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Old 07-08-2014, 09:10 PM   #406
herfacechair
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WTF: Evidently herface needs a refresher on the facts. Not the GOP talking points.

First, don't mistake propaganda to be the facts. Your repeat point, which you quoted in your post, was thoroughly rebutted. However, since you insist on repeating yourself like a broken record, I'm going to do to your source what I've done to others who have done the same thing you've done here... take their propaganda opinion apart piece by piece.

Piece of advice... accept defeat when other posters prove your post wrong. If you insist in pushing the same defeated source again and again, you're bound to regret the answer that you ultimately get.

Second, I wasn't advancing GOP talking points. If you bothered knowing your opposition in more detail, I'm more of a libertarian. If the facts that I advance is also being advanced by a political party or two, it's not because I'm "blindly" following them.

If I'm advancing the same or similar points, it's because the facts dictate a conclusion that multiple people, or groups of people, are going to make. Also, since you keep running from my question like a coward, here it is again:


If I were to go on an internet forum, and say that one plus one equals two, would it be safe for someone reading that to assume that you were the one that made that post because you also agree that one plus one equals two? YES [ ] NO [ ]

Simply copy and paste that question along with the "YES" and "NO" options. Put an "X" in the option that represents your reply, and spare me the nonsense that you'd want to add to that.


Third, you advanced a series of liberal talking points, not something that reflects reality on the ground.

WTF: You do not have a clue as to what was happening behind the scenes....Someone please quote so JD Cornhole can see what a complete tool he is.

I'm sorry, but hiding behind someone else's propaganda piece doesn't give you a clue about what's happening behind the scenes. You, having no combat deployment experiences in Iraq, don't have a leg to stand on when all you have is a propaganda piece to hide behind. I'll take my first hand experiences, as well as that of other Soldiers that were in Iraq with regards to the failure to get a Status of Forces Agreement, over that of your propaganda piece.

WTF's Propaganda Task Master: The real story behind the U.S. withdrawal is how a clever strategy of deception and diplomacy adopted by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in cooperation with Iran outmanoeuvered Bush and the U.S. military leadership and got the United States to sign the U.S.-Iraq withdrawal agreement....

Wrong. When I was there, there was no love between the Iraqis and Iranians. Both Shiites and Sunnis didn't forget the fact that they had fought the Iranians not just on Iranian soil, but on Iraqi soil.

The Iraqis weren't willing to give the impression that they were trading one "leader" for another. Although they were more prone to cooperating with the Iranians, there was no move to collaborate with the Iranians real close... old rivalries die hard here as they do elsewhere in the old world.

This wasn't a result of al-Malaki and Iran "out maneuvering" anybody. This was a result of President Obama insisting on a method of approval he knew for a fact he wasn't going to get.

Both JD and I have been protected by SOFA agreements during our deployments. That SOFA isn't something that's approved by each individual country's parliaments, but by a national level "memorandum of understanding." By insisting that parliament approve it, Obama was guaranteeing that the US and Iraq wouldn't have a SOFA.

Remember, Obama was up for re-election, he ran on a campaign of "ending the Iraq War." He had a campaign promise to fulfill. THAT's the actual "behind the scenes" that happened to prevent us from having a SOFA.

Your dear leader, not collaboration between the Iranians and Iraqis, sabotaged the efforts to get a new SOFA.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: ...Publicly, the Maliki government continued to assure the Bush administration it could count on a long-term military presence.

Because he knew that although his forces were getting more capable, he knew for a fact that the US was going to need to continue to remain involved with training the Iraqi military, as well as shoring up the logistics capability within the Iraqi Military. With us there, he could assure stability while he was the prime minister.

There was no deceit involved, because the temporary security pact that Bush and Malaki entered with each other opened the door for further negotiations for a follow on security pact. Both sides wanted to continue the momentum that began prior to the end of the temporary security pact.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: Asked by NBC's Richard Engel on Jan. 24, 2008 if the agreement would provide long-term U.S. bases in Iraq, Zebari said, "This is an agreement of enduring military support. The soldiers are going to have to stay someplace. They can't stay in the air."

This was a stupid question. The US military would've been able to remain in major forward operating bases in the green zone. They wouldn't have been allowed to go beyond the wire to conduct combat missions. They would; however, provide training, intelligence, and logistic support. The post 2011 mission would've mainly involved training the force as well as shoring up the logistics capability that every military needs to be able to project power across the country.

These forward operating bases would've either remained as joint operating bases, or we would've had an arrangement to where we would've occupied "tenant" positions within a forward operating base that falls under an Iraqi commander.

One of the combat outposts that we stayed at was a little section within an Iraqi Army compound. We turned that section back to the Iraqi commander after we removed our stuff from there.

We wouldn't have had permanent bases there though.


