Ripsnort: ...and Iraqi's are firing on the coalition troops from Mosques... As I've said - I am not questioning attacks on the military installations in mosques and hospitals but only POWs rescues.
Ripsnort: Anyway, how are these guys gonna communicate? They? All our future adversaries - Iranians, Koreans, Syrians, etc. are getting it from our media. We are communicating it loud and clear - "try to provide a better care for our wounded and you will regret it".
Ripsnort: New Yorker, he's been brainwashed by the New York Times. Yeah, that's where I got that idea about my avatar...
Ripsnort: probably because she was female and a high ranking Hadji wanted her for sexual pleasure after her wounds healed alittle. Thats my guess. That is actually the only rational point relating to our discussion - or at least the question I raised. Let's wait and see if our command had such belief before they launched the rescue mission. That still does not explain the reason to highly publicise it. It's not the fact of the rescue that endangers the POWs - only the knowlege of it by our adversaries.
Anyway, anyone dares to venture a straight answer? Will it or will not such an act endanger our POWs in this and the future conflicts in years to come?
Kanth: I just don't see that our actions are going to make any difference in how they decide to treat our troops..
I see no evidence that this is so. First, if you do not see it, it does not necessarily mean it's not there.
Second, who are
they you are talking about? Certainly the afghans skin their prisoners and then keep them alive for days while chechens cut their throats while Iraqis seem to treat at least one of them in the hospital and returned a few alive and germans usually treated US POWs reasonably well, etc.
Kanth: And trying to make nice with them over POW's just gives us a weakness for them to exploit. It looks like treating US prisoners humanely gives the weakness for us to exploit.
As for giving us a weakness for them to exploit, I don't see how not rescuing a POW from a hospital in a specific mission makes us weaker?
We can still attack their military facilities even if that means killing our own POWs, so they can not exploit POW as "human shields".
But if you can explain how it gives us a weakness that I fail to realise, it would be exactly a kind of an answer I was looking for in this thread.Turdboy: The problem is your "denouncing" of the US is in almost every one of your posts. If you see my bringing attention to our mistakes in hopes to fix them for the benefit as this country as "denouncing" - not much I can do.
Still, does that mean I cannot count on your rational input on the subgect in
any of my posts?
Turdboy: Iraq is not a country known for being nice to ANY prisoners! People get killed in a war - even prisoners. Whatever the state policy, there are alwasy people close to the action with their own motivatons. Any army killed prisoners in any war - including allies killing german prisoners in WWII. Once you have your family hurt/threatened or buddies killed, your average grunt or lowly officer does not care about Geneva Convention much.
But once the prisoner survives capture, those in Iraqi hands seem to be doing OK.
Jessica seems to be treated in the hospital - and if she was tortured there and US command knew about that before mounting the raid, maybe the command should be more explicit on that.
Gulf War I prisoners were beat up somewhat and scared by shooting with unloaded pistols, but that is way milder than what we believe acceptable - not just threats but sleep/sensoty deprivation, confinment/binding in akward positions in narrow spaces, etc.
Mini D: Do you think the rescue of one POW is going to do any more/less to endanger other POWs than the siege of Bagdahd? I did not specifically mean Bagdahd but any future wars - some day we may have to asault Damaskus, Berlin or Paris or Tehran or Moscow or Belgrade, whatever.
But it applies to Bagdahd as well. They will keep our wounded POWs in the same dungeons as the rest instead of treating them in the hospitals. And, seing what a great deal we make out of the rescue and how dangerous it is to be around the POWs, they may just be tempted to shoot them all and be done with it.
What's so dumb about that?
You are falling into the same trap as the media miko. You look at one event and over analyze it and draw conclusions that really make no sense when compared to the bigger picture.
Iraq is trying to win the media battle as well as the U.S. Not really. I look at a very narrow case. You move a wounded POW in a less safe treatment facility. US exploits it as well as scores a major media coup. You get fewer POWs getting moved into safe treatment facilities. Is that one case worth more POWs dead in the future - who's death could not be possibly blamed on such policy with any certainity but will be no less real?
miko