@no1marauder saidOf course your targeting civilians along with the bar staff, your being utterly ridiculous.
If you bomb a pub known to be primarily frequented by soldiers, you are not targeting civilians. Some civilians may get killed, but they were not targets. It's cold blooded perhaps but every military accepts the idea of "collateral damage"; by your definition every army in every war has been "terrorists".
Is that such a hard concept to understand?
If you wanted to call yourself a soldier and not a terrorist you would target enemy soldiers in a combat scenario not plant a bomb in pub clearly frequented by civilians and skulk back into the shadows.
You clearly have no real argument here. If it walks like a duck etc.
@athousandyoung saidWhar are you on about?
What is the relevance of that list to your argument?
I said: kneecapping is an example of terrorism.
You said: give me an example.
And after me getting rather irritated with your lack of proof that you actually exist, I gave you a list of studies which prove that kneecapping exists, what the consequences are for the people living under those practises and I finished it off with an example from the BBC of someone who was kneecapped.
I’m finished with you.
@kevcvs57 saidNo, it is your argument that is ridiculous. If the RAF bombed the Headquarters of the 1st SS , it would not be "terrorists" because it killed some civilian janitors or clerks there.
Of course your targeting civilians along with the bar staff, your being utterly ridiculous.
If you wanted to call yourself a soldier and not a terrorist you would target enemy soldiers in a combat scenario not plant a bomb in pub clearly frequented by civilians and skulk back into the shadows.
You clearly have no real argument here. If it walks like a duck etc.
Similarly, if the Maquis saw a large group of German soldiers in a cafe, they could attack them under the rules of war even if it was possible or even likely some civilians would be killed.
A war has to be fought under the accepted rules of war, not under ones that gives the militarily inferior side no chance to succeed. The IRA did not have to muster up in a field so British tanks, planes and artillery could massacre them.
@no1marauder saidWiki
If you bomb a pub known to be primarily frequented by soldiers, you are not targeting civilians. Some civilians may get killed, but they were not targets. It's cold blooded perhaps but every military accepts the idea of "collateral damage"; by your definition every army in every war has been "terrorists".
Is that such a hard concept to understand?
Bloody Friday July 21 1972
“ Nine people were killed and a further 130 injured,[1] some of them horrifically mutilated.[7] Of those injured, 77 were women and children.[12] All of the deaths were caused by two of the bombs: at Oxford Street bus depot, and at Cavehill Road. The Oxford Street bomb killed two British soldiers and four Ulsterbus employees. One of these employees was a Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) reservist; one was an Ulster loyalist paramilitary; and the other two were civilians. The Cavehill Road bomb killed three civilians.”
For brave soldiers who were not targeting civilians that’s not a bad haul is it.
I can only assume soldiers must have frequented Belfast city centre that day.
What you cannot seem to grasp is that they weren’t a “military’ they were a para military organisation that targeted civilians along with military. They were conducting a war of terror against the British State actively killing and maiming civilians and enforcing their own brand of justice on their own communities without legal representation for the accused.
If there is such a thing as a terrorist then PIRA were among their ranks as much as the INLA and the UVF.
They represented no lawful government and if you think all they have to do to absolve themselves is to falsely claim that civilians stupid enough to frequent shops and pubs were collateral damage then you are about as wrong as it gets.
@kevcvs57 saidDo you reckon regular soldiers can be terrorists?
What you cannot seem to grasp is that they weren’t a “military’ they were a para military organisation that targeted civilians along with military. They were conducting a war of terror against the British State actively killing and maiming civilians and enforcing their own brand of justice on their own communities without legal representation for the accused.
If there is su ...[text shortened]... pid enough to frequent shops and pubs were collateral damage then you are about as wrong as it gets.
@no1marauder saidSo your argument is based on the British Army in N.I ( legally their own territory ) being analogous with the Nazi occupation of France.
No, it is your argument that is ridiculous. If the RAF bombed the Headquarters of the 1st SS , it would not be "terrorists" because it killed some civilian janitors or clerks there.
Similarly, if the Maquis saw a large group of German soldiers in a cafe, they could attack them under the rules of war even if it was possible or even likely some civilians would be killed. ...[text shortened]... IRA did not have to muster up in a field so British tanks, planes and artillery could massacre them.
Can you cite how many civilians the RAF killed during their bombing raids on west Belfast or Free Derry or perhaps you can tell us what the Brits did with the Falls Road gas chambers after the Good Friday agreement. You really are being ridiculously melodramatic now.
It’s clear that you have no idea about the Troubles or who PIRA actually were.