WTF's Propaganda Master: Confident that it was going to get a South Korea-style SOFA, the Bush administration gave the Iraqi government a draft on Mar. 7, 2008 that provided for no limit on the number of U.S. troops or the duration of their presence. Nor did it give Iraq any control over U.S. military operations.

This was only applicable for the SOFA that was in place from the time the agreement was signed until December 31, 2011. This wasn't applicable for any future SOFA that would've been worked on to replace the one that ended in 2011.

During the period that ended in 2011, the Iraqis didn't control our operations... but they did go with us on our missions. There were missions that we did that didn't require Iraqi escort, and that was usually cleared with the Iraqi counterparts.

The agreement that made this possible left the door open for negotiating a follow on agreement, which wasn't spelled out during the SOFA that ended in the end of 2011.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: But Maliki had a surprise in store for Washington.

No he didn't. His position was consistent... although the country wanted to move on beyond the war, he knew that the US military guaranteed stability while he was in power. This is a fact that's absent today, which has lead to many Shiite Iraqis to doubt him as a leader as a result of the terrorists flooding into Iraq.

The events that happened over the last week were among Malaki's worst fears. He wanted a SOFA agreement partly because of this, but didn't get it. In late 2013, Malaki tried to warn Obama that the terrorists were getting ready to flood in... if only Obama would allow air strikes against terrorist positions...

That's not the action of someone that wanted the US out "for good" in exchange for favors from the Iranian government. He was more concerned about his hide than he was about any benefit that he could get from the Iranians.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: A series of dramatic moves by Maliki and Iran over the next few months showed that there had been an explicit understanding between the two governments to prevent the U.S. military from launching major operations against the Mahdi Army and to reach an agreement with Sadr on ending the Mahdi Army's role in return for assurances that Maliki would demand the complete withdrawal of U.S. forces.

That's not supported by historical fact. The Iraqi Security Forces launched an offensive against the Mahdi Army in 2008. This time, they weren't doing it to stop them temporarily, the Iraqi Security Forces did so with the intention of permanently taking them out of commission.

The Iraqi Security Forces DESTROYED the Mahdi Army's ability to wage continued successful militia campaigns. The Mahdi Army's reaction? One that'd be taken by the side that lost the military conflict... initiate civil disobedience.

A joint US and Iraqi Force capitalized on the successes of the Iraqi Security Force, and built barricades of "T barriers" and other kinds of barriers to force the Mahdi Army beyond mortar and other attack ranges.

It got to the point to where the Mahdi Army couldn't pursue further attacks without suffering tremendous casualties.

They stopped their attacks on the grounds of "species survival," and not because they were receiving orders from Iran.

Al Sadr's Mahdi Army was weakened to the point to where he had no other choice but to work on a cease fire agreement with the Iraqi Security Forces. Al Sadr wizened up and shifted his efforts to another arena that didn't involve fighting with militia.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: In July, he revealed that his government was demanding the complete withdrawal of U.S. troops on a timetable. The Bush administration was in a state of shock. From July to October, it pretended that it could simply refuse to accept the withdrawal demand, while trying vainly to pressure Maliki to back down.

Again, that's not supported by history. Back in 2003, George Bush laid out a plan that involved a complete withdrawal. The negotiated agreement was based on conditions on the ground. It was predicated on the conditions that he set in 2003 becoming possible.

Complete withdrawal of the US military from Iraq was expected since 2003. The question was, "When?"

Based on conditions on the ground, US had anticipated withdrawal in 2011. Given the momentum of the success of the US military, conditions improved to the point to where we could've pulled up completely earlier than 2011.

The Iraqi military had made strides in progress. The last years of US military involvement, Iraqi military was taking the lead in security operations throughout Iraq. The logistics still had work to be done.

Both sides opened the door for a follow-on agreement to replace the one anticipated to end in 2011.

Asking for complete withdrawal did not take George Bush by surprise. That was expected.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: In the end, however, Bush administration officials realised that Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama, who was then far ahead of Republican John McCain in polls, would accept the same or an even faster timetable for withdrawal. In October, Bush decided to sign the draft agreement pledging withdrawal of all U.S. troops by the end of 2011.

Wrong. George Bush didn't sign a watered-down version of what he wanted in anticipation of what Barack Obama wanted. George Bush signed an agreement that he wanted, which allowed the US to continue to complete its mission. People who paid attention to the news would see the significance of this move.

People who didn't have their heads up their asses would known that the closeout of the Iraq war was settled during Bush's administration. It wasn't something that Barack Obama initiated. So, when Barack Obama tried to take credit for the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq in 2011, people who weren't brainwashed knew that he was full of Shit. They knew that Pres. Obama presided over an agreement that his predecessor made.

Again, the agreement left the door open for the negotiation of a newer agreement following the one that was to end in 2011.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: The ambitious plans of the U.S. military to use Iraq to dominate the Middle East militarily and politically had been foiled by the very regime the United States had installed, and the officials behind the U.S. scheme, had been clueless about what was happening until it was too late.

