|
| | |||||||
|
Welcome to the scubish.com - Scuba Diving Forum forums. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us. |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
| |||
| |||
| In article <XcGdnRH-1f3BT3DdRVn2iw@netnitco.net>, dazed and confuzed <dedmann@netnitco.net> wrote: > >>>> > >>>> The Cole is U.S. territory. > >>>> > >>>> > >>> > >>>Sorry, Doug, but no it isn't. While nations like to think their > >>>warships are "soverign territory" the reality is that they're little > >>>soverign islands in hostile territory. If the attack on the Cole was an > >>>attack on US soverignty, then every single attack on every foreign > >>>flagged vessle is an attack on a soverign nation. It just ain't so. > >> > >> Flagged vessels are not the same as Warships. > >> > >> Just like an embassy, a warship is U.S. territory. > >> > >> > > > > > > So you consider every attack on a military vessel to be *exactly* the > > same as an attack on New York city? > yes Then you're living in a fantasy world. What you, Scott and Popeye are saying is that any attack on a US warship is *criminal* act. Criminal acts are attacks against ones own society. Acts of war are attacks against another society. When we put one of our warships or embassies into a foreign and often hostile area, they are subject to attack by parties that don't like us, just as we tend to attack societies we don't like. Embassy staff and military personnel understand that is part of the risk of doing their work. Civilians, on the other hand, have an expectation that they *won't* be attacked while going about their daily lives. Equating the unprovoked bombing of a US city with an attack on a warship in hostile waters isn't the same, as I'm sure the commander of the Cole found out. |
|
#2
| |||
| |||
| Alan Street wrote: > In article <20040708084440.11526.00000973@mb-m23.aol.com>, Popeye NCAT3 > <buzcutt454@aol.comByteMe> wrote: > > >>>From: Alan Street agstreet@nonono_san.rr.com >>>Date: 7/8/2004 1:12 AM Eastern Daylight Time >>>Message-id: <080720041312476335%agstreet@nonono_san.rr.com> >>> >>>In article <20040707222410.04282.00000894@mb-m26.aol.com>, Popeye NCAT3 >>><buzcutt454@aol.comByteMe> wrote: >>> >>> >>>>>From: John R. Macdonald scubajohn@remove.claranet.fr >>>> >>>>>Wrong, the USS Cole was attacked in Yemen >>>> >>>> Right. >>>> >>>> The Cole is U.S. territory. >>>> >>>> >>> >>>Sorry, Doug, but no it isn't. While nations like to think their >>>warships are "soverign territory" the reality is that they're little >>>soverign islands in hostile territory. If the attack on the Cole was an >>>attack on US soverignty, then every single attack on every foreign >>>flagged vessle is an attack on a soverign nation. It just ain't so. >> >> Flagged vessels are not the same as Warships. >> >> Just like an embassy, a warship is U.S. territory. >> >> > > > So you consider every attack on a military vessel to be *exactly* the > same as an attack on New York city? yes -- If you don't go there, you will never know what is there. I ain't looking for trouble,.....but you can find it here. |
|
#3
| |||
| |||
| Galen: "Stick an Sidewinder right up the Governer's butt": By JOHN SOLOMON, AP WASHINGTON (July 8) - A top official at the Federal Aviation Administration testified Thursday that protections are now in place to prevent the kind of harrowing incident that forced the evacuation of the Capitol last month after a plane carrying Kentucky Gov. Ernie Fletcher entered unrestricted airspace. Asked by lawmakers whether there could be a repeat of the scare, FAA vice president Linda Schuessler said, "We don't believe it can happen again." She told a House hearing that steps taken since the June 9 incident include ensuring officials monitoring incoming flights to Washington have access to the same radar system and therefore the same information. The National Capital Region Coordination Center, which coordinates air security in the nation's capital, previously used a different radar system from the FAA and that led to the confusion. Fletcher's plane did not have a functioning transponder, which identifies the aircraft, yet it had received permission from the FAA to proceed to Washington. Schuessler said planes with malfunctioning transponders could not enter the restricted zone, 30 miles around Washington, in the future. There also will no longer be exceptions granted to other rules that are required of planes entering the restricted zone, according to the FAA. Still, some lawmakers say the lack of coordination and communication that led to the Capitol's evacuation worries them. Military aircraft patrolling over Washington scrambled but were unable to get into position where they could have shot down the suspicious plane carrying Fletcher, officials said. However Rep. Jim