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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 10:52 am 
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RangerDave wrote:
Khross wrote:
an order illegal for any commissioned and uniformed officer to issue is also illegal for the President of the United States to issue.

How is it an illegal order, though? Are you saying it's illegal for a commander to order a delay in reinforcements for any reason - whether tactical, strategic or diplomatic - or are you saying it's illegal to delay reinforcements for the reasons you believe motivated Obama's decision here?

He doesn't know. He's just making up bullshit. No doubt some new credential he can use to appeal to his own authority will soon appear.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 11:00 am 
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RangerDave:

Primarily the latter; Diamondeye just wants to continue to call another Glader a liar. I guess he's pissed because using life experiences to dispute his position is disallowed.

Diamondeye:

As for your responses, since the only thing you have for the last week is ... "Well, you're lying," but not substantive arguments or proof otherwise, I'll simply assume you've gone back to full force troll mode.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 11:13 am 
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Patterns...they are a forming...

http://danaloeschradio.com/reporter-cla ... interview/

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 11:33 am 
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There's a simpler theory to explain the acts highlighted by your concerns, Khross.

It's obvious that there are folks that will close ranks and circle the wagons around the president. It's not necessary for the president to have ordered any illegal activities in order for the acts to have been committed. Folks would fall on their swords to provide him the level of plausible deniability necessary to isolate him from any accusation that might have a chance of sticking.

There are folks here, right now, arguing in favor of the administration concerning the attack on the US resulting in several deaths because they were abandoned. They're perfectly content to ascribe those acts as "mistakes", "blunders", "miscommunications" or even tactical decisions, and discount the level of importance that failure rises to, because he is their president. They allow subordinates to take the blame for those misdeeds.

Benghazi. AP bugging. IRS attacks against opponents. Targeting US citizens.

All this and there are folks still living in the day, living in the moment they pushed the Nobel Peace Prize at him.

I really don't think the president is guilty of anything other than surrounding himself with folks that would do these things for him. Honestly, the only thing I believe he's guilty of is failing at being a leader... but he's obviously the leader some deserve. The only legacy that will survive his term in office will be the fact that he's the first black president.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 11:35 am 
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I'm still waiting to hear which law Khross feels the president violated in regards to Benghazi.


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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 12:07 pm 
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Khross wrote:
It's not an accusation. It's a statement of fact. The President issued an order that ignored an immediate and imminent threat to sovereign US territory. That order cost American citizens their lives. More to the point, that imminent threat was created by actions of the previous diplomatic officer and the intelligence operations run from that location: the Syrians and Egyptians seem to think we were arming Libyan and other Middle Eastern partisans out of that location. Whatever happened to piss off the locals, the President knew about it.


As I mentioned in the other thread, there were allegedly concerns about the security of the Tripoli compound, and they didn't want to remove defense from it. REGARDLESS, the CIC is in no way, shape, or form required to deploy troops into a conflict as a response to something like this. That would be completely retarded.

For what it's worth, I spoke with a military Commander and Lieutenant Colonel who each spent time on the JCOS, and each laughed at your assertion that not responding with military force is treason.

Moving on, above you say "It's not an accusation. It's a statement of fact." You then say: "do I believe we'll ever see that evidence? No."

So, it's not an accusation, it's a fact, but you haven't seen the evidence. Come on, you know better than that.


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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 12:26 pm 
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Arathain:

The illegal order, as I understand it, was ordering soldiers, civilians, and operatives actually under fire to not defend themselves and lay down arms. That's why Petraeus bucked the Administration, as I understand it.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 2:03 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Arathain:

The illegal order, as I understand it, was ordering soldiers, civilians, and operatives actually under fire to not defend themselves and lay down arms. That's why Petraeus bucked the Administration, as I understand it.


I have not seen the evidence that soldiers under fire were told to lay down arms. However, even this would not be an illegal order, depending. It is a perfectly valid order to direct your troops to surrender.