WRONG. The US invasion of Iraq was never intended to increase military or political dominance of the Middle East.

The invasion of Iraq was intended to be a move to counter an asymmetrical threat against the West. If you look at the map the Middle East after the invasion, you would see a checkerboard pattern of Middle East countries in different states of democracy.

Both Iraq and Afghanistan flank Iran. Since the invasions of those two countries, the Iranians had to deal with an increasingly more intensive demonstrations. The Iranians wanted the freedoms that the Iraqis and Afghanis were enjoying.

Notice, that Israel, Lebanon, Iraq, and Turkey surround Syria. After the coalition invasion of Iraq, Syria was essentially surrounded by countries with more liberal forms of government. Those were bound to have an impact on the Syrian population.

The military invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan were intended to be a catalyst to begin a ripple effect of democratic movements in the Middle East and Northern Africa.

It was up to Washington DC to capitalize on these democratic movements. There was no intention to use the military, or use political leverage, to dominate the Middle East. Invading Iraq, or Afghanistan, isn't the action you want to take if you wanted to dominate the Middle East... this wasn't about domination, but about initiating a catalyst for change.

The person that wrote the article that you hide behind has absolutely no clue about what he is talking about.


Quote:
Originally Posted by WTF View Post
AAAAAAAAHHHHKKKKK! POLLY WANT A CRACKER? (Whistle Whistle) AAAAAAAAHHHHKKKKK! POLLY WANT A CRACKER? (Whistle Whistle) AAAAAAAAHHHHKKKKK! POLLY WANT A CRACKER?
Fixed to reflect accuracy. Now, here's a more factual account, one that reflects reality as opposed to the propaganda that you tried pushing:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Whirlaway View Post
In 2011, before Obama pulled out, the Wall Street Journal presented this analysis:

OBAMA'S TRAGIC WITHDRAWAL FROM IRAQ

The administration didn't even open talks on renewing the Status of Forces Agreement until this summer, a few months before U.S. troops would have to start shuttering their remaining bases to pull out by Dec. 31. The previous agreement, in 2008, took a year to negotiate.

A U.S. Army soldier stands by military armored vehicles ready to be shipped out of Iraq at a staging yard at Camp Victory that is set to close in Baghdad.

The recent negotiations were jinxed from the start by the insistence of State Department and Pentagon lawyers that any immunity provisions be ratified by the Iraqi parliament--something that the U.S. hadn't insisted on in 2008 and that would be almost impossible to get today. In many other countries, including throughout the Arab world, U.S. personnel operate under a Memorandum of Understanding that doesn't require parliamentary ratification. Why not in Iraq? Mr. Obama could have chosen to override the lawyers' excessive demands, but he didn't.

He also undercut his own negotiating team by regularly bragging--in political speeches delivered while talks were ongoing--of his plans to "end" the "war in Iraq." Even more damaging was his August decision to commit only 3,000 to 5,000 troops to a possible mission in Iraq post-2011. This was far below the number judged necessary by our military commanders. They had asked for nearly 20,000 personnel to carry out counterterrorist operations, support American diplomats, and provide training and support to the Iraqi security forces. That figure was whittled down by Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, to 10,000, which they judged to be the absolute minimum needed.

The Iraqis knew about these estimates: U.S. military commanders had communicated them directly to Iraqi leaders. Prime Minister Maliki was said (by those who had talked to him) to privately support such a troop commitment, and almost all Iraqi political leaders--representing every major faction except for the rabidly anti-American Sadrists--assented on Aug. 2 to opening negotiations on that basis.

When the White House then said it would consent to no more than 5,000 troops--a number that may not even have been able to adequately defend itself, much less carry out other missions--the Iraqis understandably figured that the U.S. wasn't serious about a continued commitment. Iraqi political leaders may have been willing to risk a domestic backlash to support a substantial commitment of 10,000 or more troops. They were not willing to stick their necks out for such a puny force. Hence the breakdown of talks.

There is still a possibility for close U.S.-Iraqi military cooperation under the existing Strategic Framework Agreement. This could authorize joint exercises between the two countries and even the presence of a small U.S. Special Operations contingent in Iraq. But it is no substitute for the kind of robust U.S. military presence that would be needed to bolster Iraq's nascent democracy and counter interference from Iran, Saudi Arabia and other regional players that don't have Iraq's best interests at heart.

Iraq will increasingly find itself on its own, even though its air forces still lack the capability to defend its own airspace and its ground forces cannot carry out large-scale combined arms operations. Multiple terrorist groups also remain active, and almost as many civilians died in Iraq last year as in Afghanistan.

