Marching
Somehow still supports Leeds
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2001
- Messages
- 39,656
Not sure the phrase "any action is better than no action at all" is applicable in this case.
Not a phrase I'd use. Did you have a point?
Not sure the phrase "any action is better than no action at all" is applicable in this case.
Not a phrase I'd use. Did you have a point?
OK, lets assume the existing members of IS are lost causes and nothing will convince them to change their ways. Our current way of dealing with it is to kill them. You seem to be against that so what's your plan?
I agree that we need to change peoples minds. As I said that is a long term situation so I ask again, what do you suggest we do in the meantime.
That's faulty logic. For all we know terrorism levels could have been far higher if it weren't for the bombings.
You seem to be saying that you can't criticise the use of airstrikes if you don't have an alternative.
You can criticise what you want, unlike those under the rule of IS.
Air strikes obviously weaken the enemy so it naturally follows that if we didn't launch them they would grow stronger which can't be allowed to happen. IMO it is barmy to suggest stopping the airstrikes and equally barmy that the UK can have drones over Syria and even be lead the operation to take out Mohammed Emwazi yet not be allowed to launch air strikes.
It's a pet peeve of mine when people are easy to criticise yet offer no alternative.
Well the alternative is to not do airstrikes, so you don't need to be peeved.
I'm not sure I have one, nor do I need one, I simply vehemently disagree with the current policy.
To me, it seems like a Western led initiative is going to do more harm than good no matter what it does. So you'd have to involve the Arab States. For the time being that also means siding with Assad. The exact nature of that involvement depends on what they're actually doing. If the Saudi's are actively funding IS then a good first step would be to get them to stop doing that, as well as tracking down and stopping whoever is buying IS oil, and tracking down private contributors in Western states (I think Russia identified 50 states or something like that). Turkey's involvement is difficult, too, Ottoman imperialism still has deep scars, but if you could convince Turkey not to actively hinder the Kurdish resistance that would be helpful. Disrupting their communications would be a good step, too.
I think the end goal has to be the establishment of authority in the region, boots on the ground or airstrikes just further create a vacuum to be filled. In my mind the solution will inevitably resemble the creation of several, smaller, states with functioning armies which can suppress that ideology. It also means the continued support for the Afghani and Iraqi governments, but thats a problem we've already caused.
You both seem to have decided that air strikes are not the answer. So what is?
If you've managed to work all that out don't you think the likes of Cameron, Obama etc have also thought along the same lines? Some things are long term objectives and I am sure removing Assad and establishing a decent authority in the region is one of them but the need to remove IS is also on the agenda and needs immediate action rather than Corbyns way of writing them a stiff letter.
The air strikes have been supporting Kurdish ground forces, who have needed their cover in order to reclaim land previously lost. This is why pretty much every military analyst of the situation says that air strikes alone won't finish the job, further ground forces are necessary because the Kurds can't do everything, and may not really want to push beyond their own territory. But to say that air strikes have achieved nothing is patently false.The Americans have been bombing Syria for the last 2 years it has not had any effect on stopping ISIS attacks around the world. Why would us adding a few extra plane all of a sudden make an action that is not working suddenly work?
We with the other NATO countries have been bombing them in Iraq again they are still training and sending out terrorists to commit highly coordinated atrocities all over the world.
Air strikes have not and will not work.
Well, quite, I was also going to add that I'm sure they're already doing a lot of that.
If they are then it brings us closer to a working solution than the airstrikes which, whilst popular, are counter productive for all the reasons we've discussed above. As for Cameron, I don't think he has any sort of policy on the matter. He goes along with whatever is popular at the time because Britain's involvement is relatively inconsequential.
I think it's going to take a ground war with Western Troupes on the ground to damage their network enough to stop them training terrorists. I also think we need a policy where we react much faster when groups like this raise their heads again.
You may have accepted the air strikes are not weakening the enemy, I haven't. And your second point is bollox. In fact your first was too. FFS, inconsequential? Who identified Amwazi's whereabouts for the US to kill him? Any rightminded person would realise the huge part we play in the situation.
I agree and air strikes are usually part of that longer term plan.
Not sure we can react much quicker than the French police and security forces did. The Mumbai attack went on for 4 days because they had to fly in specialist teams and that won't happen again so we are learning. Security forces around the world are watching likely attackers but when you think how many directions they have to be looking at once you realise how difficult is to stop every attack. The IRA used to say they only had to be lucky once for a bomb to get through whereas we had to be lucky everytime to stop them.
We have the fifth highest level of defence spending in the world, of course we have influence.And killing Emwazi has stopped ISIS? Or impacted their operational capacity in anyway? Most media reports would have you believe Emwazi was a nobody in IS and certainly not a high value target -other for the fact he was well known- so I'd argue its conclusive proof airstrikes are being used as they're popular not because they're exclusively aimed at stopping IS as an organisation.