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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 2:07 pm 
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Arathain:

Soldiers asked to surrender can still return fire if fired upon.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 2:56 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Arathain:

Soldiers asked to surrender can still return fire if fired upon.


Sure, but it doesn't make it illegal to tell them to surrender.


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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 2:57 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Khross wrote:
Arathain:

Soldiers asked to surrender can still return fire if fired upon.
Sure, but it doesn't make it illegal to tell them to surrender.
It's illegal to tell them not to defend themselves. It's also illegal to order them not to give assistance to the US civilians in the structure they were occupying at the time.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 3:05 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Khross wrote:
Arathain:

Soldiers asked to surrender can still return fire if fired upon.
Sure, but it doesn't make it illegal to tell them to surrender.
It's illegal to tell them not to defend themselves.


Show me the order that states they were to not to defend themselves. You say it's a "fact" you should be able to demonstrate. You talk about "language matters" frequently, you should agree now that how the order was stated is important. For myself, I'm going to go out on a limb and suggest that there's no **** way they were told to allow themselves to be shot at with no recourse.

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It's also illegal to order them not to give assistance to the US civilians in the structure they were occupying at the time.


No, it's not.


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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 3:11 pm 
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No order was ever issued for those actually being fired at to cease fire. The order given was for the CIA operatives to "stand down" from conducting operations to defend the compound. The individuals themselves cannot be ordered to not fire back if personally fired at; that isn't even an illegal order because it's not an order by definition. If you ask someone to not shoot back when they, personally, are being fired at it cannot be an order. Self-defense is a right of citizens, and our soldiers and civilian personnel are citizens. You can order a soldier to fight in a way that will result in his death, but you cannot order him to accept being killed by the enemy without fighting back.

Anyhow, the relevant statute that Khross can't seem to cite because it totally contradicts his bullshit assertions is 10 USC 164; Commanders of combatant commands: assignment; powers and duties

Posted below entirely, with relevant portions underlined:

Quote:
(a) Assignment as Combatant Commander.—
(1) The President may assign an officer to serve as the commander of a unified or specified combatant command only if the officer—
(A) has the joint specialty under section 661 of this title; and
(B) has completed a full tour of duty in a joint duty assignment (as defined in section 664 (f) of this title) as a general or flag officer.
(2) The President may waive paragraph (1) in the case of an officer if the President determines that such action is necessary in the national interest.
(b) Responsibilities of Combatant Commanders.

(1) The commander of a combatant command is responsible to the President and to the Secretary of Defense for the performance of missions assigned to that command by the President or by the Secretary with the approval of the President.
(2) Subject to the direction of the President, the commander of a combatant command—
(A) performs his duties under the authority, direction, and control of the Secretary of Defense; and
(B) is directly responsible to the Secretary for the preparedness of the command to carry out missions assigned to the command.

