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Debating with the enemy Discuss politics, current events, and other hot button issues here. |
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01-17-2023, 01:17 PM | #16 |
Pro Bowl
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: San Diego Ca
Posts: 5,296
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Re: MLK - Do something
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12-06-2023, 05:08 PM | #17 |
Gamebreaker
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 13,949
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Re: MLK - Do something
chico......worships war criminals.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/henry...b0afce046cb44f “Kissinger personally 'approved each of the 3,875 Cambodia bombing raids' that occurred between 1969 and 1970.” In the spring of 1969, desperate to bring an end to the Vietnam War, Kissinger authorized one of its most horrific chapters: the secret carpet-bombing campaign in Cambodia. The theory was that it would force North Vietnam to accept improved U.S. conditions for ending the war, an early use of a “bombs as an instrument of diplomacy” approach, as Yale historian and fierce Kissinger critic Greg Grandin has described it, that has become a hallmark of U.S. foreign policy. From 1969 to 1973, when a Congress that had been largely kept in the dark about the Cambodian campaign moved to halt it, the United States dropped a half-million tons of bombs on the neutral country. Kissinger personally “approved each of the 3,875 Cambodia bombing raids” that occurred between 1969 and 1970, according to a Pentagon report released later. The bombing campaign ultimately killed between 150,000 and a half-million Cambodian civilians, various estimates suggest. It also helped unleash a civil war inside Cambodia that led to the rise of the Khmer Rouge and Pol Pot, a dictator whose regime killed as many as 2 million Cambodians, according to modern appraisals. https://www.rollingstone.com/politic...ad-1234804748/ The Yale University historian Greg Grandin, author of the biography Kissinger’s Shadow, estimates that Kissinger’s actions from 1969 through 1976, a period of eight brief years when Kissinger made Richard Nixon’s and then Gerald Ford’s foreign policy as national security adviser and secretary of state, meant the end of between three and four million people. That includes “crimes of commission,” he explained, as in Cambodia and Chile, and omission, like greenlighting Indonesia’s bloodshed in East Timor; Pakistan’s bloodshed in Bangladesh; and the inauguration of an American tradition of using and then abandoning the Kurds.
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