1 posted on
07/23/2003 2:01:45 AM PDT by
kattracks
To: kattracks
Too bad you can only kill them once.
2 posted on
07/23/2003 2:16:41 AM PDT by
Nateman
(Socialism first, cancer second.)
To: kattracks
He killed America's sons. And we killed his. Very well said.
To: kattracks
Definition of 'dynasty' - to suffer a very, very horrible death.
Have a HUGE public funeral for these two, in downtown Baghdad. Invite heads of state from the neighboring Middle Eastern countries to come, and view the (bullet-ridden) bodies. Remind the Muslim nations, especially, that Americans can have a decidedly cold and deadly streak, and some things are better never to be disturbed.
To: kattracks
"..[T]he deaths of Uday and Qusay matter more, on a practical level, than even Saddam's...death..."
Yes, this is what I was thinking. Saddam is the past, these guys were the potential future. It seems clear to me there can be no resurrection of the Ba'ath party in Iraq with these two kaput.
The more I ponder this, the happier it makes me.
5 posted on
07/23/2003 3:18:06 AM PDT by
jocon307
(Who doesn't LOVE FR?)
To: kattracks; alloysteel
In the Middle East, family trumps all other worldly connections and obligations. And sons are the most important part of an Arab family. Saddam's visions of himself as a successor to the great rulers of the golden age of the Arabs are void without sons to carry on the line. He hoped to create a hereditary throne....Saddam cherished his sons so blindly that he tolerated their monstrous excesses. Uday was wildly vicious, Qusay coldly murderous. Together, they seemed to guarantee the enduring power of the House of Hussein - perhaps even beyond the American occupation. That's the truth, Kat. Saddam had trained his sons from their earliest years to murder and torture. He'd made ruthless monsters out of them and they were his dream of carrying on the Hussein dynasty.
Alloysteel:
Remind the Muslim nations, especially, that Americans can have a decidedly cold and deadly streak, and some things are better never to be disturbed.
I've thought since 9/ll that the Arab Muslims were lost in their rhetoric and fantasies, because they didn't have the first clue what that meant to Americans. They had no idea that 9/l1 wouldn't be met with just bluster and howls, and certainly not that it would bring the American eagles roaring out of the U.S. They never really knew us, and even wilder, they couldn't tell Bush's character from Clinton's. Reality must be ice cold for them.
6 posted on
07/23/2003 3:40:14 AM PDT by
xJones
To: kattracks
Good to see that someone wrote from this angle.
Rats have shown massive ignorance by trying to downplay the significance of it.
Also increases the chances that someone will rat-out the old man, since the sons aren't around for revenge.
7 posted on
07/23/2003 3:48:26 AM PDT by
Ed_in_NJ
To: kattracks
I sure wish a similar tip off would lead us to OBL. Only took a few months to get these thugs, but it's been almost 2 years and no OBL. The longer there is no news from OBL, the more convinced I become that his remains lie somewhere in the vicinity of Tora Bora.
9 posted on
07/23/2003 5:03:25 AM PDT by
randita
To: kattracks
I can't help it - I'm a bit skeptical as to whether they are really dead. I mean, we heard Saddam was killed in a bombing raid - twice. And both times the reports were premature.
11 posted on
07/23/2003 8:07:17 AM PDT by
FierceDraka
("I am not a number - I am a FREE MAN!")
To: kattracks
Bump.
12 posted on
07/23/2003 8:48:00 AM PDT by
DoctorMichael
(>>>>>Liberals Suk. Liberalism Sukz.<<<<<)
To: xm177e2; mercy; Wait4Truth; hole_n_one; GretchenEE; Clinton's a rapist; buffyt; ladyinred; Angel; ..
Superb piece by New York Post columnist Ralph Peters. A must read.
To: kattracks; JohnHuang2
The end of a nightmare.
To: kattracks
I rarely feel good about anyone's death.
I did this time.
18 posted on
07/25/2003 4:08:00 AM PDT by
William McKinley
(Play Presidential Survivor on my blog- http://williammckinley.blogspot.com)
To: kattracks
This guy has it right. Saddam has nothing to live for.
19 posted on
07/25/2003 4:16:29 AM PDT by
Movemout
To: kattracks
His fall, his suffering - his punishment - are almost Biblical in their resonance. Pharaoh has lost his first-born and more. The prodigal sons will not return in this telling. He who sowed the wind has reaped the whirlwind.
This is such a profound essay. Can there be anything in this world more wrenching than the loss of a child? For Saddam, what goes around comes around.
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