(c) Command Authority of Combatant Commanders.—
(1) Unless otherwise directed by the President or the Secretary of Defense, the authority, direction, and control of the commander of a combatant command with respect to the commands and forces assigned to that command include the command functions of—
(A) giving authoritative direction to subordinate commands and forces necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command, including authoritative direction over all aspects of military operations, joint training, and logistics;
(B) prescribing the chain of command to the commands and forces within the command;
(C) organizing commands and forces within that command as he considers necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command;
(D) employing forces within that command as he considers necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command;
(E) assigning command functions to subordinate commanders;
(F) coordinating and approving those aspects of administration and support (including control of resources and equipment, internal organization, and training) and discipline necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command; and
(G) exercising the authority with respect to selecting subordinate commanders, selecting combatant command staff, suspending subordinates, and convening courts-martial, as provided in subsections (e), (f), and (g) of this section and section 822 (a) of this title, respectively.
(2)
(A) The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that a commander of a combatant command has sufficient authority, direction, and control over the commands and forces assigned to the command to exercise effective command over those commands and forces. In carrying out this subparagraph, the Secretary shall consult with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
(B) The Secretary shall periodically review and, after consultation with the Secretaries of the military departments, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the commander of the combatant command, assign authority to the commander of the combatant command for those aspects of administration and support that the Secretary considers necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command.
(3) If a commander of a combatant command at any time considers his authority, direction, or control with respect to any of the commands or forces assigned to the command to be insufficient to command effectively, the commander shall promptly inform the Secretary of Defense.
(d) Authority Over Subordinate Commanders.— Unless otherwise directed by the President or the Secretary of Defense—
(1) commanders of commands and forces assigned to a combatant command are under the authority, direction, and control of, and are responsible to, the commander of the combatant command on all matters for which the commander of the combatant command has been assigned authority under subsection (c);
(2) the commander of a command or force referred to in clause (1) shall communicate with other elements of the Department of Defense on any matter for which the commander of the combatant command has been assigned authority under subsection (c) in accordance with procedures, if any, established by the commander of the combatant command;
(3) other elements of the Department of Defense shall communicate with the commander of a command or force referred to in clause (1) on any matter for which the commander of the combatant command has been assigned authority under subsection (c) in accordance with procedures, if any, established by the commander of the combatant command; and
(4) if directed by the commander of the combatant command, the commander of a command or force referred to in clause (1) shall advise the commander of the combatant command of all communications to and from other elements of the Department of Defense on any matter for which the commander of the combatant command has not been assigned authority under subsection (c).
(e) Selection of Subordinate Commanders.—
(1) An officer may be assigned to a position as the commander of a command directly subordinate to the commander of a combatant command or, in the case of such a position that is designated under section 601 of this title as a position of importance and responsibility, may be recommended to the President for assignment to that position, only—
(A) with the concurrence of the commander of the combatant command; and
(B) in accordance with procedures established by the Secretary of Defense.
(2) The Secretary of Defense may waive the requirement under paragraph (1) for the concurrence of the commander of a combatant command with regard to the assignment (or recommendation for assignment) of a particular officer if the Secretary of Defense determines that such action is in the national interest.
(3) The commander of a combatant command shall—
(A) evaluate the duty performance of each commander of a command directly subordinate to the commander of such combatant command; and
(B) submit the evaluation to the Secretary of the military department concerned and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
(4) At least one deputy commander of the combatant command the geographic area of responsibility of which includes the United States shall be a qualified officer of the National Guard who is eligible for promotion to the grade of O–9, unless a National Guard officer is serving as commander of that combatant command.
(f) Combatant Command Staff.—
(1) Each unified and specified combatant command shall have a staff to assist the commander of the command in carrying out his responsibilities. Positions of responsibility on the combatant command staff shall be filled by officers from each of the armed forces having significant forces assigned to the command.
(2) An officer may be assigned to a position on the staff of a combatant command or, in the case of such a position that is designated under section 601 of this title as a position of importance and responsibility, may be recommended to the President for assignment to that position, only—
(A) with the concurrence of the commander of such command; and
(B) in accordance with procedures established by the Secretary of Defense.
(3) The Secretary of Defense may waive the requirement under paragraph (2) for the concurrence of the commander of a combatant command with regard to the assignment (or recommendation for assignment) of a particular officer to serve on the staff of the combatant command if the Secretary of Defense determines that such action is in the national interest.
(g) Authority to Suspend Subordinates.— In accordance with procedures established by the Secretary of Defense, the commander of a combatant command may suspend from duty and recommend the reassignment of any officer assigned to such combatant command.


All authority of combatant commanders is subject to the final authority of the President, wartime or not, acting through the Secretary of Defense as the above passages that subject actions to the President's approval and allow him to waive portions of the law for the benefit of national security illustrate. There is no way a commander can ever have more authority than the President; that would be contrary to the concept of "command" in the first place and would be a direct violation of the appointment of the President as Commander in Chief.

