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Drone Strike authorised by Cameron
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theotherjonvFree Member
when there is no evidence he posed a direct and immediate threat to any one in this country,
The trouble is that the very nature of these decisions is such that you and i may never know what the justification was beyond what’s been said. Ultimately it comes down to whether you trust the intel, and whether you trust* the people with the intel to make the decision based on it. It happens that I do, others clearly don’t, and it’ll be very difficult and probably futile to try to get us to change our positions.
* but if they subsequently are shown to have lied they should then be held to account appropriately. Chilcott, etc.
I’m sure you’d all be keen as mustard to be in charge of this decision making process, but I’m bloody glad I’m not.
+ 1,000,001
I find it hard enough to decide where to put my X on a ballot paper to decide who gets to make these decisions, let alone making them myself.
dragonFree MemberThe russians perhaps,
Doubt it they have an even worse record.
I do wonder if people would have been less up in arms about it if it had been a Paveway dropped from a Tornado or even a missile from a Vulcan.
binnersFull Memberbut if they subsequently are shown to have lied they should then be held to account appropriately. Chilcott, etc.
What a perfect example of judicial oversight. All hail the beacon of accountability to international law that is the Chilcott Report. Expected date of publication 2035 – possibly never.
footflapsFull Member“The russians perhaps, they work by their own rules.”
Largely unsuccessful ones, their overseas campaigns weren’t a great success…
binnersFull MemberOooooooooo can we use more specific names for weaponry, and military shorthand. I’m feeling a bit… you know… tingly
footflapsFull MemberHardly, way too much was at stake if they got this wrong. The media would be having a field day if they bombed the wrong house.
WTF? Drone strikes endlessly hit the wrong targets / kill civilians. It’s just called collateral damage and as they’ve all got dark skin and beards, no one really cares back in the West. It’s only Western soldiers getting maimed by IEDs which makes headline news.
kimbersFull MemberI wouldn’t be against sending ground troops in this case given the atrocities they’re up to, they could be exterminated in a week with a modern army.
Are you on crack? Billions of £, millions of lives lost in Iraq and Afghanistan stand testament to the utter inadequacy of our modern army
enigmasFree MemberIn reality, it’s ‘There’s one, he’s got a beard!’ and bang – he’s dead.
That’s almost as deluded a statement as IS could be defeated in a week. Well done.I wasn’t saying it would be the best way forward and I would be against doing anything like that right this moment. Like I said the other factions who would fill the void aren’t much better.
I was more pondering the fact that the coalition toppled the much better armed/equipped Iraqi government in 3 weeks. (not that I agree with the invasion of Iraq then) A ground strike would quickly reduce IS to an underground movement, rather than in control of large swathes of the middle east, and able to commit atrocities on the people in that area/ and plan attacks further afield with impunity.
binnersFull MemberA ground strike would quickly reduce IS to an underground movement, rather than in control of large swathes of the middle east, and able to commit atrocities on the people in that area/ and plan attacks further afield with impunity.
BillMCFull Memberone of them was wearing a Cardiff city shirt
..definitely a Welsh dresser
mikewsmithFree MemberA ground strike would quickly….
And in this case it’s not really history. We showed them in Iraq didn’t we, and Afganistan. Thats working well at the momentwreckerFree MemberLargely unsuccessful ones, their overseas campaigns weren’t a great success…
Fair point, but they’d do a much better (certainly quicker) job than we could.
The whole thing is a great big gang**** and we’d be best off keeping our nose well out of it. Of course, the risk is that a caliphate is established. That’ll be a bit of a problem.grumFree MemberSo those who support these murders (let’s call them by their correct name under international law) – would you be happy for foreign powers to start taking people out in the UK using drones?
I was more pondering the fact that the coalition toppled the much better armed/equipped Iraqi government in 3 weeks.
