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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (104527)7/10/2003 8:58:10 AM
From: Noel de Leon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
"In Iraq, there is another (ethnic/religious) issue than just Baath party membership, I think. The Baath party and Saddam's government drew most of its support from the Sunni Arab minority - which is the segment producing the violent resistance now. Putting very many former Baath Sunni Arabs back in their positions sends a negative message to the 80% of the country which isn't Sunni and Arab - that they've been betrayed again - and could produce bigger problems than we face now with the Sunni Arabs."


Message #104527 from Brumar89 at Jul 10, 2003 8:13 AM

"I think denazification was much more lenient in Austria than in Germany. And within Germany, the British and French were more lenient than the Americans and Russians.
Under denazification, low-level Nazi party members were individually investigated. If they turned out to have been guilty of nothing more than membership, I think they were given certificates of denazification. Such is my understanding."


Are you saying that it was OK to put nazis back into their former positions because 80% of the population were nazis?

A fundamentalist state is what we'll get out of the present situation no matter which way it goes. Bush II(he who is a lying expert in foreign policy) will be remembered for that.