And yes, what the UK does in inconsequential, yeah we can kill a few people and we can certainly help. But we're simply not a strong enough geopolitical power to have any real influence on the solution. We'll just go along with what the US decides.
We have the fifth highest level of defence spending in the world, of course we have influence.
We have the fifth highest level of defence spending in the world, of course we have influence.
I agree with air strikes for a short period before a ground invasion and then as support during the ground invasion just not as the only coarse of action.
I'm not on about react to the attacks, I thought that the French police did a great job and are still doing so rooting out the group that organised all of this. I mean that we sat back and let ISIS become powerful we should have stopped them when they were just in their infancy. Everybody could see what they were going to become.
I also think we need to be harder on the people who are going to Syria to fight for ISIS and then returning to the west. They should be charged with treason and locked up and have the key thrown away. I can't see how a British, French, Belgium or any other western national joining ISIS is not treason.
Not being able to set the agenda is orders of magnitude away from having "no real influence". Parliament voting down the possibility of air strikes in Syria 2 years ago stopped the US getting involved at that point. We're a major military and diplomatic power, we have influence.It doesn't matter (for a start our defence spending is ~10% that of the US). The UK is not going to set the debate here, nor will we act unilaterally in the face of international opposition. We will support the US's policy aims like we always do.
"I had no idea he had any mental health issues. If he's upset I'm sorry" and claimed Mr Jones made a "personal attack" on him by "questioning his competence to do the job".
He added: "I grew up in south London. If someone was rude to you, you were rude to back to them. I did not got to Eton and get all that smarmy charming education, I’m afraid. So sorry about that.
Well of course he isn't right now, that can't really be a criticism of his position though can it? If you genuinely think a bombing campaign would only make things better and have no long-term adverse affects then I guess that's fair enough but for me it seems like we are just trying to repeat history.
Not being able to set the agenda is orders of magnitude away from having "no real influence". Parliament voting down the possibility of air strikes in Syria 2 years ago stopped the US getting involved at that point. We're a major military and diplomatic power, we have influence.
Because choosing to do nothing, or so little that it amounts to the same, is still a decision which has consequences. Indeed it could be argued that thousands have died because the West felt it had no choice but to either stand off our outsource its intervention.
You've accused the the British public of being bloodthirsty, however if that were indeed the case the vote in 2013 would surely have turned out very differently. Cameron was unable to convince his own party let alone the wider population, and i suspect that a significant minority of backbenchers remain sceptical of his competence on foreign policy matters.
It's not anglo-centric, it's what happened. Obama was ready to start and was waiting on Cameron to get the greenlight. When that wasn't acquired, Obama abandoned the idea. It was only Da'esh becoming established that brought them back in.That's quite an anglo-centric viewpoint. It was a lack of appetite in the west in general, not just the UK. Correct me if I'm wrong, but aside from Cameron, Hollande and Obama. No world leader supported air-strikes and one of them was voted down by his own parliament.
There was a poll today suggesting just over 50% of people supported air-strikes and Cameron has suggested he won't take it to a vote because he's not sure he'd win. Given the timing, I'd be surprised if that number didn't decrease the further we get from events.
Thats the other reason why I would argue the Uk is inconsequential, because we have no real appetite to get involved.
That's quite an anglo-centric viewpoint. It was a lack of appetite in the west in general, not just the UK. Correct me if I'm wrong, but aside from Cameron, Hollande and Obama. No world leader supported air-strikes and one of them was voted down by his own parliament.
There was a poll today suggesting just over 50% of people supported air-strikes and Cameron has suggested he won't take it to a vote because he's not sure he'd win. Given the timing, I'd be surprised if that number didn't decrease the further we get from events.
Thats the other reason why I would argue the Uk is inconsequential, because we have no real appetite to get involved.
It's not anglo-centric, it's what happened. Obama was ready to start and was waiting on Cameron to get the greenlight. When that wasn't acquired, Obama abandoned the idea. It was only Da'esh becoming established that brought them back in.
There's been a number of polls relating to military action today. One (which I posted in another thread, can't remember which) even showed people wanted boots on the ground, not just air strikes. The poll you mention citing 58% support for airstrikes had just 22% against them. Another more nuanced one had only 15% in favour of unilateral airstrikes, but massive support for internationally agreed action including military, and only about 15% wanting to rule out military. So I'm not quite sure your point on the appetite is based on the evidence.
I'm sure I saw a list somewhere that included Bahrain, Canada, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, Australia...
Exactly, after we'd voted against it he stepped back from his previous "we're definitely going in" stance and said it would be put to Congress, precisely because he could no longer say there was broad international agreement on it. Given the "surprise u-turn", to use the language of the Guardian's article on it here - http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/aug/31/syrian-air-strikes-obama-congress - happened the day after our vote, it's not exactly a coincidence. After the rowing back, Putin took advantage to look the statesman. Maybe that would still have happened if we'd voted to join airstrikes, I don't know, but it was a big event at the time and I'm fairly certain it affected Obama's decision making.No, Obama was waiting on the green light from coalition partners (to borrow an Iraq warism) which he didn't receive. Yes the UK was one of those, but it was not the only one. Not only that, but he faced substantial domestic opposition not just from the public but within his own party. To act like the UK was solely responsible for what happened is disingenuous. In fact, after the UK voted against the measures on 30 Aug on the 31 Obama announced the proposals would go to congress. And a bi-partisan joint committee bill was filed on the 6th September.