Second there is no law prohibiting any commander from issuing a stand-down or surrender order to his troops (although if the enemy refuses to accept surrender and continues attacking, troops cannot be ordered to stop defending themselves). It might or might not have been legal for the Admiral or General in question to order the CIA operatives to stand down as the CIA does not normally fall under military authority, but they certainly do fall under the authority of the President, and he can make that order. It is in no way, shape, or form illegal, and wouldn't be illegal coming from a military officer, provided the personnel in question fell under that officer's authority.

Khross:

Your life experiences and credentials mysteriously expand any time you need them to in order to win a dispute. You've even pulled this crap with video games, as if writing mods for Skyrim mean you understand the game better than Numbuk and give you some privilege to tell him what kind of game it is, or lecturing Midgen on SWTOR. In both cases, you'd be well advised to shut up and listen to them. The same here. It is not me that hasn't provided substantive proof - its you. You are making accusations of treason; you must cite something. Unfortunately, I already cited the relevant law, and it indicates you don't know what the hell you're talking about. Your claims about lying and trolling are nothing more than a distraction technique, and points-scoring. If you want people to regard your life experience as credible, relate them to something other than your own say-so and don't whip them out right when its convenient. Frankly, the list of experiences you claim to have had is entirely too well-tailored to your discussion needs, and frequently crosses into the territory of the incredible.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 3:13 pm 
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Quote:
You talk about "language matters" frequently,


This is because it's the area Khross actually IS expert in. Unfortunately, since we use language to discuss everything, he uses that as a technique to make the matter about the words, or about how we think about it, rather than the actual topic at hand. It's also so he can use sources and materials we can't access.

There's something else we don't have access to - other language professors. Like any field, there is professional dispute and disagreement. Khross's word is not law on such matters.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 3:19 pm 
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But why would you give the order to stand down?

You have people, US citizens in harms way, should you not do whatever you have to power to do to ensure their security?

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 3:24 pm 
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Müs wrote:
But why would you give the order to stand down?

You have people, US citizens in harms way, should you not do whatever you have to power to do to ensure their security?


Yes, you should. That's why this should have been a bigger campaign issue, and why the entire matter was about trying to make the situation in Libya rosy before the campaign and covering it up when it wasn't.

That does not make anything Obama did illegal, much less treason. It makes it slimy and cynical politics, but all he has to say is "In my judgement as Commander in Chief it was the right call at the time." As far as his authority goes, he was firmly within it.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 3:37 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
No order was ever issued for those actually being fired at to cease fire. The order given was for the CIA operatives to "stand down" from conducting operations to defend the compound.
Are you certain this is the case, because that is not how it's been explained to me? <-- That's a Question.
Diamondeye wrote:
The individuals themselves cannot be ordered to not fire back if personally fired at; that isn't even an illegal order because it's not an order by definition. If you ask someone to not shoot back when they, personally, are being fired at it cannot be an order. Self-defense is a right of citizens, and our soldiers and civilian personnel are citizens. You can order a soldier to fight in a way that will result in his death, but you cannot order him to accept being killed by the enemy without fighting back.
The order issued, as they've been explained to me and portrayed by some facets of the media, seem to indicated the underlined is what was issued. As for being certain the President issued the orders in question: Petraeus denies issuing the order to the CIA and denies that anyone in the CIA at the time issued that order. The CIA operatives (according to the White House at various points in their story) were not under military command in Libya, which means their order came from the White House.
Diamondeye wrote:
Anyhow, the relevant statute that Khross can't seem to cite because it totally contradicts his bullshit assertions is 10 USC 164; Commanders of combatant commands: assignment; powers and duties

Posted below entirely, with relevant portions underlined:

Quote:
(a) Assignment as Combatant Commander.—
(1) The President may assign an officer to serve as the commander of a unified or specified combatant command only if the officer—
(A) has the joint specialty under section 661 of this title; and
(B) has completed a full tour of duty in a joint duty assignment (as defined in section 664 (f) of this title) as a general or flag officer.
(2) The President may waive paragraph (1) in the case of an officer if the President determines that such action is necessary in the national interest.
(b) Responsibilities of Combatant Commanders.

