. They don't respect us so let's surprise them; We'll drop the big one and pulverize them. Now Asia's crowded And Europe's too old. Africa's far too hot, And Canada's too cold. And South America stole our name. Let's drop the big one; there'll be no one left to blame us. Bridge: We'll save Australia; Don't wanna hurt no kangaroo. We'll build an all-American amusement park there; They've got surfing, too. Well, boom goes London, And boom Paris. More room for you And more room for me. And every city the whole world round Will just be another American town. Oh, how peaceful it'll be; We'll set everybody free; You'll have Japanese kimonos, baby, There'll be Italian shoes for me. They all hate us anyhow, So let's drop the big one now. Let's drop the big one now. ---END-- ![]() Last edited by Swift Sword : 01-23-2006 at 11:09 AM. |
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