Isn’t what actually happened that they realised they were never going to win in a conventional fight so they gave up immediately and abandoned their posts/uniforms – IIRC quite a few of them went on to become a fairly effective guerrilla force…. called ISIS or something like that.
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/06/16/us-mideast-crisis-baghdadi-insight-idUSKBN0OW1VN20150616
theotherjonvFree MemberWhat a perfect example of judicial oversight. All hail the beacon of accountability to international law that is the Chilcott Report. Expected date of publication 2035 – possibly never.
I wasn’t using it as an example of how it should be!!
binnersFull MemberI wasn’t using it as an example of how it should be!!
Maybe not, but thats how it is. That’s the reality of ‘accountability’ as far as our glorious leaders are concerned. Do you think it’ll ever see the light of day? Seriously?
Which explains, probably more than anything else already mentioned on this thread, why we can’t just accept it when they tell us to just trust them in areas like this. They have demonstrated repeatedly that they are the least trustworthy people on the planet! And they’re busy pursuing their own agendas, where legitimate democratic oversight would be… inconvenient… shall we say
dragonFree Memberwould you be happy for foreign powers to start taking people out in the UK using drones?
No but we have a government in control of the country and hence laws. Syria is in the midst of a civil war with no effective government control in many areas and a complete lack of law. So they aren’t the same situation at all.
Drone strikes endlessly hit the wrong targets / kill civilians.
Really got any evidence for that?
binnersFull MemberNo but we have a government in control of the country and hence laws.
Laws which in this case, our govenment chose to completely ignore. You know… the ones about assassinating people without any legal process? Pretty basic, fundamental stuff like that?
theotherjonvFree MemberWill we see it released, in the full unedited form. I’m not holding my breath.
But to me, that’s the situation that needs changing. Not the decision to take out someone with intent and capability and a near future plan to commit atrocities against our citizens, I think that’s a legitimate target, sorry if others don’t see it as so.
grumFree MemberNo but we have a government in control of the country and hence laws. Syria is in the midst of a civil war with no effective government control in many areas and a complete lack of law. So they aren’t the same situation at all.
Ah so one rule for them, another rule for us. What a surprise.
Really got any evidence for that?
Finally, on 15 October 2010, Hellfire missiles fired from a Predator or Reaper drone killed Hussain, the Pakistani Taliban later confirmed. For the death of a man whom practically no American can name, the US killed 128 people, 13 of them children, none of whom it meant to harm.
A new analysis of the data available to the public about drone strikes, conducted by the human-rights group Reprieve, indicates that even when operators target specific individuals – the most focused effort of what Barack Obama calls “targeted killing” – they kill vastly more people than their targets, often needing to strike multiple times. Attempts to kill 41 men resulted in the deaths of an estimated 1,147 people, as of 24 November.
Among those killed that day were 22 children. The youngest, Khadje Ali Mokbel Louqye, was just one year old. A dozen women also died, five of them reportedly pregnant.
Yet these numbers mask the many individual families annihilated in the attack. Mohammed Nasser Awad Jaljala, 60, his 30-year-old wife Nousa, their son Nasser, 6, and daughters Arwa, 4, and Fatima, aged 2, were all killed.
Then there was 35-year old Ali Mohammed Nasser Jaljala, his wife Qubla (25), and their four daughters Afrah (9), Zayda (7), Hoda (5) and Sheikha (4) who all died.
The youngest killed, Khadje Ali Mokbel Louqye, was just one year old
Ahmed Mohammed Nasser Jaljala, 30, was killed alongside his 21-year old wife Qubla and 50-year old mother Mouhsena. Their daughter Fatima, aged 13, was the only survivor of the family, badly injured and needing extensive medical treatment abroad.The Anbour clan suffered similarly catastrophic losses. Abdullah Mokbel Salem Louqye died with his wife, son and three daughters. His brother Ali Mokbel Salem Louqye’s seven-strong family were also wiped out.
molgripsFree MemberSo what would you have done o great binners? You don’t seem to acknowledge the difficulty of the situation at all in your enthusiasm to castigate those in charge. It’s so easy isn’t it?
grumFree MemberNo but we have a government in control of the country and hence laws.