It was, in fact, Russian pressure on the Assad regime to destroy chemical weapons that stopped air-strikes at that time and, in September 2014 in spite of the UK's vote a year earlier the US engaged in airstrikes on Syria supported by geopolitical allies.
My point with the polls, is that we're at the height of anger and rage and yet just over half, from the ones I've seen (fair enough if you've seen others that suggest a stronger backing), support air-strikes. It's a passionate response and in 3-4 months time with, hopefully, the events of the past week a distant memory support is not going to be as strong.
In googling this I came across this quote from Miliband:
Labour leader Ed Miliband said on Friday that the House of Commons had spoken "for the people of Britain".
"People are deeply concerned about the chemical weapons attacks in Syria, but they want us to learn the lessons of Iraq," he said.
"They don't want a rush to war. They want things done in the right way, working with the international community."
He said Britain "doesn't need reckless and impulsive leadership, it needs calm and measured leadership".
I think it, still, sums up the attitude towards Syria.
My use of 'world leader' was incorrect. But I think almost all of those joined later in 2014 when the strikes were against IS rather than in 2013 against Assad.
Exactly, after we'd voted against it he stepped back from his previous "we're definitely going in" stance and said it would be put to Congress, precisely because he could no longer say there was broad international agreement on it. Given the "surprise u-turn", to use the language of the Guardian's article on it here - http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/aug/31/syrian-air-strikes-obama-congress - happened the day after our vote, it's not exactly a coincidence. After the rowing back, Putin took advantage to look the statesman. Maybe that would still have happened if we'd voted to join airstrikes, I don't know, but it was a big event at the time and I'm fairly certain it affected Obama's decision making.
Senior administration officials told reporters on Saturday that the president had come to his decision to seek congressional approval at about 6pm on Friday evening. He discussed it during a 45-minute walk with his chief of staff, Denis McDonough, and then called a meeting of his top national security aides at 7pm.
The officials said there was a "robust debate" in the two-hour meeting. Some aides were concerned about the risk of seeking the approval of Congress, but officials did not say which advisers had argued against the decision. All now approved of it, the officials said.
Obama's decision was a sign that the White House feels exposed over Syria, amid waning international support, minimal public backing and a chorus of concern on Capitol Hill. In 2011, Obama was strongly criticised for not consulting Congress before launching strikes against Libya.
And the article also quotes Obama directly citing the Commons vote. I'm perfectly willing to say we weren't the sole actors responsible for the change, as I said earlier we don't set the agenda, my whole point is that we still have influence. It's the "we're meaningless" attitude that irks me.From the very article you posted:
Yes, the commons vote was a part of the 'waning international support' but to act like its solely responsible for a shift in US policy is simply wrong.
And the article also quotes Obama directly citing the Commons vote. I'm perfectly willing to say we weren't the sole actors responsible for the change, as I said earlier we don't set the agenda, my whole point is that we still have influence. It's the "we're meaningless" attitude that irks me.
I don't think we're going to agree on this to be honest, and we're getting a bit off topic from his Corbiness. Which Corbyn's probably pretty happy about tbfIt's just speculation, though, Obama's reference to the commons vote is purely in response to concerns he might lose. There's more than enough domestic pressures to suggest that, rather than a tenuous link with the commons vote to be the reason.
Either way I'm not sure its a massively strong endorsement for your point. If all of the world is united against the US, including half the US itself, can just about sort of make Obama change his mind then what chance do we have on our own? You only have to look at the language used at the time to show how uncomfortable going against the US made people it was phrased in terms of damaging the 'special relationship'.
The strongest argument for your point is our security council veto, I guess, but we haven't used that for nearly 30 years and have only done so unilaterally 5 times, all in regards to Rhodesia.
You'd be right if the bombing operation had been the first they'd launched.
The escalation in the level of bombing certainly seems knee jerk, it takes time to filter intelligence and aquire targets, not sure they are taking their time to be sure anymore
The escalation in the level of bombing certainly seems knee jerk, it takes time to filter intelligence and aquire targets, not sure they are taking their time to be sure anymore
They have a set group of targets that allow them to plan in advance. There are known targets that have been avoided to this point because of civilian impact like oil facilities, etc. It's not as if they just decided to drop bombs without using specific targets that had been designated after whatever review process. They're also undoubtedly using guided munitions, unlike certain others involved in the bombing of Syria (Assad, Russia).
I don't buy that they are targeting Isis with the same criteria they followed before events on Friday
I don't buy that they are targeting Isis with the same criteria they followed before events on Friday