Quote from dgabriel:
Its a bad assumption because you have little to base it on and the action which you are denouncing has yet to completely unfold.
It's also a bad assumption (that Arabs universally detest having American troops in their countries) because it flies in the face of plentiful evidence to the contrary.
Our leading Argentinian leftist radical chose to ignore an attempt to challenge him on his assumptions. Maybe he missed it while composing his reply to another of dgabriel's reasonable and articulate posts. If so, I'll do him the favor of re-posting it here:
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Quote from alfonso:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------It's "too early" to assume that Arabs, practically universally, detest having American troops within their borders?
I could link you to several articles describing positive reactions to the invasion, and to the troops directly, among Iraqi Arabs. Some include video or pictures. One such article even comes from the Arab News - which, big surprise, has taken a strong editorial stance against the invasion. Can you give me any reason why I should bother digging up the links for you? Would it make any difference in your position or your beliefs? Or would you instead, like your comrade msfe, engage in the message board equivalent of plugging your ears like a five-year-old and whining as loudly as you can? Or would you just ignore the material, and go on exactly as you had before, pretending that the exchange has never occurred?
Outside of Iraq, there have been many articles and interviews describing a generally positive response in Qatar and Kuwait to the American presence. Obviously, there has also been some popular opposition, especially in Saudi Arabia. I'm not sure how many other Arab countries have detachments of American troops within their borders, but, unless you have determined that Iraqi civilians, Kuwaitis, and Qataris are no longer Arabs, then whatever detestation there is certainly is not universal, nor, as events have shown, is it very practical.