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Goodbye Saddam
Anyone else watching the news right now? Big statue of Saddam about to come down. Looks like Baghdad is now in America's control.
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It tore him right in half!
It doesn't even matter to me anymore why we went into Iraq. Seeing the elation in the Iraqi people this morning just reinforced my support for this war. |
I saw some footage before I came into work. Is it down yet? I am sure to see replays of it on tonight's news. Oh wait, I'll be working. Hmm, maybe pics on www.cnn.com
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The whole thing just gives me chills....
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I think this is cool & all, and maybe I'm just paranoid.. but isn't it kind of scary how LITTLE opposition they ran into for the 'Battle of Bagdad'?
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I think the main reason they didn't run into any oposition is because the Iraqi leaders are all gone...the majority of the soliders fighting for Iraq were told if they didn't fight, their family members would be killed. Well, no ones' left to carry out that threat, so no ones fighting. Plus, I believe that the poorest people live on the outskirts of Baghdad and they were tired of being treated so badly by Saddam and his regime. I'm not sure if the "war is over" but I can at least breathe a little eaiser and cross my fingers that my boyfriend is going to come home sooner than I thought.
God bless, Blaire |
God Bless America!
Remember that there are still thousands of troops in Iraq and Kuwait including POW's. |
I've been watching all this most of the day. The happiness they are feeling is a beautiful thing. The Iraqi ambassador to the UN
stated-The game is over. I hope the Iraqi people will live in peace. Rumsfield has stated there is still a hard fight ahead. Those who are most loyal to Saddam will still try to kill our soldiers and possibly those who celebrate the end of the regime. Did y'all hear about the bunkers? Yesterday they had intelligence that there was fighting underground. Some of the bunkers are layered and go as far as 80 ft. deep with aisles wide enough for a tank. They also said one fear was the possibility of launching a chem/bio attack from underneath. Many tunnels connect and run though the Baghdad due to an undeveloped subway system. They also found a lot of ammo. So, who thinks Saddam is sipping a Pina Colada on the Mediterranean? |
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Personally I see Saddam and Osama chillin' at some sleazy strip club in Hong Kong, contracting SARS.
I just don't think they're dead yet. |
Isn't it funny how everyone that was associated with the old regime is disavowing it? Anyone catch the Iraqi rep to the UN saying that he has nothing to do with Saddam?
Look for France to offer him asylum. |
I saw the footage this morning while I got ready for work. It was such stricking footage...to see them rally in the streets, then attack the statue with shoes (which is an insult in their culture) and then to see them tear it down. It reminded me of the Berlin Wall coming down.
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It really is an historic moment. It is like the Berlin Wall coming down or the fall of the USSR when they dragged Stalin through the streets.
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Mussolini and his mistress were captured by Italian partisans while trying to escape to Switzerland. Both were shot on the spot by firing squad; the following morning the bodies were taken to the main square in Milan and hung by the heels -- allowing a little modesty for Clara Petacci; someone tied a belt around the bottom of her skirt so it wouldn't ride up (down?) when she was hung up. After a brief period of public display, they were cut down and hacked to pieces by the crowd. Stalin, on the other hand, died a natural death and buried next to Lenin in Red Square. Within the year, Nikita Khrushchev was well in the process of de-Stalinizing the Soviet Union, and ol' 'Joe Steel' (the literal translation of his name; his real name was Josef Vissarionovich Dzugashvili) got evicted from Lenin's tomb. On the other hand, when Communism ended in the former Soviet Union, the people knocked down as many statues and pictures of Lenin and other Commie cronies as they could find; one particular one stands out in my mind: the toppling of Cheka founder Feliks Dzerzhinsky at the square named after him in front of KGB headquarters. (The Cheka later became the KGB; in Russian slang a 'chekist' refers to a member of the secret police or their network of stool-pigeons -- current Russian president Vladimir Putin got his start in the KGB). And what was across KGB HQ? A toy store, Detsky Mir (Children's World)!) |
Good, take the bastard down!
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Saddam will turn into another Osama and Hitler, with his death never being certain.