So the end of the U.S. military mission in Iraq is a tragedy, not a triumph--and a self-inflicted one at that.
Mr. Boot is a senior fellow in national security studies at the Council on Foreign Relations.

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/...03931424188806
Oh yeah, you owe some answers to:

Are Super Bowl fans on the football field playing football in the Super Bowl in lieu of the football players on the football field playing football in the Super Bowl? YES [ ] NO [ ]

If I were to go on an internet forum, and say that one plus one equals two, would it be safe for someone reading that to assume that you were the one that made that post because you also agree that one plus one equals two? YES [ ] NO [ ]

Copy and paste these questions and their "yes" and "no" options to your reply and put an "X" in the appropriate option that represents your reply. Spare me any nonsense reply that you'd want to add to that.
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Old 07-08-2014, 10:08 PM   #407
WTF
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Default I'm sorry my lil Parrot....but your shifting the blame is rubbish.

If Bush could have gotten a SOFA, why didn't he? If Malili wanted one like you say...all he and Busch had to do was sign one. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.

Not only that....had the American public wanted to stay in Iraq, they would have elected McCain. None of that shit happened. No McCain, no SOFA.


http://www.ipsnews.net/2011/12/how-m...op-withdrawal/

Confident that it was going to get a South Korea-style SOFA, the Bush administration gave the Iraqi government a draft on Mar. 7, 2008 that provided for no limit on the number of U.S. troops or the duration of their presence. Nor did it give Iraq any control over U.S. military operations.
But Maliki had a surprise in store for Washington.
A series of dramatic moves by Maliki and Iran over the next few months showed that there had been an explicit understanding between the two governments to prevent the U.S. military from launching major operations against the Mahdi Army and to reach an agreement with Sadr on ending the Mahdi Army’s role in return for assurances that Maliki would demand the complete withdrawal of U.S. forces.
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Old 07-08-2014, 10:26 PM   #408
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Hey asshole, I said you WEREN'T the only veteran on this board. So YOU were wrong, not me, harasscleaner.

How do I know this?

Like I said, you aren't the only veteran in this forum.

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Old 07-08-2014, 10:44 PM   #409
i'va biggen
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider View Post
Hey asshole, I said you WEREN'T the only veteran on this board. So YOU were wrong, not me, harasscleaner.

How do I know this?

Like I said, you aren't the only veteran in this forum.

He is providing comic relief on the board. Time for him to copy and paste more of his/her pathetic bull shit.
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Old 07-09-2014, 05:14 AM   #410
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I see that they left the ward unlocked again yesterday evening that is home to JD's eldest son.

Someone please alert Security!
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Old 07-09-2014, 09:13 PM   #411
herfacechair
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WTF View Post
If Bush could have gotten a SOFA, why didn't he? If Malili wanted one like you say...all he and Busch had to do was sign one. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
Have you even paid attention to any posts on this thread?

The security pact was signed in 2008, before Obama's term began. President Obama was President when I combat deployed to Iraq last. We operated under a Status of Forces Agreement. This Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) was signed:


"We're also signing a Security Agreement, sometimes called a Status of Forces Agreement. The agreement provides American troops and Defense Department officials with authorizations and protections to continue supporting Iraq's democracy once the U.N. mandate expires at the end of this year. This agreement respects the sovereignty and the authority of Iraq's democracy. The agreement lays out a framework for the withdrawal of American forces in Iraq -- a withdrawal that is possible because of the success of the surge." -President Bush, 2008

http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archiv...0081214-2.html

Quote:
Originally Posted by WTF View Post
Not only that....had the American public wanted to stay in Iraq, they would have elected McCain. None of that shit happened. No McCain, no SOFA.
President Bush and Prime Minister Maliki's negotiators were working on a pact that was going to cover the transition from US to Iraq Security Forces... and ultimately the end of all combat operations on the part of the US... meaning... they were negotiating a term that was going to cover an end of the Iraq war for the US. They were doing this throughout the presidential campaign of 2008.

Obama wanted an irresponsible pull out, McCain wanted a responsible move that was based on conditions on the ground. That was determined before Obama could do anything. We had a SOFA agreement before President Bush left office.

Bottom line, you bring up a non-point. The Election of 2008 was more about the deteriorating economy than it was about Iraq. McCain's numbers were starting to gain on Obama until the economic crash of 2008.

Also, it was more about people's ignorance of the real issues than it was about the real issues. Again, most of the people that voted for Obama were clueless brainwashed drones that knew a lot of what the mainstream media wanted them to know but little of the actual hard news that was important.

Again:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mm1KOBMg1Y8

A successful propaganda campaign won the election for Obama in both 2008 and 2012.

WTF's Propaganda Master: Confident that it was going to get a South Korea-style SOFA, the Bush administration gave the Iraqi government a draft on Mar. 7, 2008 that provided for no limit on the number of U.S. troops or the duration of their presence. Nor did it give Iraq any control over U.S. military operations. (REPEAT POINT)

This was only applicable for the SOFA that was in place from the time the agreement was signed until December 31, 2011. This wasn't applicable for any future SOFA that would've been worked on to replace the one that ended in 2011.

