
Iraq in the good old days
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"It's going to take them about three months to form a government and I'm sure the negotiations will be tough," said Salaam Ali, a 35-year-old Shi'ite shopkeeper on the unusually calm streets of central Baghdad.
"We hope the elections will bring all Iraqis together -- Shi'ites, Sunnis and others," he said, citing a good electricity supply as his most pressing need.
Actually, the shareholders of the oil companies should toss the senior management out for producing such as small % of net income as related to total revenues. GE's board would have fired the whole crew for such poor performance and either sold or closed down most of the refineries. Anything less than 10% net income is unacceptable!Bush orchestrated that entire Katrina deal to help the oil companies increase their profits. It pays to vote Republican
1) Saddam invaded and took over Kuwait to pay for the Iran/Iraq war debt. The Kuwaitis asked the world for help. The world responded in kind. Saddam's army blew up every oil well they could on the way out.Ben wrote:
I guess maybee we should invade every country in the world that is corrupt huh? Why stop at Iraq?
You're right. The Kurds have been doing pretty well for awhile and are now trying to move their people from working for the military to the private sector. The Sunni leaders and insurgents screwed up big with forcing folks to boycott the last election and I think lost a lot of face. I really believe that a large portion of the Sunni just want to get on with their lives and this election will marginalize the apologist for old Iraq.Indeed the Sunni insurgents have been creating their own hell. The north and the south thrive while all the major Sunni cities don't have the most basic services when the insurgents constanly attack them.
Even if they did could we honestly be able to occupy them? I am willing to bet we could beat them, we have the best military in the world. But do we want to go into such a situation? Of course not. We can't, because our military is already spread to thin.Iran and North Korea have not yet crossed the line of international law so brazenly.
Recruitment is down in the Army but 'less and less' is not an accurate statement. Some of the decline is a result of our vibrant economy.Less and less people are enlisting.
My Bad. Looks like enlistment is meeting expectations as of late.PENTAGON- The Pentagon says that all four service branches exceeded their recruitment goals last month, with more than 13,000 men and women signing up.
The retention of active-duty service members has been more problematic.
Only the Army appears to be on track to meet their yearly retention goal, with 10,677 soldiers who have "re-upped." The Army is hoping more than 11,500 soldiers will do so. The recruitment and retention of members of the reserves and the National Guard has been an even tougher sell.
Exactly! That's what we need is a realistic goal. I am not advocating an imediate w/d of our troops. Like Bill pointed out, the world is watching.What defines "success" in the region?
They have been blowing each other up and murdering each other leaders loooonnngggg before we ever showed up.
(NOT mocking them for this--just noting a ugly fact)
If people define "success" as no attacks--ever---then the whole region is and always has been, and always will be a failure.