I hate to say it, but with the situation in Iraq right now anyone stupid enough to fire weapons at a wedding ceremony puts themselves at risk.
I'm not even so sure this was a wedding. Who the hell has a wedding on the Syrian-Iraqi border, anyway?
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I hate to say it, but with the situation in Iraq right now anyone stupid enough to fire weapons at a wedding ceremony puts themselves at risk.
I'm not even so sure this was a wedding. Who the hell has a wedding on the Syrian-Iraqi border, anyway?
I think they dance whilst firing weapons.Quote:
Originally Posted by diffusionx
I agree with DifX. I know some of you just love to find reasons to bash on the military and the adminstration but while your sitting at your computer thinking war is some affair that's supposed to be civil and direct, keep in mind it's not. The US military makes mistakes but our track record is still pretty damned good compared to other countries.
Only an irresponsible murderer bombs a group of people who's identity is unknown. If I were to murder someone I'd want to at least be sure we've both got similar weapons and that he's trying to kill me. But bombing civilians from a plane! What cowardice!
It's the responsibility of those soldiers to be sure they're not killing civilians and it's not the civilian's fault, which is what most of the gung-ho bullshit here seems to be suggesting. Remember who the invaders are in Iraq. They weren't invited to Iraq. Their reasons for their being there have long since disappeared. They should have some respect and kindly refrain from murdering civilians.
Whiskey Tango Foxtrot?
Indeed.Quote:
Originally Posted by AstroBlue
Okay, this Nick Berg stuff is just getting too weird.
Berg's sister confused over Moore's taped interview
BY WILLIAM BUNCH
Knight Ridder Newspapers
PHILADELPHIA - (KRT) - The sister of Nick Berg, the contractor from the Philadelphia suburbs who was beheaded earlier this month in Iraq, says she's dumbfounded by reports that liberal icon Michael Moore had filmed an interview with her late brother for his new anti-war film.
"I'm very skeptical of this," said Sara Berg, a Virginia attorney whose brother's beheading sparked a global uproar.
But she said there was no way to confirm that Moore had sent a tape of the reported 20-minute interview to their parents' home in West Chester, as the filmmaker suggested in a statement Thursday, because the couple has been away.
Moore's acknowledgment that he had interview footage of Berg that had been shot - but not used - for his highly controversial "Fahrenheit 9/11" documentary may be the strangest twist yet in the increasingly weird saga of Berg and his Iraqi travels, which led to his slaying.
The initial story that touched off the controversy appeared Thursday on the online magazine Salon.com.
It said the interview took place in the United States late last year, before Berg, a radio-tower technician, made the first of two trips to Iraq seeking work there as a private contractor.
So, how would a completely unknown young wannabe contractor like Berg come to the attention of Moore, whose anti-President Bush screed "Dude, Where's My Country?" was the best-selling book in the nation at the time?
Stranger than that: Why would Moore or his crew interview Berg for "Fahrenheit 9/11" for 20 minutes, when Berg's family insists the slain contractor was pro-Bush and supported the American military action in Iraq?
The film, which just took top honors at the Cannes Film Festival, blasts Bush and shows graphic war footage from Iraq.
We may never know the answers, because Berg is dead and Moore says he has no plans to release the interview footage to the public.
"We have an interview with Nick Berg," Moore's terse statement said. "It was approximately 20 minutes long. We are not releasing it to the media. It is not in the film. We are dealing privately with the family."
Friends of Berg, the Henderson High School grad, say he was an adventurous, inventive and perhaps naive young man who simply wanted to help in the rebuilding of Iraq but disregarded safety warnings, traveling solo and in private taxis.
Berg was arrested by Iraqi police on March 24, held in custody for 13 days, and released - only to disappear again on April 10. His headless body was found on a Baghdad overpass on May 8, three days before the video of the decapitation was posted.
Despite some contradictory evidence, the CIA claims the execution was done by an al Qaeda terrorist, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi.
Since then, some have questioned why Berg had been in Iraq, as well as some of his strange connections.
The FBI questioned Berg in 2002 to find out why his e-mail password had ended up with an Oklahoma terror suspect linked to al Qaeda terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui.
In Iraq, Berg partnered with an ex-Philadelphia Iraqi expatriate who'd been convicted in a Russian-exile crack-vial ring before becoming the highly visible leader of an anti-Saddam Hussein group backed by the Bush administration.
I would believe a 10 year old sock before I believed MM. He's always complaining that everyone in the WH witholds information to further their own agenda all the while doing this. Kind of hypocritical.
"The FBI questioned Berg in 2002 to find out why his e-mail password had ended up with an Oklahoma terror suspect linked to al Qaeda terrorist Zacarias Moussaoui."
His email password? So he could potentially let al Qaeda members get into his email account?
1.) Iraq is sovereign. Debate the technicalities.
2.) Saddam is being tried by Iraqis, 15 months later.
3.) 10,000 Iraqis dead as a direct result of the Iraq war over the last 15 months. How many Iraqis died in the 15 months leading up to the war as a direct result of Saddam, and the sanctions?
4.) Yemen and Jordan are offering to send troops to Iraq.
5.) We're sure Saddam doesn't have WMDs, now (heheh).
1000 Americans dead, 5000 injured, $150 billion spent.
The last year has been far worse than it needed to be, but thinking over it all, I'm glad we did what we did.