During the period that ended in 2011, the Iraqis didn't control our operations... but they did go with us on our missions. There were missions that we did that didn't require Iraqi escort, and that was usually cleared with the Iraqi counterparts.

The agreement that made this possible left the door open for negotiating a follow on agreement, which wasn't spelled out during the SOFA that ended in the end of 2011.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: But Maliki had a surprise in store for Washington. (REPEAT POINT)

No he didn't. His position was consistent... although the country wanted to move on beyond the war, he knew that the US military guaranteed stability while he was in power. This is a fact that's absent today, which has lead to many Shiite Iraqis to doubt him as a leader as a result of the terrorists flooding into Iraq.

The events that happened over the last week were among Malaki's worst fears. He wanted a SOFA agreement partly because of this, but didn't get it. In late 2013, Malaki tried to warn Obama that the terrorists were getting ready to flood in... if only Obama would allow air strikes against terrorist positions...

That's not the action of someone that wanted the US out "for good" in exchange for favors from the Iranian government. He was more concerned about his hide than he was about any benefit that he could get from the Iranians.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: A series of dramatic moves by Maliki and Iran over the next few months showed that there had been an explicit understanding between the two governments to prevent the U.S. military from launching major operations against the Mahdi Army and to reach an agreement with Sadr on ending the Mahdi Army's role in return for assurances that Maliki would demand the complete withdrawal of U.S. forces. (REPEAT POINT)

That's not supported by historical fact. The Iraqi Security Forces launched an offensive against the Mahdi Army in 2008. This time, they weren't doing it to stop them temporarily, the Iraqi Security Forces did so with the intention of permanently taking them out of commission.

The Iraqi Security Forces DESTROYED the Mahdi Army's ability to wage continued successful militia campaigns. The Mahdi Army's reaction? One that'd be taken by the side that lost the military conflict... initiate civil disobedience.

A joint US and Iraqi Force capitalized on the successes of the Iraqi Security Force, and built barricades of "T barriers" and other kinds of barriers to force the Mahdi Army beyond mortar and other attack ranges.

It got to the point to where the Mahdi Army couldn't pursue further attacks without suffering tremendous casualties.

They stopped their attacks on the grounds of "species survival," and not because they were receiving orders from Iran.

Al Sadr's Mahdi Army was weakened to the point to where he had no other choice but to work on a cease fire agreement with the Iraqi Security Forces. Al Sadr wizened up and shifted his efforts to another arena that didn't involve fighting with militia.

Oh yeah, you owe some answers to:


Are Super Bowl fans on the football field playing football in the Super Bowl in lieu of the football players on the football field playing football in the Super Bowl? YES [ ] NO [ ]

If I were to go on an internet forum, and say that one plus one equals two, would it be safe for someone reading that to assume that you were the one that made that post because you also agree that one plus one equals two? YES [ ] NO [ ]

Where you wrong when you claimed that Bush and Maliki, or their representatives, didn't sign a Status of Forces Agreement? YES [ ] NO [ ]

Copy and paste these questions and their "yes" and "no" options to your reply and put an "X" in the appropriate option that represents your reply. Spare me any nonsense reply that you'd want to add to that.
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Old 07-09-2014, 09:15 PM   #412
herfacechair
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Yssup Rider View Post
(STRAWMAN + RED HERRING)

Hey asshole, I said you WEREN'T the only veteran on this board. So YOU were wrong, not me, harasscleaner.

How do I know this?

Like I said, you aren't the only veteran in this forum.
Take it away Yssup Rider:

"If you want to make excuses for your mistakes you have two palatable choices: 1) Admit your error or 2) lie about it." -Yssup Rider

This time, your words actually apply. You're actually doing number 2. See what I mean by your side of the argument projecting your own traits onto us?

You don't know jack shit, Dickssucker, because you knew full well what you intended with that statement.

I've consistently argued the following in different forms throughout this thread:

"You see, if you combat deployed to Iraq and saw what I saw, you'd notice that the Iraqis were very appreciative of what we had done for them... of what we were doing for them. We weren't forcing them to become like us... we weren't forcing them to bend to our way of thinking and behaving." -herfacechair

In frustration, you argued:


"Oh, and you're not the only Veteran on this board." -Yssup Rider

That was another strawman that you brought up. This wasn't an argument as to whether I was the only veteran on this thread or not. The fact that I mentioned these should've spared you from even mentioning that comment:

"Notice how
we're on the same side, and those opposing us haven't answered my question on who has stepped foot in Iraq. There's a good chance that we have arm chair generals arguing against boots on the ground experience. That even makes them look more stupid. " -herfacechair

And this:


"JD barleycorn and I are war veterans from conflict that took place in the part of the world. None of you guys have indicated that you have similar experiences." -herfacechair

Which leads to the question:


Where, in my posts here, did I claim to be the ONLY veteran?

