Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Government The Military United States News

New US Airstrikes In Iraq Intended to Protect Important Dam 215

U.S. military involvement in Iraq is heating up again; the sudden rise of the organization known as the Islamic State has put a kink in the gradual, ongoing winding down of U.S. military presence in that country, and today that kink has gotten a little sharper. From The New York Times: The United States launched a fresh series of airstrikes against Sunni fighters in Iraq late Saturday in what Defense Department officials described as a mission to stop militants from seizing an important dam on the Euphrates River and prevent the possibility of floodwaters being unleashed toward the capital, Baghdad. The attacks were aimed at militant fighters of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria as they were moving toward the Haditha Dam, officials said. The operation represented another expansion of the limited goals that President Obama set out when he announced last month that he had authorized airstrikes in Iraq.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

New US Airstrikes In Iraq Intended to Protect Important Dam

Comments Filter:
  • by cold fjord ( 826450 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @05:56AM (#47844983)

    This struggle will be going on for decades (if we're lucky, longer if not), until the extremists get tired of it and want to live in peace. Until then any talk of "ending the war" is as silly as claiming you can tear down a dam because the river stopped flowing. It stopped flowing because of the dam. Tearing down the dam while the water is still there will have the obvious consequence.

    • The "struggle" has been going on since the early 7th Century AD.

    • Latent extremists will always be around in all countries. They come to power when there is a power vacuum. This is something we're observing in Iraq right now.

    • This struggle will go on until they run out of oil. Then we won't care, and stop meddling in their internal affairs.
    • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

      Until then any talk of "ending the war" is as silly as claiming you can tear down a dam because the river stopped flowing. It stopped flowing because of the dam.

      Eh, the idea was that once the Iraqis had built up their own dam, slightly downstream from the US-built temporary dam, that we could remove the US dam and let the Iraqi dam take over.

      Unfortunately, it looks like the Iraqi dam was made out of paper-mache... :(

  • by should_be_linear ( 779431 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @06:22AM (#47845021)
    If Saddam was still in power, he would be major american ally in "fighting terrorists". Orwell would laugh his ass out if he lived to this day.
    • Who would've thought, history has demonstrated the Saddam wasn't such a bad guy after all...
      • Actually it hasn't. Saddam was a murderous butcher that had a body toll well beyond that of ISIS.

        • If we're talking body tolls, then George W Bush is responsible for the deaths of more Iraqis than Saddam. But it's all relative, the current state is set to drag on for another couple of decades primarily because the ruthless fist of Saddam is not there to keep it in check. Sometimes we have to learn that there is no good option, only bad or really bad. I believe we would've been better containing Saddam than the current mess we have.
          • If we're talking body tolls, then George W Bush is responsible for the deaths of more Iraqis than Saddam.

            No, not really. Saddam was responsible for the deaths of millions of Iraqis. Getting even more of his people killed while spending that last of force's energies to try to keep him in power was also his fault. Starving even more of them while stealing aid money to buy more weapons and prop up his regime by force was his fault.

            I believe we would've been better containing Saddam than the current mess we have.

            We do indeed have to put up with lots of bad people in power. But holding our noses while contending with him ceased to be an option. He invaded Kuwait, and we allowed to stay in powe

      • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Sunday September 07, 2014 @07:06AM (#47845127) Journal
        Saddam, Assad, Ceausescu, Mubarak, all various shades of "bad guy" but good at something in particular: keeping warring factions in their own country out of each other's hair. And when the dictator leaves, old enemies have at it again.

        What recent history has demonstrated is that stable democracy isn't a natural state of affairs that will come to pass if given the chance. One of our biggest mistakes in the Middle East was thinking that the folks over there would embrace democracy once freedom and free elections were established. And we can see the same thing here at home in Europe: people from more or less oppressive states in Africa or the Middle East emigrating to Europe do not wholeheartedly embrace our notion of democracy and freedom as we expected they would.
        • by jbolden ( 176878 )

          What they are doing is over the long term embracing democracy. Those countries have insane borders designed by the French and British as part of the Sykes–Picot Agreement. What's happening now is genuine nation-states are forming where the borders are likely to be people who view themselves as share a common interest. That is forming nation-states. That makes good government possible and thus democracy possible. It is the same process Europe went through.

