Who stands to lose most if Iran-Saudi tensions got de-escalated?
If this is confirmed to be part of some conspiracy to stop de-escalation between Iran and Saudi and keep wars temperature high, Deep Neocons could be in big trouble in 2020 elections.
1. That's not what assassination means... lol.A couple of things.
Firstly, it is not established that he was "assassinated". To assume this is to assume that killing him was unjust. The evidence seems to suggest that he was a very bad actor, an enemy combatant whose deliberate actions validly placed him in the crosshairs.
Secondly, it makes no sense that anyone would have him killed with the objective in mind of maintaining tensions between the parties in question. Unless the false case can be convincingly made that the Saudis had Soleimani offed or that Iran did so to make it look as if Saudis did it, I see no reason that either party would be stupid enough to allow this event to derail deescalation.
Thirdly, the United States has claimed Soleimani's head, which in itself demolishes the notion that the act was carried forth for the stated purposes. If anything, the act would stand to better solidify relations between the pair, assuming that the efforts are sincere on both sides.
At this time, I am inclined to believe that that boy placed himself in danger by poking at the sleeping tiger, which them awakened, took exception, and resolved the issue without equivocation.
Maybe. Or Trump’s neoconservative advisors (Kushner, Pence, Pompeo, Graham, Rubio) took advantage of knowing about it...
1. That's not what assassination means... lol.
So assassinating (yes, assassinating) a top official of a foreign country that has already been subjected with sanctions for decades, which are an act of war, should... not deter deescalation? How does that make any sense? Saudi Arabia and the US are allies, you know.
3. I don't think Trump had Soleimani killed to prevent peace between Saudi and Iran, he just did it to get more votes from the Oorah retard wing of the Republican party
A couple of things.
Firstly, it is not established that he was "assassinated". To assume this is to assume that killing him was unjust. The evidence seems to suggest that he was a very bad actor, an enemy combatant whose deliberate actions validly placed him in the crosshairs.
Secondly, it makes no sense that anyone would have him killed with the objective in mind of maintaining tensions between the parties in question. Unless the false case can be convincingly made that the Saudis had Soleimani offed or that Iran did so to make it look as if Saudis did it, I see no reason that either party would be stupid enough to allow this event to derail deescalation.
At this time, I am inclined to believe that that boy placed himself in danger by poking at the sleeping tiger, which them awakened, took exception, and resolved the issue without equivocation.
3. I don't think Trump had Soleimani killed to prevent peace between Saudi and Iran, he just did it to get more votes from the Oorah retard wing of the Republican party[/QUOTE]From the Oxford etymological dictionary:assassinate (v.)
1610s, from past participle stem of Medieval Latin assassinare (see assassin). "Assassinate means to kill wrongfully by surprise, suddenly, or by secret assault" [Century Dictionary]. Of reputations, characters, etc., from 1620s. Related: Assassinated; assassinating.
Please address your attention to the bold, italicized, underlined term. Now go back to what I wrote. The assumption has been by some that he was wrongfully killed. That assumption is eminently questionable and has in no way been established as being truth, at least no to my eyes.
2.
Let us examine this. If we assume, per your implications of tone and word, that both the Saudis and Iranians are in fact and indeed sincere about not standing at one another's throats and the USA who is a foe of one and an uneasy ally of the other (again assuming those nations are what they appear and all the Wahhabist bull$#@! is not just more political theater), then what I have written makes strong, if not conclusively convincing, sense. Brothers in Islam attempt to mend fences and America steps in and murders one of the envoys of peace. What YOU need to explain is how that is likely to turn those brothers at each other's throats and not leave them eyeballing the captain who has proudly proclaimed the head in question.
Good luck with that, but my mind is open to persuasion.
The Saudi's set him up...
wouldn’t surprise me.
That's how I would do it , only I would expect the prey too smart to take the bait .
That would explain quite a bit.
Who remembers Jamal Khashoggi? He took the Saudi bait.
Supposedly ordered by Jared Kushner's good buddy, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS).