Again, nowhere on this thread was I arguing that I was the only one, and nothing in my posts would lead anybody to that conclusion... unless they were pulling straws in order to construct a strawman.

I've repeatedly indicated, on this thread that I knew that there were other veterans on this thread and on this message board. There's absolutely no point to your stating that "I'm not the only veteran," because anybody that does this...


"I'd strongly suggest you spend a little more time reading the high literature on this forum before you start complaining about anything." -Yssup Rider

...wouldn't have a need to tell me that I'm not the only veteran here. Now, again, the question you keep ignoring:

"JD barleycorn and I are war veterans from conflict that took place in the part of the world. None of you guys have indicated that you have similar experiences." -herfacechair

Which leads to the question:


Where, in my posts here, did I claim to be the ONLY veteran?

I know for fact that you can look at that question, and the preceding quotes, and realize that you're wrong. You're understandably, and rightfully, feeling embarrassed because of that mistake. If you choose to ignore that question then consider this question:

Where you wrong when you accused me of claiming to be the only veteran on the board? YES [ ] NO [ ]

Copy and paste that question, along with those "yes" and "no" options to your reply. Put an "X" in the bracket that represents your reply. Spare me any additional nonsense that you're going to want to add to this question.


if you reply to me while failing to answer this question per the parameters that I set, I'm going to consistently ask you these same questions.
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Old 07-09-2014, 09:18 PM   #413
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Quote:
Originally Posted by i'va biggen View Post
He is providing comic relief on the board. Time for him to copy and paste more of his/her pathetic bull shit.
What you're really complaining about is my consistently repeating questions you people are hoping would go away.

None of you guys are amused by anything that I'm doing on this thread. I could tell, by your responses, that you people are annoyed as hell that I keep destroying your arguments and statements... and that I keep forcing these questions onto you guys.

If you removed your head from your ass, and removed your horse-blinders, you'd notice that when you people ignore my questions, questions that destroy your arguments, questions that force you people to see that you're wrong, while insisting on replying, the part of my response involves asking those questions again.

You'll also notice that if you people repeat the same points over and over again, I'm going to repeat my same counter points over and over again.

You keep defecating your BS, that was force fed down your throat by your liberal propaganda task masters, on this and on other threads. You don't have a leg to stand on complaining about others repeating their rebuttal to someone's repeat point.

You said this further back in this "discussion":


However I am finished with this discussion, so you can declare victory like other idiots on this board. -i'va biggen

So I'va biggen, were you wrong about you being finished with this "discussion"? YES [ ] NO [ ]

Simply copy and paste this question, and the "yes" and "no" option to your reply. Put an "X" in the box that represents your reply. Add no further nonsense to your reply.
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Old 07-09-2014, 09:20 PM   #414
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bigtex View Post
I have to admit, I "cheek" my medications when it's "medication pass" time here at the group home. I tell them that I take my meds, but I hide them under my tongue, then spit them out later.

Not taking these medications makes me feel FREE!

One time, I stood in the middle of the day room, looked straight ahead, and rocked my upper body back and forth. My legs didn't do anything, but I swung my arms back and forth. I let my saliva roll down my chin instead of swallowing it... can't have any of the medication residue roll down my throat!

Well, anyway, I was having fun doing this. I was the only one up, and nobody was in the day room that late at night. Things were going fine when people wearing white smocks came out of the woodwork and dragged me to a padded room and poked me with a needle.

Well, I got even for that. I cheeked my medication again today, and here I am at a computer, even though I'm not supposed to be at one of these things!
You need to get off the computer before you hurt yourself any further, both here on this thread and back at your institution. Time to call your handlers...

Quote:
Originally Posted by bigtex View Post
Ahh shit! Those guys with the white smocks are coming after me again!
Fixed to reflect accuracy. Now for the questions that you keep ignoring:

"Our common security is challenged by regional conflicts -- ethnic and religious strife that is ancient but not inevitable. In the Middle East, there can be no peace for either side without FREEDOM for both sides." -- George Bush, 2002 (Emphasis mine)


I'm going to keep asking you this question for as long as you insist on replying to me or as long as you insist on replying to something I argued:

So bigtex, were you wrong when you insisted that WMD was the ONLY reason for us going into Iraq? YES [ ] NO [ ]

Where you wrong when you insisted that they were ONLY searching for nuclear weapons? YES [ ] NO [ ]

Copy and paste these questions, and answer options, to your reply. Put an "X" in the options that represents your honest opinion. Don't add any further information to your reply.
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Old 07-09-2014, 09:57 PM   #415
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Stir...
Quote:
Originally Posted by WTF View Post
If Bush could have gotten a SOFA, why didn't he? If Malili wanted one like you say...all he and Busch had to do was sign one. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.