(1) The commander of a combatant command is responsible to the President and to the Secretary of Defense for the performance of missions assigned to that command by the President or by the Secretary with the approval of the President.
(2) Subject to the direction of the President, the commander of a combatant command—
(A) performs his duties under the authority, direction, and control of the Secretary of Defense; and
(B) is directly responsible to the Secretary for the preparedness of the command to carry out missions assigned to the command.

(c) Command Authority of Combatant Commanders.—
(1) Unless otherwise directed by the President or the Secretary of Defense, the authority, direction, and control of the commander of a combatant command with respect to the commands and forces assigned to that command include the command functions of—
(A) giving authoritative direction to subordinate commands and forces necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command, including authoritative direction over all aspects of military operations, joint training, and logistics;
(B) prescribing the chain of command to the commands and forces within the command;
(C) organizing commands and forces within that command as he considers necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command;
(D) employing forces within that command as he considers necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command;
(E) assigning command functions to subordinate commanders;
(F) coordinating and approving those aspects of administration and support (including control of resources and equipment, internal organization, and training) and discipline necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command; and
(G) exercising the authority with respect to selecting subordinate commanders, selecting combatant command staff, suspending subordinates, and convening courts-martial, as provided in subsections (e), (f), and (g) of this section and section 822 (a) of this title, respectively.
(2)
(A) The Secretary of Defense shall ensure that a commander of a combatant command has sufficient authority, direction, and control over the commands and forces assigned to the command to exercise effective command over those commands and forces. In carrying out this subparagraph, the Secretary shall consult with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
(B) The Secretary shall periodically review and, after consultation with the Secretaries of the military departments, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the commander of the combatant command, assign authority to the commander of the combatant command for those aspects of administration and support that the Secretary considers necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command.
(3) If a commander of a combatant command at any time considers his authority, direction, or control with respect to any of the commands or forces assigned to the command to be insufficient to command effectively, the commander shall promptly inform the Secretary of Defense.
(d) Authority Over Subordinate Commanders.— Unless otherwise directed by the President or the Secretary of Defense—
(1) commanders of commands and forces assigned to a combatant command are under the authority, direction, and control of, and are responsible to, the commander of the combatant command on all matters for which the commander of the combatant command has been assigned authority under subsection (c);
(2) the commander of a command or force referred to in clause (1) shall communicate with other elements of the Department of Defense on any matter for which the commander of the combatant command has been assigned authority under subsection (c) in accordance with procedures, if any, established by the commander of the combatant command;
(3) other elements of the Department of Defense shall communicate with the commander of a command or force referred to in clause (1) on any matter for which the commander of the combatant command has been assigned authority under subsection (c) in accordance with procedures, if any, established by the commander of the combatant command; and
(4) if directed by the commander of the combatant command, the commander of a command or force referred to in clause (1) shall advise the commander of the combatant command of all communications to and from other elements of the Department of Defense on any matter for which the commander of the combatant command has not been assigned authority under subsection (c).
(e) Selection of Subordinate Commanders.—
(1) An officer may be assigned to a position as the commander of a command directly subordinate to the commander of a combatant command or, in the case of such a position that is designated under section 601 of this title as a position of importance and responsibility, may be recommended to the President for assignment to that position, only—
(A) with the concurrence of the commander of the combatant command; and
(B) in accordance with procedures established by the Secretary of Defense.
(2) The Secretary of Defense may waive the requirement under paragraph (1) for the concurrence of the commander of a combatant command with regard to the assignment (or recommendation for assignment) of a particular officer if the Secretary of Defense determines that such action is in the national interest.
(3) The commander of a combatant command shall—
(A) evaluate the duty performance of each commander of a command directly subordinate to the commander of such combatant command; and
(B) submit the evaluation to the Secretary of the military department concerned and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
(4) At least one deputy commander of the combatant command the geographic area of responsibility of which includes the United States shall be a qualified officer of the National Guard who is eligible for promotion to the grade of O–9, unless a National Guard officer is serving as commander of that combatant command.
(f) Combatant Command Staff.—
(1) Each unified and specified combatant command shall have a staff to assist the commander of the command in carrying out his responsibilities. Positions of responsibility on the combatant command staff shall be filled by officers from each of the armed forces having significant forces assigned to the command.
(2) An officer may be assigned to a position on the staff of a combatant command or, in the case of such a position that is designated under section 601 of this title as a position of importance and responsibility, may be recommended to the President for assignment to that position, only—
(A) with the concurrence of the commander of such command; and
(B) in accordance with procedures established by the Secretary of Defense.
(3) The Secretary of Defense may waive the requirement under paragraph (2) for the concurrence of the commander of a combatant command with regard to the assignment (or recommendation for assignment) of a particular officer to serve on the staff of the combatant command if the Secretary of Defense determines that such action is in the national interest.
(g) Authority to Suspend Subordinates.— In accordance with procedures established by the Secretary of Defense, the commander of a combatant command may suspend from duty and recommend the reassignment of any officer assigned to such combatant command.
And all of that is lovely and has been read prior to this thread, I assure you. However, read my posts: we know the White House and thus the President did it, because orders were issued to CIA operatives without the CIA doing so. No one else in the room has the authority to hit both sides of the equation. That's kind of the problem ...

