SUBSIM Radio Room Forums

SUBSIM Radio Room Forums (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/index.php)
-   General Topics (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/forumdisplay.php?f=175)
-   -   Karl Rove promises Republican insiders an"October Surprise" (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=98460)

The Avon Lady 09-22-06 02:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PeriscopeDepth
My guess is the Mossad presence in Iran is far bigger than the CIA presence there.

Maybe that explains the 20% vacancy rate at the local hotels this Jewish New Year. :hmm:

Immacolata 09-22-06 03:22 AM

WHoa, can we have some board manners here and not paste miles long articles? If you feel a need to have this article read, LINK to it please. Paraphrase it. But this text dumping is polluting the thread.

As for iran's perceived nuclear capability. The US' ability to perceive threats of WMD have been somewhat tarnished lately. Maybe it is true or not. But it so happens that my neighbour is working with nuclear contingency plans for our national security. From what he heard on "the grapevine", Iranians possess rather few of the critical "slings" or centrifuges that is used to enrich uranium... or is that deplete? They possess a fraction of the numbers used normally to manufacture weaponsgrade uranium per bomb. So even IF they have the plans and some of the raw materials, they do have a while to go yet before they can actually make one.

After that, they have the problem of testing it. Once they test it, the world knows fer shure. They can go without testing it. But who knows what it will do the. Be a real bomb or just a very polluting firecracker? For the time being, I think the world should concentrate on moping up the mess in Iraq and Afghanistan, not plan bombing of Iran.

Gizzmoe 09-22-06 03:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Immacolata
WHoa, can we have some board manners here and not paste miles long articles? If you feel a need to have this article read, LINK to it please. Paraphrase it.

:yep:

http://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=98467

I´ve removed the quoted article from Skybird´s post and just left the link.

scandium 09-22-06 03:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Immacolata
For the time being, I think the world should concentrate on moping up the mess in Iraq and Afghanistan, not plan bombing of Iran.

The "world" didn't want any part of Iraq and pretty much called it exactly as its turned out even before the first cruise missle was fired. Why should the "world" clean up GWB's mess? I say issue him some camis, an M-16, and then parachute him into Baghdad for a first hand look at his newly created "democracy" (after he's impeached and recalled from office of course). Same goes for Dick, Rummy, and Condi.

Well, in a perfect world perhaps...

Immacolata 09-22-06 05:21 AM

The "world" should clean up GWBs mess because he made poo poo, and someone has to rear him proper, so that this huge kid in diapers doesn't throw his toys out of the pram again. He might just end up shattering what ever is left of the chinaware that didn't break already.

Onkel Neal 09-22-06 05:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by The Noob
Quote:

Originally Posted by Neal Stevens
That's what they said before we went into Afghanistan and Iraq :roll:

And there you found...nuts. You only got your Behind kicked till you Retreated. And still, they kill your New Politicans down there.

Ah, i just love such Discussions, even if nothing comes out in the end.

??? Whaaaat? Do I need to run that through a decoder?

Skybird 09-22-06 06:44 AM

TLAMs are not sufficient for the destruction of certain key installations, Neal. Bunker buster bombs , even oversozed ones, even if hardened and dropped from a very high altitude, only penetrate so much into the earth, and not more (we had a thread some months ago describing and referring to the physics of it, it was said that a penetration depth of 7-8, or 12 m is the physically possible maximum before any object with that ammount of kinetic energy gets stuck, I do not remember which one of these two was the right value, I think it was 8 m.) that penetration depth does not help much if the installation is hidden behind massive stone formations, let's say 30m or more, is installed inside mountains, and build by steel-hardened concrete structures, and shock-absorbing cellur design. There is no guarantee that they also do not have included further precautions to absorb the shock or reduce the damage from sub-terranean mega-explosions. No, daisy-cutters and bigger bombs will not do the job on some of the key elements of their nuclear industry.

then there is the problem that we know the places in general - but not the exact positions of key structures. We have no GPS coordinates to program. In some places you lacik the ability to aim your conventional megabombs precisely on the right spot, not to mention a weak spot. you could only target the general area, wasting most of the explosion's blast energy for nothing as long as you do not score a lucky hit. even Your mentioned TLAM's need to be programmed by exact coordinates in order to hit the ntended taregt. If you do not know these numbers, your taregt effectively is invisible. The intel deficit on the exact locations has been described in various articles and form ann y sources, Amerian as well as international ones, in the last two years. It is a huge problem, and it is fact.