Not only that....had the American public wanted to stay in Iraq, they would have elected McCain. None of that shit happened. No McCain, no SOFA.


http://www.ipsnews.net/2011/12/how-m...op-withdrawal/

Confident that it was going to get a South Korea-style SOFA, the Bush administration gave the Iraqi government a draft on Mar. 7, 2008 that provided for no limit on the number of U.S. troops or the duration of their presence. Nor did it give Iraq any control over U.S. military operations.
But Maliki had a surprise in store for Washington.
A series of dramatic moves by Maliki and Iran over the next few months showed that there had been an explicit understanding between the two governments to prevent the U.S. military from launching major operations against the Mahdi Army and to reach an agreement with Sadr on ending the Mahdi Army’s role in return for assurances that Maliki would demand the complete withdrawal of U.S. forces.
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Old 07-09-2014, 10:11 PM   #416
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You're not the first one that pulled that stunt.

Quote:
Originally Posted by herfacechair View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by WTF View Post
If Bush could have gotten a SOFA, why didn't he? If Malili wanted one like you say...all he and Busch had to do was sign one. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm.
Have you even paid attention to any posts on this thread?

The security pact was signed in 2008, before Obama's term began. President Obama was President when I combat deployed to Iraq last. We operated under a Status of Forces Agreement. This Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) was signed:


"We're also signing a Security Agreement, sometimes called a Status of Forces Agreement. The agreement provides American troops and Defense Department officials with authorizations and protections to continue supporting Iraq's democracy once the U.N. mandate expires at the end of this year. This agreement respects the sovereignty and the authority of Iraq's democracy. The agreement lays out a framework for the withdrawal of American forces in Iraq -- a withdrawal that is possible because of the success of the surge." -President Bush, 2008

http://georgewbush-whitehouse.archiv...0081214-2.html

Quote:
Originally Posted by WTF View Post
Not only that....had the American public wanted to stay in Iraq, they would have elected McCain. None of that shit happened. No McCain, no SOFA.
President Bush and Prime Minister Maliki's negotiators were working on a pact that was going to cover the transition from US to Iraq Security Forces... and ultimately the end of all combat operations on the part of the US... meaning... they were negotiating a term that was going to cover an end of the Iraq war for the US. They were doing this throughout the presidential campaign of 2008.

Obama wanted an irresponsible pull out, McCain wanted a responsible move that was based on conditions on the ground. That was determined before Obama could do anything. We had a SOFA agreement before President Bush left office.

Bottom line, you bring up a non-point. The Election of 2008 was more about the deteriorating economy than it was about Iraq. McCain's numbers were starting to gain on Obama until the economic crash of 2008.

Also, it was more about people's ignorance of the real issues than it was about the real issues. Again, most of the people that voted for Obama were clueless brainwashed drones that knew a lot of what the mainstream media wanted them to know but little of the actual hard news that was important.

Again:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mm1KOBMg1Y8

A successful propaganda campaign won the election for Obama in both 2008 and 2012.

WTF's Propaganda Master: Confident that it was going to get a South Korea-style SOFA, the Bush administration gave the Iraqi government a draft on Mar. 7, 2008 that provided for no limit on the number of U.S. troops or the duration of their presence. Nor did it give Iraq any control over U.S. military operations. (REPEAT POINT)

This was only applicable for the SOFA that was in place from the time the agreement was signed until December 31, 2011. This wasn't applicable for any future SOFA that would've been worked on to replace the one that ended in 2011.

During the period that ended in 2011, the Iraqis didn't control our operations... but they did go with us on our missions. There were missions that we did that didn't require Iraqi escort, and that was usually cleared with the Iraqi counterparts.

The agreement that made this possible left the door open for negotiating a follow on agreement, which wasn't spelled out during the SOFA that ended in the end of 2011.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: But Maliki had a surprise in store for Washington. (REPEAT POINT)

No he didn't. His position was consistent... although the country wanted to move on beyond the war, he knew that the US military guaranteed stability while he was in power. This is a fact that's absent today, which has lead to many Shiite Iraqis to doubt him as a leader as a result of the terrorists flooding into Iraq.

The events that happened over the last week were among Malaki's worst fears. He wanted a SOFA agreement partly because of this, but didn't get it. In late 2013, Malaki tried to warn Obama that the terrorists were getting ready to flood in... if only Obama would allow air strikes against terrorist positions...

That's not the action of someone that wanted the US out "for good" in exchange for favors from the Iranian government. He was more concerned about his hide than he was about any benefit that he could get from the Iranians.