No other person in this country can order the CIA and the US Military to stand down simultaneously, unless, of course, Obama's White House is lying about who had operational control in that facility entirely. There's another option ...

Diamondeye wrote:
Second there is no law prohibiting any commander from issuing a stand-down or surrender order to his troops (although if the enemy refuses to accept surrender and continues attacking, troops cannot be ordered to stop defending themselves).
The orders, as they have been explained to me, did indeed order troops to stop defending themselves and other involved citizens. If I read your post correctly, I suspect you think this is because the media isn't separating the orders properly and thus confusing people (or me). I'm actually not hostile to that notion.

What I am hostile to, however, is the notion that, after the CIA and the Joint Chiefs say they didn't give the orders involved, that the President didn't and that the President didn't know.
Diamondeye wrote:
Khross:

Your life experiences and credentials mysteriously expand any time you need them to in order to win a dispute. You've even pulled this crap with video games, as if writing mods for Skyrim mean you understand the game better than Numbuk and give you some privilege to tell him what kind of game it is, or lecturing Midgen on SWTOR.
Except, amusingly, as I said, I do in point of fact have more time playing Skyrim than Numbuk by nearly 70 hours (67 to be exact). Steam's wonderful for that ...

More to the point, my knowledge of the game is based on personal experience and time invested. And my opinion that Skyrim is not a roleplaying game in execution or design is my opinion. That I doggedly defend my opinion and resist the use of bad taxonomic process does not give Numbuk more knowledge about the game than I have. At worst, you can say Numbuk and I have equal knowledge of the game.

And Midgen and I still argue about SW:TOR. We can do that quite freely and then proceed to get along while playing the game. Amusingly, The Harbinger seems not to suffer from whatever anti-group syndrome affects The Ebon Hawk currently. And there was this huge 6 month window where there weren't players to support most servers and group content -- hence consolidation. But, you know, you would do well not go off half-cocked.

More to the point, I've played Skyrim. I write mods for myself for Skyrim, because I play Skyrim. In fact, I was totally floored at how much better mechanically the game was than Oblivion and mentioned that. I'm critical of video games; this is something you don't seem to understand. I'm critical of a lot of things; criticism is not synonymous with dislike or disapproval. Criticism serves a world of purposes.

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Last edited by Khross on Tue May 14, 2013 3:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 3:39 pm 
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Müs wrote:
But why would you give the order to stand down?

You have people, US citizens in harms way, should you not do whatever you have to power to do to ensure their security?

To prevent escalation you accept your losses, turn tail, and run.

It's all about priorities. If the safety of US territory and US citizens is the utmost priority, you accept the responsibility as commander when you defend those priorities.