Moran, D-Va., said he worries a mistake will happen again that will lead to an unidentified plane getting shot down. "I think we're only very lucky that there hasn't been a catastrophic mistake made," he said. The incident proved what security experts have been saying since Sept. 11, 2001, officials said, that preventing an aerial attack depends on measures taken well before a plane enters the restricted air space over Washington. NORAD - North American Aerospace Defense Command - said that it scrambled two jets during the incident, but declined to be more specific because of the classified nature of its engagement rules. The fact that "the plane landed without incident June 9 indicates that the procedures developed since Sept. 11 work," it said. Homeland Security spokeswoman Katy Mynster said, "We believe appropriate security measures were put in place based on the information we had at the time. ... Of course, we continue to look for ways to improve communications." Members of Congress whose staffs have looked into the episode said the incident exposed flaws two years after the Sept. 11 attacks led to a major upgrade of America's security net. "The incident raises the question: Does the existing no-fly zone around our nation's capital give sufficient time to intercept a terrorist-controlled flight?" said Rep. Jim Turner, D-Texas, the top Democrat on the House Homeland Security Committee. "Further it appears that the FAA miscommunicated with other agencies responsible for the protection of Washington." Government, military and congressional officials said two F-15 fighter planes were already patrolling on June 9 in anticipation of the Reagan funeral and were diverted when security monitors saw the governor's plane as an unidentified and potentially hostile aircraft. However, under the Pentagon's rules of engagement, the jets could not get close enough to be in position to shoot the plane down if it was indeed heading toward the Capitol, according to officials outside NORAD. The officials declined to further describe the rules of engagement, except to say they are different for fighter jets in wide open areas than in urban areas and that they require several conditions to be met before a shootdown is considered possible. The entire scrambling of the jets was unnecessary, caused by miscommunications between the FAA, which directs air traffic, NORAD, which protect America's air space from impending threats, and the National Capital Region Coordination Center, which coordinates air security in the nation's capital. Officials said that: The FAA originally misdiagnosed the Kentucky plane as having a transponder that was functioning properly except for a failure to transmit its altitude. In fact, the plane did not have a functioning transponder, and such planes are supposed to be barred from Washington airspace. When the FAA recognized the plane did not have a transponder, it disregarded its rules and allowed the plane to proceed, putting the identification into its radar system manually. Because the Washington coordination center used a different radar system than the FAA, it was unaware of the special exemption and believed the plane was an unidentified and potentially hostile aircraft, causing NORAD to scramble its jets. 07/08/04 15:40 EDT However Rep. Jim Moran, D-Va., said he worries a mistake will happen again that will lead to an unidentified plane getting shot down. "I think we're only very lucky that there hasn't been a catastrophic mistake made," he said. The incident proved what security experts have been saying since Sept. 11, 2001, officials said, that preventing an aerial attack depends on measures taken well before a plane enters the restricted air space over Washington. However Rep. Jim Moran, D-Va., said he worries a mistake will happen again that will lead to an unidentified plane getting shot down. "I think we're only very lucky that there hasn't been a catastrophic mistake made," he said. The incident proved what security experts have been saying since Sept. 11, 2001, officials said, that preventing an aerial attack depends on measures taken well before a plane enters the restricted air space over Washington. However Rep. Jim Moran, D-Va., said he worries a mistake will happen again that will lead to an unidentified plane getting shot down. "I think we're only very lucky that there hasn't been a catastrophic mistake made," he said. The incident proved what security experts have been saying since Sept. 11, 2001, officials said, that preventing an aerial attack depends on measures taken well before a plane enters the restricted air space over Washington. Popeye "Best thing for him, really. His therapy was going nowhere," -Hannibal Lector. |
|
#4
| |||
| |||