It is not suffient to destroy only what is in reach, and delay their program. Do you want to come back to them every four years? A sure way to brake with almost all remaining world'S sympathy when striking first in an effective war of attack - and then do it again four years later. And then do it again. It will turn your country into political rubble.

Shuttling around Marines and capture the installations by hand? Come on, think of it. That could work only with those near the coast and the borders, and I expect such things to take place. but Iran is bigger than Iraq, and bigger then Afghanistan. You enter a country where the population is not neutral at the beginning, as was the case in Iraq and Afghanaistan in the beginning. I know the iranian mentlaity and temperament for long enough now, even those who are of a moderate opinion towards the West will turn into enflamed nationalists if you turn against their country. they love it, in all age groups, both sexes, no matter the political or religious spectrum. You will have all of them against you. You would need to fight with extremely vulnerable units while they are on the move, in terrain extremely in favour of guerilla ambushes or even a conventional defender. you would need to enter some of the most rugged mountain terrain in Iran there is. There is modern shoulder-launched SAM's, and ATGMs, not just RPGs. Opposite to Irak, I know many of the terrain types in Iran by my own eyes. Helicopter transportation on huge scale? Your losses will rocket into the sky. The Sovjets lost twice as many helicopters in Afghanistan than tanks. Different than the mujaheddin at the bginning, Iran has Stinger-like weaponry - from the beginning.

Alternative: ground invasion, and fighting your way into the centre of Iran, so to speak. Again, the terrain is your enemy, and many regions you need to enter do not do any favours to tanks and heavy equipement. You would have no safe resting and supply places inside the country. An abrams travels 300 miles before needing to drink. It consumes the samed ammount of gas when sitting still, due to it's turnbine. you would depend on ridiculousoly thin and vulnerable supply lines. Logistics would be a nightmare, and maybe would cause you more losses than combat at the front. You would need to fight all the time, for every mile, against militias, an army with quite some modern weapons in reserve, a population that will welcome you nowhere, but would like to see your throats being slit when you rest. Many of the various enemeis you face would be extremely fanatised. The Revolutionary Guards is the orgnization by whose design Hezbollah has been created in recent years: it effectively brought the israels to a halt, who maybe did not prepare well and planned idiotically, nevertheless run the show with impressive firepower. I mean, all the place of Iran is more hostile than Iraq or Afghanistan, from the very beginning. If you do a ground invasion there, you would need more troops then in Iraq and Afghanistan, and your losses would be of a totally different quality then during the last five years.

Some weeks ago there was an Amnerican article referring to status of army equipment due to Iraq. they said the army will already need years to repair all what has broken down or is degraded due to wear and tear, and thta units already feel the negative, downgrading effect of this.

Then, national public opinion. your nation's population already is polarised over Bush, and Iraq. Now that you would start this Iran story, and imagine what this would mean to the widening gaps between the two "tribes" you already have? The damage to your national psyche wouldn'T heal in the next twenty years to come.

Is the American people really prepared for that? Is it really willing these costs? I doubt that.

Everything speaks against your conventional military scenario, and nothing for it. It reminds me of Napoleon's advance on Moscow.

It is possible though, that for innerpolitical reasons such an attack is launched - with the unamditted knowledge from the very beginning that the objectives cannot all be acchieved, but giving the impression of toughness, and "doing something". what in general is the reasons why there are still US troops in Iraq now: not giving the impression of having been strategically defeated in public, and that it was a mistake.

I stick to it: when somebody will get serious about really destroying Iran'S prgrom, not just delaying it for 3-5 years, then the use of small nukes on selected targets is unavoidable. I see a clear willingness to eventually use nukes in parts of this administration's audience, and the administration itself. And judging the conventional versus the limited nuclear option, I see myself cautiously shifting towards the latter. It would mean far lesser losses for the troops, but higher losses for the popultion over the long run, because even subterranean detonations will create immense radiation and toxic dust as long as the explosive device is not driven many hundred meters into the earth.