We don't have any record of his DNA, right? Even with the evidence found, there will be some belief that he is still alive and definitely remaining support for him. You know, kinda like Hitler and the Neo Nazis...or maybe I'm just being pessimistic. |
I'm pretty sure Hitler is dead. Wasn't he found dead in his bunker where he commited suicide after marrying his longtime misstress?
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I thought that Stalin's (maybe Lenin's) statue was torn down in a similar way to Saddam's statue after the Soviet Union fell. That was my reference. :) |
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I am pretty sure that he's dead now. |
There were several witnesses to Hitler's suicide in the Fuehrerbunker, while they did not see the actual act, they did hear the gunshot. Entering Hitler's private quarters, they found Hitler dead from a bullet through his temple and a crushed cyanide capsule in his mouth as a backup. Eva Braun took only cyanide.
The bodies were carried up from the bunker and dumped in a shell crater, where they were hastily cremated. along with propaganda chief Goebbels and his entire family. The Russians overran the Reich Chancellery and the bunker a day later. It was not until over 50 years later that the mystery was solved. The Russians did manage to get a hold of a few vital pieces of Hitler's remains for identification purposes, and later shipped them to Moscow, where they were buried in the secret state archives until the fall of communism. The rest of the bodies were buried in a far corner of a Soviet Army base in East Germany, to prevent anyone from finding the remains and attempting to make them into some kind of neo-Nazi shrine. The area where the former Reich Chancellery was located was bulldozed as part of the no-man's land surrounding the Berlin Wall. After the wall came down and the no-man's land demined, the remains of the Fuehrerbunker were visited one last time for historical purposes before being sealed forever with explosive charges; it now forms the foundation of a parking garage in Berlin near the Brandenburg gate. Parking patrons today wouldn't even know about it. Highly unlikely Hitler would be alive by now; April 20 would have marked his 114th birthday (and coincidentally, it's also the anniversary of my initiation into Alpha Sigma Phi). Medical documents revealed he was already suffering from the effects of Parkinson's disease, and his personal physician, Dr. Morell, was a quack, slowly poisoning Hitler with his concoctions of useless medicines. |
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On a (completely un)related note, Khruschev's son is a professor at my school--International Relations. I see him around from time to time. A thinner version of his father, with hair. Who doesn't know that Stalin means "steel" in Russian? :confused: One caveat: I'm happy that Saddam is no longer in power; I am concerned, however, that liberation of the Iraqi people was secondary to getting him out of power. Keep in mind, this is not, and never was, a humanitarian mission. |
Munchkin- Unfortunately that's true, but it still made me almost cry just to see how happy all the Iraqi citizens seemed to be. I just wish our government had found the WMDs. It would be really nice to be able to justify this war with something tangible, since the Iraqis didn't really invite us to invade their country. Oh well, at least it seems to be coming to a happy conclusion although we're not quite there yet.
oh, and whoever posted about the hitting his statue with the shoe thing, thanks! I've been trying to figure out why they've been doing that for about 2 weeks now. |
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AlphaSigOU, are you a history major? I was a political science major, but I have forgotten so much over the years. It's all a blur. :)
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Started off as an education major back in the days when OU's aviation program was under the College of Education... later switched to Poli Sci but never completed my degree. :(
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AlphaSigOU~ Thanks! I only got about a weeks worth of nonwestern history in the Middle East, and i don't think i really paid attention 'cause i was studying foriegn policy over there at the same time
Ok: adding a poll to this. How much longer do you htink this war will last? I'm going to say at least 2 weeks. |
The heavy duty fighting will probably last about another two weeks... rooting out the Fedayeen Saddam, Ba'athists, and other vermin that are hiding out may take longer, and that's if they're not outed by angry townspeople.
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According to the news, US Intelligence thinks that Saddam probably escaped the bombing and is on his way to either Northern Iraq or Syria.
There will still be some fighting in the streets and the north. On St. Patrick's Day when the President gave his speech, I thought that it would be over before Memorial Day. Now I think sooner. Maybe the end of April. When the fighting is over, there will be much to do in Iraq. |
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