If I sneak into a shooting range where people are shooting at targets, and I decide to go down range behind the targets when they don't see me, who is the burden on if I get shot, assuming I know that I'm walking into essentially a warzone?Its not a perfect system, mistakes are made, but theres no such thing as a perfect system. If you're looking for perfection, ie zero civilian casualties, you simply have too unrealistic of expectations]
4/9/2010 11:01:08 PM
^i hope you don't think thats an apt analogy for the people in the van, because i think you know that's a pretty bad comparison. you're conveniently assuming that you "know" what you are walking in to. i don't think its fair for us to assume the people in the van knew anything. i suppose they may have known that, but its really hard for me to jump to that conclusion.
4/9/2010 11:09:05 PM
oh ffs, these people know wtf is up. you act like they are some yuppie suburban schoolkids from cary.
4/9/2010 11:11:47 PM
you make a strong point there, young urban professional school children from cary[Edited on April 9, 2010 at 11:13 PM. Reason : .]
4/9/2010 11:13:09 PM
^^^Like I said, the US soldiers and the Iraqi government tell the civilians where they should and shouldn't go. If you have a problem with that type of strict law, thats fine, and its not something we would like in the US. But if there were a war going on in the US, and you were told not to go certain places for risk of death, you might not like it, you might be furious, but you would know the risks.You can't legitimately compare it to just walking down the street in the current US and getting killed by a LEO, because we aren't at war, so all the comparisons to the current state of Iraq and the US are pretty silly[Edited on April 9, 2010 at 11:15 PM. Reason : ^^^]
4/9/2010 11:14:21 PM
that does not justify anything though, and saying "well, I warned you" when you are the one they are being warned against isn't quite rightit makes you sound like a bully[Edited on April 9, 2010 at 11:16 PM. Reason : .]
4/9/2010 11:15:41 PM
^^i could be wrong, but i highly doubt anyone was told that they should avoid stopping to help someone on the side of the road.i don't really have a problem with the strict rules. i do have a problem when we don't follow the same rules we set up for them. like i said, changing the rules on a regular basis without telling everyone else involved completely invalidates the reason for having rules to begin with.
4/9/2010 11:17:05 PM
^^you're not the only one being warned against
4/9/2010 11:20:37 PM
I'm sure if civilian iraquis had a choice they would have chosen to be born in the united states
4/9/2010 11:27:35 PM
or Canada
4/9/2010 11:29:00 PM
^^^then he doesn't understand the word "hypothetically," which removes the vast differences. it is the whole reason why that word is added to the question. ignoring it because he doesn't see it happening is of mere convenience, and frankly, it exposes his true sentiment. if he doesn't have to make the comparison, then he'll never push himself to think critically of the issue.[Edited on April 9, 2010 at 11:31 PM. Reason : ]
4/9/2010 11:29:47 PM
4/9/2010 11:32:00 PM
I just think in order for you or me or anyone else to fairly evaluate this incident in the context of the war in Iraq, we can't come up with similar analogies from the State when so many of the situations are so vastly different. I understand your hypotheticals, I just think they're off base and that we can't really evaluate this particular incident unless we step back from the comfy lives we all live and try to look at it from the perspective of an innocent civilian in a war torn country
4/9/2010 11:32:59 PM
Again, we're getting back into "I don't like that we're at war in Iraq" and "Of course Iraqis are pissed", etc on this page. That has nothing to do with the justifications of the actions of this particular Apache crew on this particular flight.
4/9/2010 11:34:25 PM
4/9/2010 11:44:52 PM
4/9/2010 11:47:39 PM
I'm about to go take a shower and start tackling the day's "to-do" list...I'll just say that I don't know what all they saw. I'm not an Apache guy, and I wasn't there. Shooting the van is more of a grey area in my mind, too, but at worst, I view it as a reasonable enough response to a grey enough area that I wouldn't armchair quarterback it either way, whether they chose to shoot or hold fire.
4/9/2010 11:51:00 PM
"I'm sorry I beat the shit out of you, but if I were you and our roles were reversed I think I'd know down that I NEEDED that beating. And by beating I mean the loss of loved ones and other et cetera that comes with a foreign occupation."[Edited on April 10, 2010 at 12:01 AM. Reason : .]
4/10/2010 12:00:33 AM
^^^i should apologize to you, then. at first, i thought you were a callous asshole with no respect for human life, civil discourse or the very human cost of premature decisions. you know, a real git-r-done type.turns out you're just very brave[Edited on April 10, 2010 at 12:02 AM. Reason : ]
4/10/2010 12:02:26 AM
the bravest thing you can do is post on a message board about what you WOULD do in reply to a topic about something that has already happened to other people (who aren't americans. from cary)[Edited on April 10, 2010 at 12:07 AM. Reason : .]
4/10/2010 12:07:04 AM
It's also very brave to put yourself in the shoes of front-line soldiers and critique the decisions they made while under fire.
4/10/2010 12:54:45 AM
I was about to say, the irony of that post is staggering.