And our government in control of the country and hence laws didn’t seem too bothered about those laws when we invaded Iraq illegally and killed far more people than Al-Qaeda ever have.
atlazFree MemberIt’s only Western soldiers getting maimed by IEDs which makes headline news.
Hardly. 6600 US soldiers dead in Iraq and Afghanistan, over 600 British dead soldiers. Wounded; over 50,000 US and over 10,000 British. If you put in other countries and civilian contractors the numbers are pretty shocking.
I doubt if even a tenth of those wounded have been near a headline, even in their local papers.
binnersFull MemberI’ve gone into detail about my solution to the whole middle eastern problem many times Molls….
dragonFree MemberBinners you may disagree but the main consensus seems to be that it was within the law.
Grum I think you’ll find the present government weren’t the ones in power when we invaded Iraq. And I struggle to see how invading a country is the same as a clearly defined strike on a single car with known combatants in it. This is closer to the SAS killing of three IRA members on Gibraltar in ’88.
just5minutesFree MemberPersonally I don’t have any sympathy for the two nut jobs that were targeted with drones. As far as I can see it:
1. IS/ ISIS is a terrorist group. If you say you’re going to join them / make videos saying you’re going to / travel with the intent of doing so then you should lose your British citizenship (thus rendering them stateless) and should be actively targeted as an enemy combatant (with the exception of children taken by their parents).
2. At the point a person travels to Iraq / Syria to join ISIS they should be treated as a traitor with their entire assets to be taken by the state and disbursed to those who are fleeing the chaos caused by ISIS.
3. Public support for the goals of ISIS is not compatible with a life in Britain and should be dealt with as such – including the immediate loss of all benefits and social housing. Children should be removed from households where parents have extremist views with a view to getting them fostered / adopted by other families.
4. Anyone who believes that the Caliphate is a great place should be given free travel and the option of permanently leaving the UK with loss of citizenship part of the process. The houses freed up should be given to refugees / those who have values compatible with life in a democracy / secular state.
binnersFull MemberBinners you may disagree but the main consensus seems to be that it was within the law.
Depends who’s law. And who’s consensus. Have I missed something? Assassinating people is now legal according to our present laws is it? Without anything so inconvenient as a trial, or people supplying evidence? I must have missed the news piece when they said they’d legalised that.
As with Iraq. If its against our law, or international law, we’ll just use somebody elses. See also extraordinary rendition etc. We can’t torture people? Lets go to somewhere where we can then.
Grum I think you’ll find the present government weren’t the ones in power when we invaded Iraq.
Have a look at the present Tory front bench and see if you can find one of them who voted against it. Another reason Chilcott will never see the light of day. The Tory’s are as up to their necks in it as Blair. They were all unquestioningly tagging along with George
MSPFull MemberBinners you may disagree but the main consensus seems to be that it was within the law
That isn’t the consensus I am reading on this thread.
MSPFull MemberPublic support for the goals of ISIS is not compatible with a life in Britain and should be dealt with as such – including the immediate loss of all benefits and social housing. Children should be removed from households where parents have extremist views with a view to getting them fostered / adopted by other families.
1984
binnersFull MemberHow many of them had a hand in creating this ?
Its the job of an opposition to raise questions about exactly this type of thing. Blair was proposing invading a country, and going to war FFS! All over the world, people, including the UN weapons inspectors, were saying there were no WMD’s. The basis on which we went into that war. Millions of people took to the streets to protest against it. Remember? You’d think maybe some of the opposition front bench might want to articulate some of these perfectly reasonable questions about the legitimacy of invading Iraq.
Did they?
Did they ****!
