SO why exactly

It's the 19th Anniversary for T1B - Fuckin' A

Moderator: Jesus H Christ

Post Reply
User avatar
Mister Bushice
Drinking all the beer Luther left behind
Posts: 9490
Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 2:39 pm

SO why exactly

Post by Mister Bushice »

Does the UN Humanitarian coordinator open his yap about Israel cleaning house in Lebanon and he doesn't ever say jack shit about the sectarian bombings in iraq that kill civilians every day, or the fact that hezbollah started this war and they themselves are still launching nearly 100 rockets a day into israel, also putting innocent citizens at risk?

Is israel supposed to roll over and let the terrorists have their way? As useless as the UN is at intervening in global conflicts, they will remain the barking dog in a kennel that they are. They never solve anything but seeing them point fingers and announce one sided accusations is getting old. I don't get why they pander to the muslims as much as they do.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20060723/wl ... MlJVRPUCUl
UN slams Israel over Lebanon strikes as killing rages on

by Nayla Razzouk 1 hour, 29 minutes ago

BEIRUT (AFP) - The UN relief chief condemned
Israel for "violating humanitarian law" over its blistering raids on Lebanon as the Jewish state and Hezbollah killed more civilians in another wave of attacks.

As Israel tightened its grip on a strategic border village seized in south Lebanon,
Syria fuelled fears the fighting could spread by issuing a warning that it would intervene if Israel dared launch a full-out invasion of Lebanon.

US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice was also heading to the Middle East with Washington increasingly estranged from European and Arab allies over a conflict that has killed close to 400 people in just 12 days and triggered a major humanitarian crisis.

UN humanitarian coordinator Jan Egeland, in Beirut to launch a urgent appeal for funds for half a million people made homeless by the conflict, made no attempt to hide his fury as he toured bombed-out areas.

"This is destruction of block after block of mainly residential areas. I would say it seems to be an excessive use of force in an area with so many citizens," he told reporters in the southern suburbs of Beirut, a Hezbollah stronghold.

Asked if the Israeli raid that destroyed the burned-out buildings before him constituted a war crime, he replied: "It makes it a violation of humanitarian law."

His comments came as at least twelve civilians, including a Lebanese press photographer, were killed in new Israeli air strikes across Lebanon on the 12th day of Israel's punishing war on Hezbollah.

The Shiite militant group said three of its fighters had also been killed.

Shiite guerrillas responded with a new hail of rocket fire on Israel's third city of Haifa, killing one person in his car and a second as he worked in a warehouse.

Streams of people, many waving white flags, are making a desperate trek from southern Lebanon after Israel ordered them to leave their homes, raising fears it was planning a largescale ground invasion.

Israeli Justice Minister Haim Ramon said the aim of the offensive was to keep Hezbollah -- which controls southern Lebanon in the absence of the regular Lebanese army -- at least 20 kilometres (13 miles) from the frontier.

Israel, which has called up thousands of reserve soldiers and massed its troops on the border, seized control of the strategic hilltop village of Marun Al-Ras on Saturday after sending tanks, bulldozers and armoured cars rolling across the border.

But Defence Minister Amir Peretz insisted Israel did not plan a widescale invasion. "The ground operation is focusing on a limited entry of forces," he told the cabinet. "We are not dealing with an invasion of Lebanon."

At least 362 people have been killed in Israel's massive blitz against Lebanon which was launched after the capture of two soldiers by Hezbollah guerrillas in a deadly border attack on July 12. A total of 37 Israelis have died.

Israel's ambassador to the United States maintained the military offensive had dealt a "real blow" to Hezbollah, damaging the group's arsenal and killing a "few hundred" of its fighters.

Daniel Ayalon said the military campaign was "not easy" but Israel was making progress, adding: "And in a few days, you will see a totally different situation."

But in the first openly expressed reservations by an Israeli minister on the success of the offensive, minister without portfolio Eitan Cabel said: "I admit I had hoped for better from the army."

Syria, blamed by the United States for stoking the conflict, warned that if Israel invaded Lebanon it would have no choice but to respond.

"If Israel makes a land entry into Lebanon, they can get to within 20 kilometres (12 miles) of Damascus," Information Minister Moshen Bilal told the Spanish newspaper ABC.

"What will we do? Stand by with our arms folded? Absolutely not. Without any doubt Syria will intervene in the conflict."

US ambassador to the
United Nations John Bolton rebuffed a previous Syrian offer of dialogue in characteristically blunt fashion, saying that "Syria doesn't need dialogue to know what they need to do."

Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, whose army is also fighting a second deadly offensive in the
Gaza Strip, said he would accept a peacekeeping force in Lebanon "made up of troops from
European Union countries".

Its mandate "will have to include control of the border crossings between Syria and Lebanon, deployment in south Lebanon and support for the Lebanese army," he said.

His comments came amid mounting international criticism of the Israeli offensive, which has left Lebanon virtually cut off from the world, made hundreds of thousands refugees in their own country and destroyed billions of dollars of infrastructure.