Follwing my argument that morals needs to be decided before, but not during a war, it comes down to this question alone: should war be waged to deny Iran access to nuclear wepaons in probably 8-12, or 5-15 years (estimations vary), or not? If you answer with Yes, you are better advised to will the limited use of small nukes on selected targets, too, else you cannot acchieve your objective, which must be: destruction, not delay.

One thing must be clear, though: the use of nukes will effectively delete any remaining scruples by others to use nukes themselves, and it will immensly fuel islamic propaganda, taking it as further justification to fight the West by means of terror. both national and non-national actors will have this modern precedence as an excuse. Total war always works both sides.

SkvyWvr 09-22-06 07:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ishmael
The Pentagon's top brass has moved into second-stage contingency planning for a potential military strike on Iran, one senior intelligence official familiar with the plans tells RAW STORY.
The official, who is close to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the highest ranking officials of each branch of the US military, says the Chiefs have started what is called "branches and sequels" contingency planning.

CONTINGENCY. This is what every military high command in the world does. They have stacks and stacks of contingency plans available. Anyone familiar with the way these things work wouldn't give this story a glance.

@ Avon, Happy New Year.;)

Onkel Neal 09-22-06 08:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skybird
TLAMs are not sufficient for the destruction of certain key installations, Neal. Bunker buster bombs , even oversozed ones, even if hardened and dropped from a very high altitude, only penetrate so much into the earth, and not more (we had a thread some months ago describing and referring to the physics of it, it was said that a penetration depth of 7-8, or 12 m is the physically possible maximum

Yes, I know all that. I believe I suggested TLAM strikes (along with MOAB saturation) of the targets to knock down resistance, then insert ground troops at the sites to complete the destruction.

Are the American people prepared for this? Will we do it? No and probably not.

Napoleon?? Oh yeah, I forgot about that.

Onkel Neal 09-22-06 08:08 AM

Anyway, this is something the Western countries should all do, in tandem, or none at all. I'm tired of the US carrying the burden and getting all the criticism. If it were up to me, I would pull all US troops out, expell 90% of foreign students & workers, and return to isolationism. We have 24/7 news now, we could watch the next world war instead of being counted on to win it.

SkvyWvr 09-22-06 08:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Neal Stevens
Anyway, this is something the Western countries should all do, in tandem, or none at all. I'm tired of the US carrying the burden and getting all the criticism. If it were up to me, I would pull all US troops out, expell 90% of foreign students & workers, and return to isolationism. We have 24/7 news now, we could watch the next world war instead of being counted on to win it.

Well said.:up:

Ishmael 09-22-06 09:27 AM

In the interest of Brevity. Here is an excerpt from a book written by Marine corps Gen. Smedley Butler in 1932. The title is,"War is a Racket."

The following is an excerpt from a speech Gen. Butler delivered in 1933…one of over 1,200 speeches he delivered in over 700 US cities.

"War is just a racket. A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of people. Only a small inside group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few at the expense of the masses.
I believe in adequate defense at the coastline and nothing else. If a nation comes over here to fight, then we'll fight. The trouble with America is that when the dollar only earns 6 percent over here, then it gets restless and goes overseas to get 100 percent. Then the flag follows the dollar and the soldiers follow the flag.
I wouldn't go to war again as I have done to protect some lousy investment of the bankers. There are only two things we should fight for. One is the defense of our homes and the other is the Bill of Rights. War for any other reason is simply a racket.
There isn't a trick in the racketeering bag that the military gang is blind to. It has its "finger men" to point out enemies, its "muscle men" to destroy enemies, its "brain men" to plan war preparations, and a "Big Boss" Super-Nationalistic-Capitalism.
It may seem odd for me, a military man to adopt such a comparison. Truthfulness compels me to. I spent thirty- three years and four months in active military service as a member of this country's most agile military force, the Marine Corps. I served in all commissioned ranks from Second Lieutenant to Major-General. And during that period, I spent most of my time being a high class muscle- man for Big Business, for Wall Street and for the Bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism.
I suspected I was just part of a racket at the time. Now I am sure of it. Like all the members of the military profession, I never had a thought of my own until I left the service. My mental faculties remained in suspended animation while I obeyed the orders of higher-ups. This is typical with everyone in the military service.
I helped make Mexico, especially Tampico, safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefits of Wall Street. The record of racketeering is long. I helped purify Nicaragua for the international banking house of Brown Brothers in 1909-1912. I brought light to the Dominican Republic for American sugar interests in 1916. In China I helped to see to it that Standard Oil went its way unmolested.
During those years, I had, as the boys in the back room would say, a swell racket. Looking back on it, I feel that I could have given Al Capone a few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated on three continents."

