Archived material Access restricted Article
Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Thu 04/24/2003 View Wed 04/23/2003 View Tue 04/22/2003 View Mon 04/21/2003 View Sun 04/20/2003 View Sat 04/19/2003 View Fri 04/18/2003
1
2003-04-24 Iraq
Plunder and the Pentagon
Archived material is restricted to Rantburg regulars and members. If you need access email fred.pruitt=at=gmail.com with your nick to be added to the members list. There is no charge to join Rantburg as a member.
Posted by dakotah 2003-04-24 06:40 am|| || Front Page|| [10 views since 2007-05-07]  Top

#1 Sorry, I didn't get the link in the title. Please feel free to edit.
Posted by Dakotah 2003-04-24 06:50:06||   2003-04-24 06:50:06|| Front Page Top

#2 So what's his excuse for the Iraqis having looted the same museum in 1991, when we didn't invade Iraq?
Posted by Chuck  2003-04-24 07:29:17|| [blog.simmins.org]  2003-04-24 07:29:17|| Front Page Top

#3 I've been reading Kanan Makiya in the New Republic and Chicago Tribune for the past week, as well as Instapundit on this matter. Like many pieces of info. that we got during the fighting on the road to Baghdad, there's more to this story than just what was reported in the first 24 hours. Remember the "1000 vehicle convoy" that was on its way south to meet our forces? To the best of my recollection, after 24 hours, CentCom revised that figure and admitted there were forces coming south, but nothing like 1,000 vehicles.

This thought process is guiding me on what to make of the Museum theft. Makiya has a friend in Baghdad who told him it was an inside job. The Trib a couple of days ago quoted soldiers in the area of the museum that it was still a very hot zone when they arrived in the neighborhood, and were, in fact, taking fire from the Museum. Paraphrasing a GI, it wasn't like our guys were out next to the gate smoking cigs and drinking coffee letting people walk in and out with sacks full of booty. He said they were about 500 meters away, and that the common thieves used the back entrance.

So, we've got people who knew what to rip off, even before we had invested Baghdad (the insiders), others getting the scraps (the average guys) all with RPG's and bullets flying. A sad story, among many, but it also serves as a sledgehammer to be used by the Left to justify their opposition. Oh, well, whatever. Is this the best they can come up with?
Posted by Michael 2003-04-24 08:02:01||   2003-04-24 08:02:01|| Front Page Top

#4 Damn,this dim-wit is a relative.McManus is an Irish surname.The Mc was droped and changed to Manues,when my ancesters imigrated.
Posted by raptor  2003-04-24 09:22:15||   2003-04-24 09:22:15|| Front Page Top

#5 No Blood for Pottery!
Posted by Don  2003-04-24 09:38:57||   2003-04-24 09:38:57|| Front Page Top

#6 Will somebody please ask the erudite Mr. McManus if he would write an article on the joy of parents being reunited with their children who were imprisoned for years because they refused to join the "Saddam youth" brigades. Then, after writing said article, could he in good conscience, compare the value of all the "riches" of that museum with just one day of freedom for those children. The loss of the antiquities is regrettable, but the loss of one day of freedom is truly a tragedy.

or in other words, "Darn that U.S. military! While they were destroying a tyrannical regime and freeing tortured children, somebody stole some statues!"
Posted by Dripping sarcasm 2003-04-24 09:57:19||   2003-04-24 09:57:19|| Front Page Top

#7 becky - i dont blame you for using the word liberal - im ready to admit that at least half of the Dem party is what you mean by liberal, and many of the dems who arent, are not particularly liberal even on domestic matters (like John Breaux, for instance). and of course the people who you mean by liberal are quite eager to grab the label for themselves, and insist that the only hawks are conservatives.


Right now I'm looking kindly on Dick Gephardt. Pro-war in Iraq from the beginning, and now pro-Universal Health Insurance. Maybe hes an opportunist, but he's worth another look. More so than Kerry, IMHO.
Posted by liberalhawk 2003-04-24 11:29:17||   2003-04-24 11:29:17|| Front Page Top

#8 oops, that comment belonged under the subsequent post.
Posted by liberalhawk 2003-04-24 11:35:59||   2003-04-24 11:35:59|| Front Page Top

#9 i meant prior post - totally befogged today
Posted by liberalhawk 2003-04-24 12:14:08||   2003-04-24 12:14:08|| Front Page Top

#10 Oh, no! Not the fog of blog!
Posted by Fred  2003-04-24 14:12:12||   2003-04-24 14:12:12|| Front Page Top

#11 What you guys are calling "pottery" and "a few statues" are worth more than you collective asses put together. Not in monetary terms, but cultural, which is obviously a concept difficult to for you philistines to understand, coming as you are from a country without any.

And BTW, what makes freeing Iraqi "women and children from Saddam" antithetical to protecting ancient monuments and cultural treasures? And what makes protecting oil more critical than protecting museums? American greed that's what!
Posted by Profshan  2003-04-25 01:02:26||   2003-04-25 01:02:26|| Front Page Top

#12 Profshan, I wouldn't assume that because of the dismissive tone here there's no respect for culture. If you bothered to read more postings, you'd appreciate there's an unusual appreciation for, and knowledge of, middle east culture amongst this site's regulars. I wouldn't assume we're all Americans either, or that Americans are even in the majority (I speak as a Brit); another erroneous fact you claim as a result of insufficient research of your subject. More seriously though, as someone who values artifacts, however ancient and historically valuable, over human life, you've subscribed to a coldly murderous form of misanthropy. Perhaps you should ask yourself precisely which objects in the museum collection were worth a human sacrifice, and which were not. Which items would you be prepared to die for?
Posted by Bulldog  2003-04-25 02:44:02||   2003-04-25 02:44:02|| Front Page Top

#13 People,thier lives and freedom are more important than objects.
"but cultural,which is obviously a concept difficult to for you philistines to understand, coming as you are from a country without any."

By this I take it to mean you support stoning a woman for not wearing a chador,that you have no problem mudering people for having a different faith.If this is your idea of culture then I will proudly wear the cloak of"Phlistine".
Posted by raptor  2003-04-25 09:03:07||   2003-04-25 09:03:07|| Front Page Top

15:57 my name is Jane Baner
15:46 my name is Jane Baner
09:03 raptor
08:55 raptor
08:24 raptor
07:33 Hiryu
07:31 Hiryu
04:02 becky
02:44 Bulldog
01:02 Profshan
23:51 Mark IV
23:10 The Marmot
22:49 Ralph
22:43 Alaska Paul
22:25 Douglas De Bono
22:04 greg
22:03 R. McLeod
22:03 Denny
21:55 Dishman
21:47 Tibor
21:43 Tom
21:25 Mark IV
21:21 Rawsnacks
21:09 Alaska Paul









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com