Even a minister from close US ally Britain, which had drawn Arab anger for appearing to back US support of the bombardment, has described Israel's tactics as "very difficult to understand".

In Washington, Saudi Arabia's Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal requested an immediate ceasefire in talks with US
President George W. Bush and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

Saudi officials said he would also propose an "exchange of prisoners" between Hezbollah and Israel, something the Israeli government has so far ruled out without the prior release of two soldiers captured by the Shiite militant group in a deadly cross-border raid on July 12.

Rice was due to arrive in Israel on Monday to meet Olmert in the hope of finding a long-term solution to the crisis rather than a temporary ceasefire, an outcome vehemently opposed by Washington as a "false promise".

Israel said it opened an 80-kilometre by eight-kilometre (50-mile by five-mile) safe passage to Beirut for ships and aircraft, a humanitarian corridor to allow aid to the Lebanese.

Israel's air and sea blockade put Lebanon's only international airport out of action, and the bombing of houses, roads, bridges, factories, warehouses and trucks has created scenes reminiscent of the 1975-1990 civil war.

Foreign governments have been forced to lay on a flotilla of ferries, warships and cruise liners to evacuate stranded nationals, mainly to the nearby resort island of Cyprus which has been battling to find temporary accommodation and flights for the estimated 70,000 evacuees at peak summer holiday season.
User avatar
Dr_Phibes
P.H.D - M.B.E. - O.B.E.
Posts: 4237
Joined: Mon Jan 17, 2005 5:11 am

Post by Dr_Phibes »

A UN humanitarian co-ordinator would deal with large scale crisis - displacement of large segmants of a population, lack of food, collapse of infrastructure, etc.

Uncle Shlomos burning pizza stand might require the attention of the fire-brigade or perhaps an ambulance.
User avatar
Mikey
Carbon Neutral since 1955
Posts: 31625
Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 6:06 pm
Location: Paradise

Post by Mikey »

Bush already said that if Hezbollah would stop doing that shit there wouldn't be a problem.
UN Humanitarian guy prolly figured that's all that needs to be said on that subject.
User avatar
OCmike
Cursed JFFL Owner
Posts: 3626
Joined: Wed Oct 26, 2005 4:58 pm
Location: South Bay

Post by OCmike »

Mikey wrote:Bush already said that if Hezbollah would stop doing that shit there wouldn't be a problem.
UN Humanitarian guy prolly figured that's all that needs to be said on that subject.
Okay, it may be a rather simplistic way of summing up the current crisis in the middle east, but he's right. :lol:
Bushice wrote: Is israel supposed to roll over and let the terrorists have their way? As useless as the UN is at intervening in global conflicts, they will remain the barking dog in a kennel that they are. They never solve anything but seeing them point fingers and announce one sided accusations is getting old. I don't get why they pander to the muslims as much as they do.
I heard a brief interview with Kofi Annan the other day on the BBC (as I recall) and he was going on and on about how horrible the whole situation was. The thing that really stuck with me though is that he was aghast that one of Israel's goals with the current operation was to disarm Hezbollah. He acted as if that was the single worst thing that could possibly happen out of the whole conflict.

Additionally, not once did he condemn the Hezbollah rocket attacks, which included one that was fired at a children's hospital in Haifa. It didn't miss any military target, it WAS the target. A fucking children's hospital. Sick fuckers. Anywho, the Kofi's entire spiel was about what concessions Israel needed to make and what actions they needed to stop. Not one peep about how the conflict started or about the civilian targets of the Hezzy rocket attacks.
User avatar
Mister Bushice
Drinking all the beer Luther left behind
Posts: 9490
Joined: Fri Jan 14, 2005 2:39 pm

Post by Mister Bushice »

Is it any wonder the UN can't solve any of the worlds conflicts given that the bad guys ( the ones targeting women and children) are usually muslims?
If this were a dictatorship, it'd be a heck of a lot easier, just so long as I'm the dictator." —GWB Washington, D.C., Dec. 19, 2000
Martyred wrote: Hang in there, Whitey. Smart people are on their way with dictionaries.
War Wagon wrote:being as how I've got "stupid" draped all over, I'm not really sure.
User avatar
Dr_Phibes
P.H.D - M.B.E. - O.B.E.
Posts: 4237
Joined: Mon Jan 17, 2005 5:11 am

Post by Dr_Phibes »

Seems the tribe doesn't take kindly to criticism:
A preliminary UN report said 17 bombardments landed within one kilometre of the post, and 12 artillery rounds hit within 150 metres of the structure - four of them being direct hits.

After this, the post was hit by a precision-guided weapon from an Israeli aircraft.

The Irish foreign ministry said one of its officers in the UN's Unifil peacekeeping force in south Lebanon, placed six warning calls to the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) prior to the attack.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5216230.stm

Bit sensitive, are we? :lol:
Post Reply