Tuesday, April 15, 2003
No To Saddam, No To The US?
Now that the Bush administration is savoring it's victory over Iraq. Hurray!! We beat a major adversary. Or did we? Let's see Iraq was a country:
which had an antiquated army,
which lost thousands and thousands of soldiers, in the wars with Iran and in the 1991 Gulf war
that was under 12 years of sanctions.
where 2/3 rds of the country was constantly monitored by our air force.
the size of California.
whose major sin, was that it was not a democracy, which had oil and did not like us
which, oh yea, did not attack anyone first
Well big whoop for us. By the way where are the massive stores of Chemical and Biological weapons? It seems odd to me that if the feyedeen, a vicious element of Saddam's army, that used women and children to shield themselves. did not use chemical weapons on our troops. Could they have decided that they should play by gentlemen's rules of war all of a sudden? I don't think so, but hey that's me.
Now,that those poor civilians that need medical assistance, and the shootings are dying off. The US had a meeting of various selected tribes to tell them, that we are there for them. There seems to be some doubts.
Thousands of demonstrators gathered yesterday on the road leading to a hastily constructed air base outside this city, of Nassiriyay, the location of a meeting between US government representatives and members of the opposition Iraqi National Congress.
The demonstrators, numbering in their tens of thousands, railed against US occupation of Iraq and the resulting hardships its citizens are being made to suffer.
"No to Saddam, No to US"
Many Iraqis boycotted the meeting in opposition to US plans to install retired Lt. Gen. Jay Garner atop an interim administration.
It seems that the demonstration by some of the most oppressed sect of arabs under Saddam's regime also hate the United States! How is that for gratitude! If they keep that up, we wouldn't give them their oil back!
which had an antiquated army,
which lost thousands and thousands of soldiers, in the wars with Iran and in the 1991 Gulf war
that was under 12 years of sanctions.
where 2/3 rds of the country was constantly monitored by our air force.
the size of California.
whose major sin, was that it was not a democracy, which had oil and did not like us
which, oh yea, did not attack anyone first
Well big whoop for us. By the way where are the massive stores of Chemical and Biological weapons? It seems odd to me that if the feyedeen, a vicious element of Saddam's army, that used women and children to shield themselves. did not use chemical weapons on our troops. Could they have decided that they should play by gentlemen's rules of war all of a sudden? I don't think so, but hey that's me.
Now,that those poor civilians that need medical assistance, and the shootings are dying off. The US had a meeting of various selected tribes to tell them, that we are there for them. There seems to be some doubts.
Thousands of demonstrators gathered yesterday on the road leading to a hastily constructed air base outside this city, of Nassiriyay, the location of a meeting between US government representatives and members of the opposition Iraqi National Congress.
The demonstrators, numbering in their tens of thousands, railed against US occupation of Iraq and the resulting hardships its citizens are being made to suffer.
"No to Saddam, No to US"
Many Iraqis boycotted the meeting in opposition to US plans to install retired Lt. Gen. Jay Garner atop an interim administration.
It seems that the demonstration by some of the most oppressed sect of arabs under Saddam's regime also hate the United States! How is that for gratitude! If they keep that up, we wouldn't give them their oil back!