4/10/2010 1:24:39 AM
4/10/2010 1:32:56 AM
Incidentally, a couple points about trust...The video says (and is confirmed in the speech on the video) that the children were to be evacuated to a military hospital, but that it was decided they should go to a local hospital, and (implied in the video) that this would result in reduced care.However, from the very same site this is posted at, we see they have the medical treatment records for both children, showing them treated at military medical facilities. Again with the dishonesty:Video statement is at 13:15 of the short video.http://collateralmurder.com/en/img/imgiraq/rec_doaha_us_sc.jpg.htmlhttp://collateralmurder.com/en/img/imgiraq/rec_syad_us_sc.jpg.htmlAlso they have this picture:http://collateralmurder.com/en/img/photos/AliAbbas_VAN.jpg.htmlclaiming to be the van in question. But unless we decided to blow up the front of the van after the fact, 14:41 of the short video clearly shows the front more or less intact.Someone (beyond the government) has an agenda here that goes beyond "whistle blowing"[Edited on April 10, 2010 at 1:42 AM. Reason : asd]
4/10/2010 1:41:58 AM
Why doesn't the government release their copy of the video and clear all this up?
4/10/2010 6:08:55 AM
maybe because the govt. doesn't give a shit what a few dailykos readers thinkOh, and because they know you guys aren't looking for the truth - you're looking for an excuse to bash the military:
4/10/2010 8:50:09 AM
4/10/2010 10:19:46 AM
my gosh, its a wonder that anyone is even still alive in iraq today!
4/10/2010 10:20:56 AM
4/10/2010 11:55:42 AM
4/10/2010 1:28:23 PM
funny how saying 'it was an accident' makes it ok...because it is war
4/10/2010 3:20:44 PM
you're right... we sent them over there to kill insurgents so its totally rational for us to act outraged when they do their job and kill who they think are insurgents.
4/10/2010 3:23:36 PM
wait, we sent them over to kill insurgents or can they kill anyone who might be an insurgent? it may not be a difference to you, but I am sure it's a difference to dead people WHO AREN'T INSURGENTS
4/10/2010 3:28:15 PM
^^ so you would rather people NOT be bothered by the brutality of war...?
4/10/2010 3:32:10 PM
4/10/2010 3:37:53 PM
4/10/2010 3:39:40 PM
it's pretty obtuse to expect people be upset at atrocities of war but not the actors responsible for them
4/10/2010 3:42:53 PM
oh so now this video is portraying an atrocity?wtf people.
4/10/2010 3:43:45 PM
I for one found it cruel and barbaric to watch soldiers in a helicopter routinely circle around a bunch of men, find conclusions and justifications that I myself could not come to given the exact same evidence, and then kill the group with sterile effectiveness.
4/10/2010 3:46:59 PM
but you don't have all the same evidence (SA on the surrounding area, stuff that happened leading up to that engagement, intel, radio chatter, Predator feeds/other collectors helping to ID bad guys, etc).you simply have the same imaging footage from the Apache. Hell, you don't even have that--it's been cut. Nor are you a professional at looking at that stuff.Oh, and where's the atrocity? They killed people. That's what Apaches do. The only atrocity is that the fuckheads they were killing brought children along for a fight, but that's not on the U.S.--it's on the dipshit insurgent fighters. The Reuters correspondents are no more than a sad, unfortunate occurrence if they knowingly tagged along with a group of insurgents into a fight..but again, that's their own damn fault....and aside from all that, do you have a better idea? War is not and cannot be a court of law where evidence is presented, deliberations occur, etc.[Edited on April 10, 2010 at 4:02 PM. Reason : ]
4/10/2010 3:58:02 PM
4/10/2010 4:05:02 PM
4/10/2010 4:18:29 PM
if there's more evidence, the us government should show itif the us government doesn't think civilian america should see how they operate, that's a greater problem.
4/10/2010 4:20:39 PM
the US government doesn't have to defend every engagement to you. that's not how this works.wingnut fuckheads don't get to leverage the government to release classified information that can endanger troops on the ground.
4/10/2010 4:23:03 PM
4/10/2010 4:26:26 PM
lol - journalists who embed themselves with troops or insurgents during a war know what they're getting into. you think the insurgents are going to not set off a roadside bomb just because someone from CNN happens to be in the convoy? nope. same shit goes for those with insurgents. if a squad on the ground calls for CAS and the helo sees the guys with weapons, tough tits to the camera man who was tagging along.flip it - if we held our fire every time we saw a camera amongst the weapons held by insurgents, wouldn't every group of insurgents just start carrying a camera guy around? it's not like they wear some IFF transponder that lets the guys shooting know "aim at everyone but me"
4/10/2010 4:33:54 PM
^^ Surely you can grasp how it's not the fault of the U.S. soldiers when people attack us with their kids in tow, then those gets get wounded. ...and surely you can grasp how it's not the fault of U.S. soldiers when a Reuters camera crew embeds itself with a group of insurgent fighters. I mean, if they want to film from that perspective, go for it, but you can't complain when the people your new acquaintances are shooting at turn and shoot back.
4/10/2010 4:34:25 PM
I don't agree with the language [theDuke866] used; the deaths of the journalists and any civilians caught up in the engagement are truly tragic, and it's wrong to act like they invited it on themselves. However, particularly in the case of the journalists, it's true that they must have been aware of the risks they were taking. And it's preposterous to expect soldiers, in the middle of a war zone, to be able to "shoot around" journalists embedded with armed insurgents.[Edited on April 10, 2010 at 4:41 PM. Reason : ]
4/10/2010 4:39:23 PM
NOBODY QUESTION ANYTHING, THE US MILITARY IS PROTECTING YOU VOTING FUCKTARDS
4/10/2010 4:41:47 PM
^^^ I think it's silly and dangerous to obscure the physical reality of causation in cases such as this one. Those children and journalist didn't kill themselves. U.S. weapons aimed and fired by U.S. soldiers did it.[Edited on April 10, 2010 at 4:43 PM. Reason : responsibility]
4/10/2010 4:42:29 PM