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CandyAssedJabroni t1_itk9qr3 wrote

These guys are assholes for publishing confidential and sensitive info.

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TheStrangestOfKings t1_itkcyh9 wrote

And idiots for not thinking to check with the government that this top secret info was allowed to be published

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HereForGames t1_itkief7 wrote

Why are we suddenly clutching our pearls over information the government considers confidential ending up in the hands of the public, again? Are we supposed to care? It's only a problem for me if it's being sold to enemies on the sly.

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Holinyx t1_itkk9ys wrote

We don't want operation details about how we conduct kill ops to be known because then the enemy can anticipate our tactics and kill all our guys. Info like what kind of vehicles we use, how we approach certain targets, how many people are generally on an op, the type of gear they are using, ect.

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5-On-A-Toboggan t1_itkra0q wrote

We're not supposed to conduct assassinations. Since 1976, every U.S. president has upheld Ford's prohibition on assassinations, BUT both Democrat and Republican administrations have been weaseling around this ever since.

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PuckSR t1_itld07k wrote

The prohibition is against assassinations: e.g. killing legitimate political leaders.

Osama bin Laden was very clearly not a political leader and killing him did not constitute an assassination.

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5-On-A-Toboggan t1_itltow7 wrote

What's the rationale behind Gaddafi then?

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PuckSR t1_itlyh8g wrote

We assassinated Gaddafi in your mind?

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5-On-A-Toboggan t1_itlz9cg wrote

"We came, we saw, he died."

Hillary Clinton

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PuckSR t1_itlzr8h wrote

I mean, there is a video. I dont see any US military operators

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5-On-A-Toboggan t1_itm0co4 wrote

Proxy assassinations are nothing new. A bunch of failed attempts on Castro were similar for the thin veneer of plausible deniability it would have granted the US.

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PuckSR t1_itm1aex wrote

You are proposing that an unpopular dictator who was literally stabbed by a throng of people may have been killed secretly by proxies of the US govt?

Not following the theory. So, they could have just told about a million different people where he was located and they would have tried to kill him. But that isn't exactly assassination.

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5-On-A-Toboggan t1_itmgkpp wrote

NATO intercepted a satellite phone call from Gaddafi which pinpointed his fleeing in a convoy. NATO aircraft and a US predator drone, piloted remotely from the US, fired on Gaddafi's convoy crippling it so that he could be taken out by Libyans. None of this is conspiracy; it's the official narrative.

'We found him, handcuffed him, and threw him in the tiger cage, but it was the tiger that did the deed, not us.'

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litux t1_ittkxz0 wrote

Huh, TIL.

I had no idea that the convoy was stopped by NATO aircraft.

Although, since you mentioned the official narrative...

> According to their statement, NATO was not aware at the time of the strike that Gaddafi was in the convoy. NATO stated that, in accordance with United Nations Security Council Resolution 1973, it does not target individuals, but only military assets that pose a threat. NATO later learned "from open sources and Allied intelligence" that Gaddafi was in the convoy and that the strike was likely to have contributed to his capture and therefore his death. > > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Killing_of_Muammar_Gaddafi

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Holinyx t1_itm7wec wrote

lol his own people put in in the trunk of a car and then stabbed and shot him. Watching the video of it was quite surreal.

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DaJaKoe t1_itm42l2 wrote

It's a matter of professionalism and operational security when a highly selective and entrusted organization has members who keep running their mouths to the media (news and social) and selling their endorsements to make a buck.

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NP_BryanPass t1_itkscnu wrote

Reddit isn’t Reddit without something to be outraged over

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[deleted] t1_itl8x6e wrote

What!? Paid mercenaries who kill for a living are assholes ?

Nooooooooo

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sc00ttie t1_itps2hd wrote

The US is a Federal Republic.

Republic - a state in which supreme power is held by the people and their elected representatives, and which has an elected or nominated president rather than a monarch.

How can the people hold power and in turn make informed decisions on their elected representatives in less we know what they are doing?

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CandyAssedJabroni t1_itr4ulb wrote

There is an argument to be made that the government should never have anything secret from the people. It's the same people who think that Assange, Manning, and Snowden are doing the right thing. I agree with that view.

The difference is, those people were doing what they believed were the right thing. These other cocksuckers are just trying to turn a profit.

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sc00ttie t1_itrb755 wrote

I would pay a subscription to people tasked with informing the public on the activities of politicians in a non biased way.

They’re supposed to be called “the media.”

Profit and “the right thing” are not mutually exclusive.

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CandyAssedJabroni t1_itrbp11 wrote

Well, at least you're consistent.

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sc00ttie t1_itrcfaq wrote

Unfortunately, Pandora’s box cannot be shut. We’ve let politicians climb to a status above the laws they write.

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