Immacolata 09-22-06 10:15 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Neal Stevens
Anyway, this is something the Western countries should all do, in tandem, or none at all. I'm tired of the US carrying the burden and getting all the criticism. If it were up to me, I would pull all US troops out, expell 90% of foreign students & workers, and return to isolationism. We have 24/7 news now, we could watch the next world war instead of being counted on to win it.

For starters perhap US should stop shenanigans like Iraq. Had us all fooled really well with that one. Now we are wasting I don't know how much time there for nothing. Everyone who supported the US in that war now has poo on their face.

As for isolationism, be prepared to say hello to economic stagnation and social unrest if you do that. No modern country today would support isolationism if they know what is best for them. Not the americans, not the french, the germans, the brits. No one. We are now stuck with this world together whether we want it or not. Which means taking the cake or the crap from whom ever the fickle american voters decides should run their country.

And I will make sure to comment that denmark is among the few nations that has supported USA in Iraq and afghanistan for the full duration of the conflicts. Doesn't mean I think its sign of particularly smart thinking, however.

Onkel Neal 09-22-06 10:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Immacolata
Quote:

Originally Posted by Neal Stevens
Anyway, this is something the Western countries should all do, in tandem, or none at all. I'm tired of the US carrying the burden and getting all the criticism. If it were up to me, I would pull all US troops out, expell 90% of foreign students & workers, and return to isolationism. We have 24/7 news now, we could watch the next world war instead of being counted on to win it.


As for isolationism, be prepared to say hello to economic stagnation and social unrest if you do that. No modern country today would support isolationism if they know what is best for them. Not the americans, not the french, the germans, the brits. No one. We are now stuck with this world together whether we want it or not. Which means taking the cake or the crap from whom ever the fickle american voters decides should run their country.

And I will make sure to comment that denmark is among the few nations that has supported USA in Iraq and afghanistan for the full duration of the conflicts. Doesn't mean I think its sign of particularly smart thinking, however.

Social unrest, but for whom? Not us, that's for sure. I completely disagree with your premise that by keeping US troops in our country and not allowing foreigners free reign in the US would lead to "economic stagnation". The US would continue to trade with the world. Food, goods, and material would still go in and out. Just no more World Bank, UN, and peacekeeping missions. No more US Navy acting as world policeman. The Soviet Union is gone, you don't have anything to worry about except your neighbor, and it looks like Europe no longer has the urge to erupt into war every 20 years like it used to.

We'll keep our cake for ourselves.:yep: And we can deal with our crap.

Skybird 09-22-06 11:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Neal Stevens
Anyway, this is something the Western countries should all do, in tandem, or none at all. I'm tired of the US carrying the burden and getting all the criticism. If it were up to me, I would pull all US troops out, expell 90% of foreign students & workers, and return to isolationism. We have 24/7 news now, we could watch the next world war instead of being counted on to win it.

Understandable, but you need the world probably as much as others need you. Just thinking on the economical interdependencies. The impact on your way of living if returning to isolationism probably would kill any government sticking to it. and I can't magine 330 million people all of a sudden give up their luxury live and excessive consummation of both goods and ressources and live like the Amish - although that maybe is not the worst way of living. Would you? Would I? We both answer No, don't we!?


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:34 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995- 2025 Subsim®
"Subsim" is a registered trademark, all rights reserved.