WTF's Propaganda Task Master: A series of dramatic moves by Maliki and Iran over the next few months showed that there had been an explicit understanding between the two governments to prevent the U.S. military from launching major operations against the Mahdi Army and to reach an agreement with Sadr on ending the Mahdi Army's role in return for assurances that Maliki would demand the complete withdrawal of U.S. forces. (REPEAT POINT)

That's not supported by historical fact. The Iraqi Security Forces launched an offensive against the Mahdi Army in 2008. This time, they weren't doing it to stop them temporarily, the Iraqi Security Forces did so with the intention of permanently taking them out of commission.

The Iraqi Security Forces DESTROYED the Mahdi Army's ability to wage continued successful militia campaigns. The Mahdi Army's reaction? One that'd be taken by the side that lost the military conflict... initiate civil disobedience.

A joint US and Iraqi Force capitalized on the successes of the Iraqi Security Force, and built barricades of "T barriers" and other kinds of barriers to force the Mahdi Army beyond mortar and other attack ranges.

It got to the point to where the Mahdi Army couldn't pursue further attacks without suffering tremendous casualties.

They stopped their attacks on the grounds of "species survival," and not because they were receiving orders from Iran.

Al Sadr's Mahdi Army was weakened to the point to where he had no other choice but to work on a cease fire agreement with the Iraqi Security Forces. Al Sadr wizened up and shifted his efforts to another arena that didn't involve fighting with militia.

Oh yeah, you owe some answers to:


Are Super Bowl fans on the football field playing football in the Super Bowl in lieu of the football players on the football field playing football in the Super Bowl? YES [ ] NO [ ]

If I were to go on an internet forum, and say that one plus one equals two, would it be safe for someone reading that to assume that you were the one that made that post because you also agree that one plus one equals two? YES [ ] NO [ ]

Where you wrong when you claimed that Bush and Maliki, or their representatives, didn't sign a Status of Forces Agreement? YES [ ] NO [ ]

Copy and paste these questions and their "yes" and "no" options to your reply and put an "X" in the appropriate option that represents your reply. Spare me any nonsense reply that you'd want to add to that.


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Old 07-09-2014, 10:39 PM   #417
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LMAO
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Old 07-09-2014, 10:56 PM   #418
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snick
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Old 07-10-2014, 12:10 AM   #419
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Holy shit, herassment. I refuse to quote your entire voluminous post because it's discourteous to people who want to see the happy ending to this one-man circle jerk.

You are entirely nuts.

How do you know exactly what I meant. Are you that fucking paranoid? READ WHAT IS WRITTEN, goober. That's usually the best way to determine what another poster is saying.

Yet YOU have spent God knows how much time and wasted bandwidth to argue assumptions of what I'm thinking.

I'll make it crystal clear for you: Prove (PROVE) you're right, admit you're wrong or shut the fuck up! that would include presenting facts and assuming that NOBODY is going to take you at your arrogant word.

BTW -- the 2014 Dipshit of the Year award hasn't been presented yet. Might look good on the mantelpiece of your bunker, you raving lunatic.

Prove that anything I said was wrong, or that I really meant something else by it.

I fully expect another ridiculous retort. Have at it, fool. You are distinguishing yourself as the Board's new laughingstock. I guess that puts you in fine company.

And don't forget, you're not the only vet in this forum... Just the stupidest.
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Old 07-10-2014, 04:59 AM   #420
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herfacechair:

The following quote which you attributed to me was found included in your post at the following link.

http://www.eccie.net/newreply.php?do...y&p=1055538668

While it was clearly presented by you as being completely factual and unedited, I have absolutely no recollection of having ever made the statement credited to me. If my memory serves me correctly (and I believe it does), you are crediting me with something that I never said or even implied.

In the (extremely) unlikely event my memory does not serve me correctly, you can easily rectify the situation by doing the following:


Please provide the actual link where you found the following quoted material attributed directly to me:

Quote:
Originally Posted by bigtex
I have to admit, I "cheek" my medications when it's "medication pass" time here at the group home. I tell them that I take my meds, but I hide them under my tongue, then spit them out later.

Not taking these medications makes me feel FREE!

One time, I stood in the middle of the day room, looked straight ahead, and rocked my upper body back and forth. My legs didn't do anything, but I swung my arms back and forth. I let my saliva roll down my chin instead of swallowing it... can't have any of the medication residue roll down my throat!

Well, anyway, I was having fun doing this. I was the only one up, and nobody was in the day room that late at night. Things were going fine when people wearing white smocks came out of the woodwork and dragged me to a padded room and poked me with a needle.

Well, I got even for that. I cheeked my medication again today, and here I am at a computer, even though I'm not supposed to be at one of these things!


---------------------------

Ahh shit! Those guys with the white smocks are coming after me again!

herefacechair, you are probably correct in saying that the "guys with the white smocks are coming after" somebody.

And you happen to be the Idiot they are coming after!
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