Meh... possible, but this paints Trump as a feckless victim, which I am hard pressed to buy. Possibly, Trump is one of Themme and everything we see is pure theatre. The Donald is treading a remarkably fine line such that I STILL do not know whether he is to be trusted. If he's a bad guy, I have to hand it to him for his virtuoso performance in this regard. Most have neither the brains to sort the role to this level of detail, or the patience to see it through. If he is a bad guy, he represents dedication to an objective that the number of others of equal commitment since the days of Sumer cn probably be counted on one hand, possibly with fingers left over. With that said, I will still not commit my trust to him. This has been quite the wild ride.
Exactly!This smells like BS. He was a general. Not a diplomat.
The only evidence we were given of that was the assertions of the Turks.Who remembers Jamal Khashoggi? He took the Saudi bait.
Supposedly ordered by Jared Kushner's good buddy, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman (MbS).
Nomenclature is not an issue here, it can by called anything and that won't change ground realities about this incidence and risk of escalation on wars path.
Just to understand your premise and views about 'bad actors' and 'justice', if in coming years GOP wars neocons party received another blowback from voters and a POTUS named Al Assad Hussein Omani got elected (repeating Barack Hussein Obama election blowback) with mideast donors money and decided to drone Israeli PM Netanyahu declaring him a 'bad actor' who had killed many civilians of other races, would you see that as 'just' action?
What is not disputed in reporting about him so far is that he :
- helped US overthrwow Taliban in Afghanistan after 9/11
- helped US form Iraqi government after Saddam overthrow
- helped defeat ISIS in Syria, Iraq
- helped Lebanon defeat Israel in 2006 war that killed over 100 Israeli soldiers
What is disputed about his role:
- he was working for CIA and killed 600 troops in Iraq
He was actually both. He helped convince Putin to enter the Syrian war on the side of Assad.This smells like BS. He was a general. Not a diplomat.
Yes, the drunken monkey is hard to read at times. But the bottom line is usually himself, that much seems consistent.
Why make the decision to kill Soleimani? Put it in personal terms. Emotion and motivations. He wants to look tough.
There is a huge voter base for that.
...Trump likes to do things that other politicians were “afraid” to do.
Emotionally, there was the back and forth of militia base attacks, but then it was escalated with the mob attacks on the US Embassy. Probably angered Trump.
Now, many media pundits are bringing up the pending impeachment.
Right wingers are saying “there can’t be an impeachment while this warm war is going on with Iran! Anyone who does is an anti-American traitor!”
The Democrats are saying he did it to distract from and avoid the impeachment. But most personally relevant? Bolton had starting making derogatory remarks about Trump, hinting he would give negative testimony in an impeachment trial. Killing Soleimani is also a dream of Bolton. Would it bring Bolton back over to Trump’s side? Would that be a consideration?
Nice, you found a suitable definition, written in a dictionary from the 1800's. Literally every other modern dictionary mentions nothing of the justifiability of the killing when defining "assassinate."
Assassination refers to the the sudden, unexpected killing of someone, typically of prominence, regardless of whether or not it's justifiable.
Your words imply that you are of the school of thought that believes in a "living" language... which is precisely the same mindset of those who view the Constitution as a "living document". The juju there is, ironically, bad almost beyond words.
Altering the semantics of words is perhaps the single greatest error that human beings make, and that is really saying a lot.
Imagine inverting the definitions of "right" and "left" in your thoughts. Now imagine following the directions you get from, say, Google Maps. This is perhaps the most trivial example I can disgorge. Things would get a whole world worse in other cases, and in fact have become so. Consider how incapable Johnny Q has become in terms of parsing the semantics of the Constitution. Why is that? Because his understanding of words is screwed to depths sufficient to render him a functional imbecile. Forget putting the works of Shakespeare before his mug... and that's just Middle English. Pass into old English and basically nobody is able to discern what in hell is going on.
I demonstrated that this is, in fact, incorrect. You are attempting to claim that the bastardized definitions available in modern, and dare I say $#@!TY, dictionaries are correct, whereas those found in the more authoritative sources are mistaken by some unstated and presumably arbitrary magic. I do trust you see the deep problem with this, or at least I hope you do.
We humans live by the most tenuous of threads. Language is the single most important skill we gain in life, yet we treat it as if it were of no consequence. Your apparent position on the issue at hand is right along that very line and I don't understand how you could adopt so dismissive a posture with respect to this question.
Anyhow, the horse is dead and no point in beating it any further. We can agree to disagree on the matter.