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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe idea of entangling our military in Syria makes me nauseas
I'm appalled at the idea of the Syrian regime using chemical weapons on civilians too, but I'm scared shitless of Syria turning into another mess like Iraq and Afghanistan.
Doesn't anyone remember that Sadam's use of chemical weapons on his own people in the past was one of the reasons that the bush administration used to justify the 2003 war in Iraq? Was that war and the estimated 100,000 - 1,000,000+ dead civilians and $1 trillion wasted worth it?
I made many of the points in this thread in a post that I made in another thread, but I thought it was worthwhile to post this as a thread in its own right. Anything war related tends to get buried in the rear echelons of this forum. Most people are happy to ignore war and don't want to talk about it.
Before anyone is eager to send our military to fight in anyone's mess we need to know exactly what it is we are sending our Soldiers into and we all need to own it. Unfortunately, that isn't the case. We'll rally at the inhumanity and cry for the use of deployment of our war machine to Syria for a week, the government will do it, then we'll forget about it when the season finale for dancing with the stars or the voice comes up. We as a country will forget about what is going on in Syria and glance over what our military is doing on the ground and how it is impacting our Soldiers.
War turns nice people into evil people. Having been through it first hand myself (I served as an Infantry Platoon Leader in Iraq for 13 months in Iraq in 2004) I've experienced it first hand. Once you start shooting and killing people, it gets easier to do. Once you find yourself comfortable with committing murder what do you suppose that does to a person's moral compass?
When we hear stories of Soldiers posing with bodies of Taliban fighters like they were hunting trophies or videos of Soldiers pissing on the dead surface, we shouldn't be shocked. It's not natural to kill anyone. Having been through that experience myself, it makes you feel like shit regardless of the circumstance or how "justified" you are told it is. And, as much as I like to think that I'm a good person, the honest truth is it only got easier to do it the more the war went on. As soon as you can find yourself easily committing the ultimate transgression what stops you from committing any others? I'm probably doing a great job getting myself the "DU biggest piece of shit" moniker, but the only reason I didn't piss on the body of or pose with the body of a person I killed was because I didn't think of it - and that is the honest truth.
I don't know exactly what circumstances would make war an appropriate option or what a justified military response would be. I'm in the throws of trying to figure out my own anti-war stance and a lot of my positions on the subject is contradictory. However, my biggest sticking point with war is that the media needs to stop sterilizing it. We as a country would be more opposed to war if we understood exactly what it entailed in its full detail. It's just like the average American eating meat. Since most of us are removed from the process that brings us meat, it is easy for us to eat. However, if we all had to go into our backyards and butcher our own cow and take its life with our own hands, I bet many people wouldn't be able to stomach it. The same holds true to war. It's easy to support a war when you are thousands of miles away and you see the clean shrink-wrapped version presented to you by the media but it isn't easy to support a war when you actually have the blood on your hands and you are involved in it.
The media needs to show the dead women and children and report all of the atrocities that happen. The media needs to show the flag draped coffins and the gory images of the mangled dead that is produced. If we can stomach making the decision to send troops into harms way, then we need to stomach the gory details of what the decision fully entails. I know that at some point I need to get over myself, but the personal pain and images that I endure as a result of my war time service needs to be on the conscious of every American who supported the war. Every American who supported the war should have a picture of a mangled child's dead body front and center in their living room. They should have to face that image constantly during every moment of their life and it should haunt them just as much as it haunts the Soldier who killed that child and the family that lost that child. When they are sitting on the floor opening birthday presents with their child on an otherwise happy day, images of a dying 10 year old with a sucking chest wound and his shocked 6 year old little brother and three handcuffed uncles should be front and center in their mind. The parent should have to look at their shocked 4 year old daughter and explain why they are crying on their birthday.
If it wasn't for the support for the war at home there wouldn't have been a war. Everybody would be hard pressed to support any war if they knew the full scope of the violence that will be committed in their name.
NightWatcher
(39,343 posts)I think that the UN countries would join us in providing dominate air cover for the rebels to finish off the regime on the ground. We'd probably just enforce a country wide no-fly zone.
I doubt we'd put boots on the ground.
former-republican
(2,163 posts)Someone has to secure those weapons
Xithras
(16,191 posts)We can't bomb the chemical weapons stockpiles because doing so would release them and kill thousands or tens of thousands of civilians. It's not like taking out a SAM site.
At the same time, an aerial bombing campaign to support the rebels WOULD trigger a chemical launch, because Assad has already made it clear that they would be used if the country was attacked from the outside.
Sending in a large ground force to seize the sites is the only way to pull it off. That would probably trigger a chemical weapons attack itself, but our forces have the gear to survive it (there would undoubtably be civilians nearby who were killed too though...the western part of Syria is fairly heavily populated).
The problem with sending in a large ground force is the fact that Assad still has a fairly substantial and well trained army with modern weapons. Syria isn't Iraq, where the army had already been decimated by another war and a decade of sanctions, and it isn't Afghanistan, where there wasn't a well trained army of any sort. It has a large regular army equipped with the best weapons the Russians would sell them. I have ZERO doubt that the U.S. military would slaughter them in combat, but we'd probably still be looking at an American death toll higher than that of Afghanistan and Iraq combined. The fight would be short but incredibly brutal.
Victor_c3
(3,557 posts)You might have your doubts, but the fighting I did in Iraq I did with one hand behind my back. Commanders were reluctant to fire 155 HE artillery into urban areas and they also disliked the use of the main gun on tanks in urban areas as well. I was fortunate not to be involved in Fallujah during November 2004 (although my company spear-headed the Marine assault there) where much of the restrictions I mentioned above weren't there. Syria would look like a larger version of Fallujah in all of its glory.
AnotherMcIntosh
(11,064 posts)If the big-money people and their politicians want war in Syrian, we are going to have it.
former-republican
(2,163 posts)"committing murder"
But as to your post it's a crazy situation in that part of the world.
No matter what the U.S decides to do it's going to be a loss , there's no win in this.
I think the MSM is providing pics already of murdered civilians.
cpwm17
(3,829 posts)and every Iraqi we killed was murdered. Victor chose his words carefully.
Victor_c3
(3,557 posts)leftstreet
(36,108 posts)Wait....that's not what you really meant
Mnemosyne
(21,363 posts)hack89
(39,171 posts)they have had chemical weapons since the 1960's
Mnemosyne
(21,363 posts)hack89
(39,171 posts)and dismantled their programs.
Chemical weapons bans have been a great success.
Syria refused to sign any treaties banning chemical weapons.
quinnox
(20,600 posts)I agree with just about all of it, especially the showing the pictures of the war dead to the people. They deliberately censor it in the mass media because they want to sanitize war. Good post, K&R. I just realized you were a soldier who fought in the Iraq war and it makes your OP that much more powerful.
Everyone should read this OP.
And even though the correct spelling is "nauseous", it doesn't matter, because we all know what you meant, so fuck any of the spelling nazis in advance. (As one myself, I think I can say this )
Initech
(100,080 posts)PufPuf23
(8,785 posts)Please give yourself absolution, I do.
Agony
(2,605 posts)I abhor war but absolutely support full veterans benefits.
Jazzgirl
(3,744 posts)on Syria using chemical weapons on its own people very interesting. I've done some searching and the only place I have seen this statement made is by US news. Even the UN says they can't find any evidence of Syria preparing chemical weapons to use.
Do some searching. Pay attention to the sources.