If your priority is to keep your re-election campaign at the top of CNN and MSNBC's website with controlled sound bites tailored to resonate with your carefully selected demographic, you sure as heck don't let the spotlight drift to hostilities when the sound bites say there shouldn't be any.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 3:55 pm 
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Taskiss wrote:
Müs wrote:
But why would you give the order to stand down?

You have people, US citizens in harms way, should you not do whatever you have to power to do to ensure their security?

To prevent escalation you accept your losses, turn tail, and run.


Which is what they were trying to do if I recall correctly. Go in, assist with evacuation, and save some lives. They weren't going to go in and retake the embassy and march forward unto dawn until all of Libya was under US protection.

They were told to *not* do that. The former. Which would have been the right thing to do.

But our government isn't fond of "right things to do" only "politically expedient things to do"

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I hate to say this, but in some respects it is the governments job to do the "politically expedient" thing, when it comes to international relations.

Although international politics affect national politics and elections and their effects do cause decision-making based on domestic popularity, it must be understood that in international politics, nations do what they feel will ultimately benefit them the most. There really isn't anything in international politics except expediency of a sort. It can be argued that choosing to sacrifice lives in order to save more later was expedient, it can also be argued that it was right. It could also be argued that saving Americans was right, and as well that it was expedient because a show of force might reduce the likelyhood of future attacks.

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Müs wrote:
Taskiss wrote:
Müs wrote:
But why would you give the order to stand down?

You have people, US citizens in harms way, should you not do whatever you have to power to do to ensure their security?

To prevent escalation you accept your losses, turn tail, and run.


Which is what they were trying to do if I recall correctly. Go in, assist with evacuation, and save some lives. They weren't going to go in and retake the embassy and march forward unto dawn until all of Libya was under US protection.

They were told to *not* do that. The former. Which would have been the right thing to do.

But our government isn't fond of "right things to do" only "politically expedient things to do"

The embassy was under attack and you had a ton of responders wanting to assist in fighting off a mob of pissed off extremists. There would have been shitloads of indignation poured down upon the idiots stupid enough to **** with the USA. It would have made page 1 with a bullet.

But the thing is, US citizens died that wouldn't necessarily have died, had relief been allowed to respond. They were abandoned because defending them didn't align with the priorities, from all indications I've seen, and honestly, leaving folks behind isn't an endearing trait in a commander. It's been a while since I served, but had that happened when I was serving I'd have taken two steps forward to help.

What happened don't sit well with bunches of folks, and I'd put myself in that list.

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 4:13 pm 
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Taskiss wrote:
What happened don't sit well with bunches of folks, and I'd put myself in that list.


You and a large portion of special operations command and DSS, based upon anecdotes I've heard from people I know in that community.

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Müs wrote:
But why would you give the order to stand down?

You have people, US citizens in harms way, should you not do whatever you have to power to do to ensure their security?


Please don't misread any of my "it's not treason" statements to interpret that I'm approving of the actions. I must, in good conscience, give some leeway to "fog of war", and not base my views solely on what is clear after the fact. For instance, the argument that moving special forces from Tripoli to Benghazi would leave Tripoli too weak to defend a similar attack must be given weight, despite the fact that such attack never came. However, the situation stinks of incompetence, and I think there was serious mismanagement of the issue.


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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 7:02 pm 
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Now-a-days, you get to have the FBI decide when you're lying if you talk to them. Then, they'll punish you for it.



http://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2013 ... story.html

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Unrecorded testimony
By Harvey Silverglate
May 11, 2013

Robel Phillipos has been charged with obstruction of justice.

Those concerned with the survival of American civil liberties during the post-9/11 (and now post-Boston Marathon) “age of terror” most commonly fear the federal government’s technical ability to record and store virtually all telephonic and electronic communications. But a more immediate threat to liberty lies in what one particular agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, refuses to record, as Robel Phillipos is now learning the hard way.