| Alan Street wrote: > In article <XcGdnRH-1f3BT3DdRVn2iw@netnitco.net>, dazed and confuzed > <dedmann@netnitco.net> wrote: > > > >>>>>> The Cole is U.S. territory. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>>Sorry, Doug, but no it isn't. While nations like to think their >>>>>warships are "soverign territory" the reality is that they're little >>>>>soverign islands in hostile territory. If the attack on the Cole was an >>>>>attack on US soverignty, then every single attack on every foreign >>>>>flagged vessle is an attack on a soverign nation. It just ain't so. >>>> >>>> Flagged vessels are not the same as Warships. >>>> >>>> Just like an embassy, a warship is U.S. territory. >>>> >>>> >>> >>> >>>So you consider every attack on a military vessel to be *exactly* the >>>same as an attack on New York city? >> >>yes > > > Then you're living in a fantasy world. > > What you, Scott and Popeye are saying is that any attack on a US > warship is *criminal* act. No, rather an act of war. I see no difference between the two. Criminal acts are attacks against ones own > society. Acts of war are attacks against another society. and attacking our territory, wherever it may be, is an act of war. A warship is just as much U.S territory as NYC. When we put > one of our warships or embassies into a foreign and often hostile area, > they are subject to attack by parties that don't like us, just as we > tend to attack societies we don't like. But these warships and/or embassies, ARE sovereign territory of the U.S. Just as Yemen's embassy and their naval vessels (both of them) are their sovereign territory. Embassy staff and military > personnel understand that is part of the risk of doing their work. > Civilians, on the other hand, have an expectation that they *won't* be > attacked while going about their daily lives. Equating the unprovoked > bombing of a US city with an attack on a warship in hostile waters > isn't the same, as I'm sure the commander of the Cole found out. The waters weren't hostile. The Cole was there with permission. They liked the money for fuel. -- If you don't go there, you will never know what is there. I ain't looking for trouble,.....but you can find it here. |
|
#5
| |||
| |||
| >From: Alan Street agstreet@nonono_san.rr.com > >What you, Scott and Popeye are saying is that any attack on a US >warship is *criminal* act. Besides being extremely nit-picky, I'd say you're also completely incorrect. Terrorist previously caught were always tried in a court of law. Besides, I wasn't talking about the legal description of the act, but the moral indignation resulting from it. >Criminal acts are attacks against ones own >society. Acts of war are attacks against another society. When we put >one of our warships or embassies into a foreign and often hostile area, >they are subject to attack by parties that don't like us, just as we >tend to attack societies we don't like. Which, in your mind, justifies what, exactly? Murdered is murdered. You can invent all the rules,regulations, conventions and terrorist etiquette you want. Popeye "Best thing for him, really. His therapy was going nowhere," -Hannibal Lector. |
|
#6
| |||
| |||
| "Alan Street" <agstreet@nonono_san.rr.com> wrote in message news:090720040824353432%agstreet@nonono_san.rr.com ... > Then you're living in a fantasy world. One with no where near the level of sophistication yours employs. > What you, Scott and Popeye are saying is that any attack on a US > warship is *criminal* act. Criminal acts are attacks against ones own > society. Acts of war are attacks against another society. When we put > one of our warships or embassies into a foreign and often hostile area, > they are subject to attack by parties that don't like us, just as we > tend to attack societies we don't like. Embassy staff and military > personnel understand that is part of the risk of doing their work. > Civilians, on the other hand, have an expectation that they *won't* be > attacked while going about their daily lives. Equating the unprovoked > bombing of a US city with an attack on a warship in hostile waters > isn't the same, as I'm sure the commander of the Cole found out. Allen. When was the last war that wasn't the result or cause of criminal acts? Acts against dignity and peace. Acts against common decency. Is there a legal war? |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
| | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Re: John Kerry | John R. Macdonald | Divers Hangout | 0 | 03-26-2007 10:27 AM |
| Re: John Kerry | John R. Macdonald | Divers Hangout | 0 | 03-26-2007 10:27 AM |
| Re: John Kerry | Greg Mossman | Divers Hangout | 4 | 03-26-2007 10:26 AM |
| Re: John Kerry | Joe English | Divers Hangout | 0 | 03-26-2007 10:26 AM |
| Re: John Kerry | Alan Street | Divers Hangout | 0 | 03-26-2007 10:26 AM |