http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/feb/15/bae.armstrade?gusrc=rss&feed=networkfront
2/15/2008 8:28:18 PM
leave your liberal rhetoric in chapel hill; we all know the terrorists were really working with Saddam duh. now that he's out of power freedom is once again shining around the world
2/15/2008 8:58:36 PM
This has been in the press for a while (upto a year), sans the threats part, but with the non-cooperation in anti-terror activities part.Prince Bandar is [censored].... Living in that very country, the last thing I want to do is give my opinion publically of people who could literally vaporize me [and family and friends to the 6ht degree] off the face of this earth.
2/15/2008 9:15:20 PM
do you think prince towel head's agents would seriously hack into TWW to find one of there sons of allah bad mouthing the good prince in order to execute him.
2/15/2008 9:27:49 PM
^ I'm not sure his concern is unwarranted.We're talking about a country that didn't outlaw slavery until 1962.
2/15/2008 10:54:31 PM
You do realize that even though the UK dropped the investigations into the BAE-Saudi Scandals, the United States Justice Department is currently involved in an investigation for the very same issue (the United States has the right to do this since BAE has an incorporated subsidy here to bid on Pentagon contracts)?Apparently Prince Bandar isn't a good enough friend of Bush that the President would pressure DOJ to drop the investigation. After all, if the UK felt that they didn't need to investigate their defense champion, why should the US do so (or so would the justification be if the White House truly wanted to kill it)?Oh, and from your own article:
2/16/2008 1:27:47 AM
i mean the US was like Gittt-errr- DUnnnn when it came to Iraq yet we are buddy buddy with Saudi Arabia even when 1/2 the 9/11 terrorists were Saudi nationals!!!!! what gives???
2/16/2008 4:27:32 AM
^ Under that rationale we should be attacking Tunisia as well since several of the co-conspirators were Tunisian. I could be wrong, but I believe that these governments (Tunisian, Saudi, etc.) do take steps to eradicate these people from their respective countries due to their radical beliefs and that is one reason they ended training in Afghanistan, etc. as men without a country.[Edited on February 16, 2008 at 1:58 PM. Reason : n]
2/16/2008 1:58:18 PM
2/16/2008 2:12:22 PM
2/16/2008 3:23:50 PM
Wheres John Paul Jones when we need em
2/16/2008 3:34:48 PM
I have respected that very "fact of life" your article mentions from the very beginning, RedGuard.That's why I, and no one like me, is out there making veiled threats of terrorist attacks against their country. We operate by a different standard.My point is that the UK, as a strategic ally of the United States, ought to move forward with their criminal probe anyway because in Western governments, laws, if you haven't forgotten, form the basis of constitutional fucking society and consider re-evaluating Saudi Arabia's status as it relates to terrorist sponsorship and collaboration as diplomatic response.This is international politics after all, not a vacuum.How in fuck you defend what is unavoidably an admission by a welfare state our tax dollars heavily subsidize that they are willing to turn an even blinder eye to terrorists that OMF WANNA KILL US LOL continues to baffle me.Since strawmen do not become of us, I'll disregard the rest of your complete mischaracterization of my argument.[Edited on February 16, 2008 at 7:16 PM. Reason : ...]
2/16/2008 7:15:21 PM
I agree with you that the United Kingdom should have moved forward with the probe and think that the British government has set a bad precedent with it, but again, I disagree with you that what the Prince said is a direct terrorist threat. He did not directly threaten to take action against the British. He simply said, based on the numerous other takes on this story from nearly every other source, that the British better back off or their going to cut off intelligence support making British attempts to thwart terrorism much more difficult. You're the one who's trying to prop this event up on the same level as a direct threat from al-Qaeda or any other source.
2/16/2008 11:36:51 PM
well if Gamecat just suddenly disappears along with his relatives, then we'll know the terrorist threat from the Saudi government is for real.
2/17/2008 8:44:59 AM
NOTICE TO LAW ENFORCEMENT: BELOW POST IS FOR ILLUSTRATION ONLYI know how to prevent radical elements within RedGuards neighborhood who really wish to kill him and anyone else like him from doing so. I'm a nice enough guy, though, I share the information about what they'll be up to and when with law enforcement to save them whenever shit looks hot.But one day, I get all butthurt that investigators are sniffing around my "shipping" operation.I make a phone call to the mayor, who's in My Circle, and tell him "If you don't get that prosecutor RedGuard to stop investigating White Sands Trucking Co.'s freight trucks, then I'm going to stop cooperating with your cops, and your citizens will die. What do you think of that?"How would the mayor interpret that?How would you?What if information I obtain and choose to withhold after the mayor grows a spine and lets RedGuard move forward, as he suggests the British do, leads to the deaths of let's just say scores of innocent civilians? What about hundreds? Or thousands?I certainly didn't squat in a cave, point a camera at myself, and wag my finger in front of it while I cursed infidels in Arabic. I also didn't burn a cross an anybody's lawn. But my actions had the same effect on the lives of the victims. Is it only later, after they've died, that one can safely call my original words what they should have been called in the first place? A threat?// END ILLUSTRATIONRedGuard is quibbling over simple points.Willful omission of material fact remains an act itself, and therefore those who do so retain culpability ESPECIALLY when doing so results in the violent deaths of others. That's why many Western nations have ACCESSORY TO MURDER laws. Accessory to terror laws exist, too. But of course, you knew that.You claim to have read the article.Did you catch this part?
2/18/2008 3:54:00 AM
It's obvious I'm not going to convince you, but I'm still going to disagree with you.The Saudis don't have direct information that something is about to happen. They aren't saying that if you don't do this or that, something is going to happen tomorrow at noon. What they are saying is that they will not cooperate in the future with British authorities, that the British need them or great harm is probably going to happen. Prince Bandar's comments were diplomatically stupid at best.You insist that there's no distinction, but I do even if both acts are reprehensible. I say this because a direct terrorist threat implies that the British should go in and deal with it with a borderline justification for military force. A threat to cut all cooperation, risking the lives of British citizens, while still reprehensible and probably deserving of some sort of political reaction, is still within the rights of the Saudi government to do so, no matter how ruthless it may be. The Saudis are not legally bound to help the British, they've been doing a favor for them at significant political cost.I'm not trying to defend "Bandar 'Bush'" nor implying that the British population should not be outraged about their government's actions. They should be outraged, but there is a distinct difference between the two types of threats particularly because the implications are very different and have to be addressed in different ways.
2/20/2008 11:23:58 PM
2/21/2008 3:07:06 AM