And now they’re demonstrating, just as much as Blair did, their contempt for international law
just5minutesFree Member1984
Not so much 1984 more 2005 when home grown islamists with a rabid hatred of the west / western life blew up 52 of their fellow british citizens on London tube trains.
The failure to recognise salafism / wahabi ideology and vigorously confront it is precisely why British citizens are now blowing themselves and others up all over the world, and why our security services are actively monitoring around 5-6,000 individuals the share the same intent.
grumFree MemberHow many of them had a hand in creating this ?
Well I thought it was utter bollocks at the time, so unless they are all monumentally thick they must have had their doubts. Let’s face it, if anything the Tories would have been even more gung-ho than Labour if they’d have been in power.
The failure to recognise salafism / wahabi ideology and vigorously confront it is precisely why British citizens are now blowing themselves and others up all over the world, and why our security services are actively monitoring around 5-6,000 individuals the share the same intent.
So why have we never attacked the root and main funder/promoter of wahhabism/salafism I wonder, and in fact continue to supply it with billions of dollars worth of weapons, and fly our flags at half mast when it’s ruler dies? That country would be one of the worst human rights abusers in the world – who’s citizens carried out the 9/11 attacks (so we invaded another country that had bugger all to do with it).
edward2000Free MemberI sometimes read the BBC comments section when i feel inclined for a giggle. However on this occasion I agree with the ones I have read (sorted by popularity. A selection of the few are:
No explanations needed.
The traitor got everything he deserved.
Enemy of the UK ,should to be treated the same way as the rest of the murderous I.S. scum.
He’s one of the reasons that hundreds of thousands
of people are fleeing for their lives in fear.Well done government.
Stop giving these idiots the title of being British. They are traitors and gave up their right to be British when they left to join the Islamic State. Same goes for any other imbecile who decides to join them.
I’m sure these to fellows would have no hesitation in killing myself or my family or any other infidel or apostate, It’s a relief we got to them first.
Nothing less than the total extermination of IS is acceptable – we need to rid the World of this sickness.
dragonFree MemberBased on the article linked to below and the governments own advice then yes it was legal.
wobbliscottFree MemberBut I have said this before – IS is a legitimate target – we can, and do bomb them at will – just not in Syria. The only technicality here is that we bombed them in Syria. If they were 1cm over the boarder in Iraq nobody would have batted an eyelid. It’s just a technicality. Our ban on military action in Syria was about targetting Assad and helping bring about a change of regime – well things have changed somewhat, these two were in Syria, but not engaged in the civil war with Assad, they were engaged in other activities that threatened our security.
Why target two specific people in Syria out of all the IS people in Syria we could have bombed? Clearly we must have been pretty convinced we had something on them. The fact they were British has nothing to do with anything.
binnersFull MemberI sometimes read the BBC comments section when i feel inclined for a giggle. However on this occasion I agree with the ones I have read
Great! Well thats that sorted then. Maybe we should let people who write comments under news articles, probably while pissed, having failed to take their medication, set all government policy from now on?
Are you going to the bar? Will you get us a Stella? And some pork scratchings? I’ll tell you what… these bloody immigrants…..
binnersFull MemberBased on the article linked to below and the governments own advice then yes it was legal.
The same people who said invading Iraq was legal? Well… thats beyond dispute then, isn’t it? The Chilcott enquiry just exonerated them all, didn’t it?
Oh wait…. hang on a minute…..
TurnerGuyFree Membertoppled the much better armed/equipped Iraqi government in 3 weeks.
not sure they were as committed/focused though – it probably doesn’t count as martyrdom if you die fighting for the governments army unless it a holy war.
wreckerFree Membertoppled the much better armed/equipped Iraqi government in 3 weeks.
It’s a completely different proposition. Fighting conventional forces in uniforms with classic tactics vs asymmetric (check me out!) warfare with terrorists. The US military was very effective at the former (blowing up tanks is childs play for them), less so at the latter (because it’s really hard fighting people hiding among the civilian population).
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