@shavixmir saidLegally and by definition no they cannot, but they can be war criminals and tried as such, which they often are, although clearly not often enough. Same with the politicos who ultimately command them.
Do you reckon regular soldiers can be terrorists?
@kevcvs57 saidOkay, so now forget labels.
Legally and by definition no they cannot, but they can be war criminals and tried as such, which they often are, although clearly not often enough. Same with the politicos who ultimately command them.
A group of armed men are committing violent crimes.
If you protest, you get shot. What do you do?
And that’s the only way to look at these kinds of situations. Oppressor is a label given by victims, terrorist is a label given by rulers.
So the question is not whether the British army, the loyalists or the IRA were terrorist or oppressors or whatever, but were their actions justifiable within the context of what was happening.
@shavixmir saidWe’ve already touched on this Shav and I’m not sure I disagree with what your saying but that logic means that there is no such thing as terrorism, it’s just a meaningless label.
Okay, so now forget labels.
A group of armed men are committing violent crimes.
If you protest, you get shot. What do you do?
And that’s the only way to look at these kinds of situations. Oppressor is a label given by victims, terrorist is a label given by rulers.
So the question is not whether the British army, the loyalists or the IRA were terrorist or oppressors or whatever, but were their actions justifiable within the context of what was happening.
But that’s not what No1 is arguing, he’s arguing that PIRA specifically are not terrorists even though terrorists and terrorism exists.
@kevcvs57 saidWell said, Kev
Of course your targeting civilians along with the bar staff, your being utterly ridiculous.
If you wanted to call yourself a soldier and not a terrorist you would target enemy soldiers in a combat scenario not plant a bomb in pub clearly frequented by civilians and skulk back into the shadows
A brave band, this IRA
I wonder if the brave soldier who planted a bomb in a waste bin in Warrington , presumably at 4am (wouldn't want to run into any nasty policeman) received the IRA equivalent of the VC. What a hero
Ps...thought your 'Robin Hood and His Merry Men' was excellent
@blood-on-the-tracks saidEver handle any explosives, BOTT?
Well said, Kev
A brave band, this IRA
I wonder if the brave soldier who planted a bomb in a waste bin in Warrington , presumably at 4am (wouldn't want to run into any nasty policeman) received the IRA equivalent of the VC. What a hero
Ps...thought your 'Robin Hood and His Merry Men' was excellent
Do you really think you have any qualifications to judge the personal bravery of average men who, outnumbered, faced one of the best trained and equipped armies in the world?
I doubt it.
@no1marauder saidNope, haven't handled many
Ever handle any explosives, BOTT?
Do you really think you have any qualifications to judge the personal bravery of average men who, outnumbered, faced one of the best trained and equipped armies in the world?
I doubt it.
Would say, that on average, they are likely to exact more harm to those around when the things are meant to go off, rather than the brave soldiers who put them in waste bins etc
Of course, if your 'bomb setters' are fairly incompetent, I suppose there is a risk. I don't live in that world.
I would guess it is also quite dangerous to inhabit places close to the targeted spot, if the bomb 'planter' is a bit of a clown. As at Inniskellin.
'faced'?? They didn't 'face' any armed forces in Warrington , or many other planting of bombs
@kevcvs57 saidI grasp that the People, particularly the Catholics, in the Six Counties were oppressed and deprived of their basic Rights. I grasp that when they rose in peaceful protest against this tyranny, the government forces and their henchmen brutally and murderously suppressed them. I grasp that it is the right of the oppressed in such circumstances to resist by force of arms. And when they so resist they need only follow the traditional laws of war, not special rules arbitrarily imposed by the oppresser and their apologists.
What you cannot seem to grasp is that they weren’t a “military’ they were a para military organisation that targeted civilians along with military. They were conducting a war of terror against the British State actively killing and maiming civilians and enforcing their own brand of justice on their own communities without legal representation for the accused.
If there is su ...[text shortened]... pid enough to frequent shops and pubs were collateral damage then you are about as wrong as it gets.
Having shown the IRA's war was justified and that they did not deliberately target civilians, I await something other than screeching from you or BOTT. I really thought there would be some attempt at rational refutation of my position, but I've yet to see it.
@no1marauder saidOf course you haven't seen it. Because you do not see.
Having shown the IRA's war was justified and that they did not deliberately target civilians, I await something other than screeching from you or BOTT. I really thought there would be some attempt at rational refutation of my position, but I've yet to see it.
The only one 'screeching' here is you.
Arm flapping, pro IRA rubbish. Have read it for 50 years.