          • No. Representative government, not tribalism, IS the common interest. The long-term thing you're describing isn't an embrace of democracy., It's the retrenchment of tribal rivalry by people who think that there is only so much prosperity available, and that the best way to get more is to kill the other guy. The "other guy" in this case, is someone who doesn't share your relatively recent family tree. Combine those gang-war family turf politics with medieval-minded murderous theo-thugocracy in the form of gr
            • by jbolden ( 176878 )

              A tribe is defined by blood. A nation is defined by things like: language, culture, ethnicity (broader) and history. That's a much larger group than a tribe. A nation is large enough to allow for complex economics, a tribe is not large enough. That's why nation-states are viable but tribal territories are not. Certainly the idea is to replicate some of the affinity one has in a tribe in the nation. For example many of the Americans traumatized and angered 9/11 didn't have anyone related to them that d

              • A tribe is defined by blood.

                But tribal behavior is pretty well baked into us, genetically, and certainly manifests itself in large groups whether they're fourth cousins twice removed or just plain people who were raised the same way or like the same things. Groupthink on Slashdot frequently looks that way, for example, where people reflexively root for or against some person, meme, or the like simply because that's what their tribe here does.

                Tribal-style behavior can exist in groups much larger than kin without that group happenin

                • by jbolden ( 176878 )

                  But tribal behavior is pretty well baked into us, genetically, and certainly manifests itself in large groups whether they're fourth cousins twice removed or just plain people who were raised the same way or like the same things.

                  Exactly! That's the idea of a nation. To create the affinity bonds that exist within tribes, or something close, within a much larger group. So yes. We aren't disagreeing.

                  Tribal-style behavior can exist in groups much larger than kin without that group happening to be a nati

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by gtall ( 79522 )

      Not really, toward's the end of Saddam's career in government, his officer corps was being infiltrated by Islamists. He wouldn't have lasted much longer regardless of what the Americans did.

    • If Saddam was still in power, he would be major american ally in "fighting terrorists".

      Do you remember when Saddam was our ally in fighting what we found inconvenient? But you're way off the mark. We are the global terrorists.

      • I'm beginning to think you're never going to get much of this right.

        Maybe you can start with this: Who armed Saddam? - Some reality checks [blogspot.com]

        And no, the US is not "the global terrorists." If you believe that you are SERIOUSLY misguided.

        • Look at the military hardware the Saddam era Iraqi army used: It wasn't American make, it was Russian/Soviet. Now look at Egypt, a country the US does arm, they are using US equipment.

          Unsurprisingly, when countries arm other countries, they do it using their stuff. It is not only convenient, but it is one of those nice political things where you can help your own industries because you are buying from them.

    • If Saddam was still in power, he would be major american ally in "fighting terrorists". Orwell would laugh his ass out if he lived to this day.

      No, he wouldn't. Saddam was funding and assisting terrorist, not fighting them.

      The present democratically elected Iraqi government is the one fighting terrorists. That government wouldn't exist if Saddam was still in power. It is worth noting that the present government is hampered by widespread corruption, a problem that Saddam made far worse in Iraq than it was.

      • by Misagon ( 1135 )

        No, he wouldn't. Saddam was funding and assisting terrorist, not fighting them.

        So has the US government, when it has served its interests ...

        Saddam Hussein and his regime was actually quite proficient and ruthless in clashing down on terrorists activities within the borders of Iraq.
        The notion that his regime would have supported the terrorist organisation Al-Qaeda is well known to be a lie by the GWB administration to gain support for their invasion of Iraq for its oil reserves, as part of the Project for t [wikipedia.org]

      • Saddam Hussein funded terrorists where he found it appropriate (mostly in other countries) and fought terrorists where he found it appropriate (mostly in Iraq).

        Corruption in the government isn't the problem, at least not as we usually think of it. The attempt by previous Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to sideline the Sunnis and Kurds as second-class citizens is the problem. The man basically tried to become a dictator, and it wasn't until the rise of the Islamic State that Iran finally stopped backing him

    • by jbolden ( 176878 )

      If Saddam was still in power, he would be major american ally in "fighting terrorists".

      Saddam was sending money to the families of suicide bombers encouraging terrorism prior to his death. No he did not help the USA in fighting terrorism.

  • If I wanted to read about this shit, I would not come here.

  • Drown a few hundred thousand. What's the worst that happens? The liberals blame the Jews?

  • Every revolution results in the most brutal, morally crude, religiously exploitive group coming to power. This is a simple function of a free for all fragfest. If we are so revolted by some head chopping, what about French revolution and its guillotine? If US and other countries didn't launch military intervention after similarly brutal bolshevik revolution in Russia, we could have avoided much of cold war, including current Ukrainian episode. Any country would want to establish a friendly buffer zone after

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

Working...