That's not the point. Donal was attempting to say the
USA was going it alone in Iraq and in the war against
terrorism. I told him there were 20-30 countries with
us in the war against terrorism. I showed him how in
NATO alone there were 18 countries. Now I'm showing
him dozens more. So, I underestimated a bit as to how
so many of the countries in the world are with the USA,
what are you gonna do about it? Whine, cry and obfuscate
even louder in your infantile and irrational dismay at the
facts that show you pacifists for what you are - fringe
group assholes and pussies who command no respect from
any rational being.
S.Simon
Capetanios Oz wrote in message ...
Bwaaaahaahhahahahaaha!
Helping the US put the place back together after their actions lead
directly to the complete breakdown of services and community.
Certainly NOT there chasing terrorists.
On Thu, 13 Nov 2003 18:24:48 -0500, "Simple Simon"
wrote:
You lose big time again Donal you mislead and ignorant whining liberal fool.
from: http://apnews.myway.com/article/20031113/D7UPVKQ00.html
Countries besides the United States that are assisting in postwar Iraq:
Albania - 71 non-combat troops in northern Iraq.
Azerbaijan - 150 troops for law enforcement and protection of religious and historic monuments in Iraq.
Bulgaria - 485 troops patrolling Karbala, south of Baghdad. An additional 289 are to be sent.
Central America and the Caribbean - Dominican Republic (300 troops), El Salvador (360), Honduras (360) and Nicaragua (120) are
assisting a Spanish-led brigade in south-central Iraq.
Czech Republic - 296 troops and three civilians running a field hospital in Basra, and a small detachment of military police.
Denmark - 406 troops, including light infantry, medics and military police. An additional 90 soldiers are being sent.
Georgia - 69 troops, including 34 special forces soldiers, 15 engineers and 20 medics.
Estonia - 55 troops.
Hungary - 300 transportation troops.
Italy - 3,000 troops.
Japan - Delays a decision Thursday on sending troops to Iraq, citing security concerns after a surge in anti-coalition violence.
Kazakhstan - 27 troops.
Latvia - 106 troops.
Lithuania - 90 troops.
Macedonia - 28 troops.
Moldova - Dozens of de-mining specialists and medics.
Netherlands - 1,106 troops, including 650 marines, three Chinook transport helicopters, a logistics team, a field hospital, a
commando contingent, military police and a unit of 230 military engineers.
New Zealand - 61 army engineers for reconstruction work in southern Iraq.
Norway - 156 troops, including engineers and mine clearers.
Philippines - 177 troops.
Poland - 2,400 troops, command of one of three military sectors in Iraq.
Portugal - 120 police officers.
Romania - 800 troops, including 405 infantry, 149 de-mining specialists and 100 military police, along with a 56-member special
intelligence detachment.
Slovakia - 82 military engineers.
South Korea - 675 non-combat troops with more forces on the way. But Seoul will cap its force at 3,000 rebuffing Washington's
request for additional soldiers.
Spain - 1,300 troops, mostly assigned to police duties in south-central Iraq.
Thailand - 400 troops assigned to humanitarian operations.
Ukraine - 1,640 troops.
United Kingdom - 7,400 troops, with an additional 1,200 planned.
The United States is in discussions with more than a dozen other countries about providing troops.
Oz1...of the 3 twins.
I welcome you to crackerbox palace,We've been expecting you.