rdmcandie wrote:
Your info is flawed or you are mixing up Iran and Iraq. In the early 70's Iraq claimed the entire waterway up to the Iranian shores, the UN tried to intervene but was pushed away however in 1975 Iraq and Iran signed the Algeirs Accord which stipulated that the territorial lines would be the deepest water, leaving the deepest channel open to binational access.
Yes. Nice regurgitation. Research more. So Iraq claimed the whole waterway up to the Iranian shoreline, and then we skip right to the Algiers Accord which sets the border along the deepest part of the waterway instead, but you don't think anything happened in between? Seriously? It was just magic or something?
They argued back and forth. Then Iran in November of 1971 invaded and held a couple islands at the mouth of the waterway in order to up the ante. At the time, Iran had the larger military. This lead to more tension and conflict
Then in 1975, the Algiers Accord was signed, setting the border where it presumably should have been all along.
Of course Iraq didn't like sharing, so 5 years after that, whilst Iran was occupied with the whole "just had a revolution and we're not sure how to run the country" bit, decided to take the waterway, and push Iran back so far that it would have to sue for peace with beneficial terms for Iraq (as Iran had done the last time if you stop and think about it).
I'm not saying that Iraq wasn't being bad as well. But I didn't notice that Paul's list of military acts by the US made any distinction based on whether said acts were justified or not. Iran most definitely did launch an attack into a foreign powers territory. That said foreign power was being mean to them first doesn't change that fact.
Quote:
Iraq was the aggressor in the early 70's, and were the aggressor again in the 80's.
Do more research.
I have. Iraq was the instigator, but that does not change what Iran did in response. I'll point out (again) that Paul's assertion didn't come with a disclaimer saying "... that wasn't justified based on the situation".
Oh. And for those playing the home version of "What would Neville Chamberlain have done?", it could be argued that had Iran accepted the border that Iraq insisted on back in the late 60s rather than fighting over it and ultimately winning the issue with the Algiers Accords, Iraq most likely would not have attacked them in 1980. So, by the same bizarre logic used by many to argue against numerous military actions by the US, it's actually the Iranians fault that all those people died between 1980 and 1988. You know. If we're being consistent with the whole apologist approach to global politics that is.
Edited, Feb 16th 2011 7:39pm by gbaji