Phillipos is a 19-year-old Cambridge resident, former UMass Dartmouth student, and friend of alleged Marathon bomber Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. He faces charges of making materially false statements during a series of interviews with FBI agents. If convicted, he could get up to eight years in federal prison and a $250,000 fine.

Phillipos underwent four FBI interviews. He is not alleged to have had any advance knowledge of, much less role in, the bombing itself. The FBI was apparently trying to obtain his information and cooperation concerning the role and knowledge of Dias Kadyrbayev and Azamat Tazhayakov, the two Kazakh students who allegedly found and disposed of Tsarnaev’s backpack and laptop after he was named a suspect in the bombings.

The public and the media should withhold judgment not only as to what Phillipos did or did not do, but also as to what he did or did not say when questioned by FBI agents. Indeed, the public should look skeptically at the accuracy of any FBI claim regarding what transpires in the bureau’s infamous witness interviews. Here’s why.



FBI agents always interview in pairs. One agent asks the questions, while the other writes up what is called a “form 302 report” based on his notes. The 302 report, which the interviewee does not normally see, becomes the official record of the exchange; any interviewee who contests its accuracy risks prosecution for lying to a federal official, a felony. And here is the key problem that throws the accuracy of all such statements and reports into doubt: FBI agents almost never electronically record their interrogations; to do so would be against written policy.

In 2006 the FBI defended its no-electronic-recording policy in an internal memorandum, which The New York Times later made public. The memo in part attempts to defend the policy as logistically necessary, but given that virtually every cellphone today has sound recording capabilities, any “inconvenience” or “non-availability” excuse for not recording seems laughably weak. The more honest — and more terrifying — justification for non-recording given in the memo reads as follows: “. . . perfectly lawful and acceptable interviewing techniques do not always come across in recorded fashion to lay persons as proper means of obtaining information from defendants. Initial resistance may be interpreted as involuntariness and misleading a defendant as to the quality of the evidence against him may appear to be unfair deceit.” Translated from bureaucratese: When viewed in the light of day, recorded witness statements could appear to a reasonable jury of laypersons to have been coercively or misleadingly obtained.

But the FBI leaves out the even more potent criticism of its practice — that such interview tactics seem virtually geared toward establishing as fact what the FBI wanted to hear from the witness. Frightened and confused interviewees, who, if they deny they said what any 302 report claims they uttered, can then be indicted for making false statements. The FBI is thus able to put words into a witness or suspect’s mouth and coerce him to adopt the FBI’s version as his own. The FBI thus establishes the official version of what a witness said, and the pressure on the witness to adhere to the 302 version is enormous. Any deviation, after all, raises the question: “Were you lying during your FBI interview, or are you lying now?”

Unlike the federal government, many states understand that unrecorded testimony must be viewed with skepticism in a fair judicial process. In Massachusetts, the Supreme Judicial Court requires that a custodial interview be electronically recorded whenever possible. For unrecorded testimony to be admitted at trial, a judge must instruct the jury to be wary of police claims as to what the interviewee did and did not say.

The lesson: As long as the FBI relies solely on its agents’ uncorroborated reports of such interviews, it is difficult to credit the bureau’s version of what was and was not said. Presumably, much more is going to emerge concerning what Phillipos really told his interrogators, and nobody should arrive at any conclusions until all of the evidence, from both sides, has been made public. The FBI is not entitled to any presumption of credibility in these situations.
Harvey Silverglate, a criminal and civil liberties lawyer, is author of “Three Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent.”

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PostPosted: Tue May 14, 2013 7:30 pm 
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FBI agents always interview in pairs. One agent asks the questions, while the other writes up what is called a “form 302 report” based on his notes. The 302 report, which the interviewee does not normally see, becomes the official record of the exchange; any interviewee who contests its accuracy risks prosecution for lying to a federal official, a felony. And here is the key problem that throws the accuracy of all such statements and reports into doubt: FBI agents almost never electronically record their interrogations; to do so would be against written policy.


Since the underlined portion is pretty much total bullshit, we can disregard everything else. You cannot prosecute someone for lying because they accuse you of lying.

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