Katie
Subscriber
Ooops.![]()
Best hope Mama didn't just get her boy's butt kicked.![]()
Typo.
Longhorns.
We are smothered here by Aggies. Their spelling must be rubbing off on me...
Ooops.![]()
Best hope Mama didn't just get her boy's butt kicked.![]()
I was on the street, which placed me outside the embassy's jurisdiction. I knew that but, having guns aimed at me seemed an inappropriate time to mention it...
Yes, IF. He said he was shooting from the street. That does leave ambiguity as to whether that street is on embassy grounds, or is a public street as I figured he meant.
Too bad some of our own embassies don't seem to be as self-protective.
Does "street" mean traffic lane or sidewalk in this instance? While the guards' reaction may have been a bit extreme, given the current climate I cannot blame them.
I sure as hell can.
They should train their people on where they are and how to act. They have no right to have their people acting like thugs under any circumstances. They have no right to threaten and intimidate an American citizen (or anyone else) on American soil, forcing him to lie on the ground and confiscating his property. Their despotic regime in their own country survives because we protect their asses for our own political reasons. I get it, but I'd be damned if I'd be put through that shit in my country without raising a hell of a noise afterward.
I sure as @#!*% can.
They should train their people on where they are and how to act. They have no right to have their people acting like thugs under any circumstances. They have no right to threaten and intimidate an American citizen (or anyone else) on American soil, forcing him to lie on the ground and confiscating his property. Their despotic regime in their own country survives because we protect their @#!*% for our own political reasons. I get it, but I'd be damned if I'd be put through that @#!*% in my country without raising a @#!*% of a noise afterward.
"They grabbed my camera ( an SLR)"
They had no right to take it to begin with, drawing from the account given.And they gave it back, he finished the shoot.
Different situation, different country, different shit.I remember going to the US embassy in Jeddah KSA in 1983. The car was searched, and I mean searched, I was searched - by fully armed US Marines, while a second squad stood by. This before I, a US citizen, was allowed on US soil. Sh!t happens.
Economic reasons are part of the political reasons. Political reasons include giving us an Arab "ally" in the region, and military bases from which to project power. These are intertwined with oil, but not solely about oil.+2
And we protect them for economic reasons (oil) not other political ones.
It was over 25 years ago, but there has always been a certain degree of paranoia among some "allies" .
I was on the sidewalk, which was/is US territory. My camera was handed back to me by the DC police, after they took it from the Saudi guards. The decision to lay on the ground was my own. I didn't understand a word the guards were saying, and I wanted to appear as compliant as possible (remember, they had guns...). After it was over one of the State Dept guys said it was a smart move. If the guards had forced me beyond the gates, I would have no longer been on US property, which may have complicated my release. Still, the whole incident began due to a Secretary failing to inform his people I was supposed to be there, and I'm sure it also would have been cleared up quickly. The Secretary was very apologetic.
As an aside, I was treated really well by other embassies. At some, I was invited in, offered food/beverages, and even met a few ambassadors.
Thanks for the clarifications. Still, the State Department guys should have been more protective of the boundary and of a citizen, and State should have made it very clear to the Saudi Ambassador and to all embassies that that type of behavior is not tolerated. It should not have depended on a slip-up in communication.
I mean, what if you had not acted fast enough, or made a move they didn't like, and they'd popped you? It hits the news: six armed Saudi hotheads from the embassy shoot an American citizen on American soil in the nation's capital- film at eleven. I would expect our State Dept. to think about these things...oh well.
Thanks for the clarifications. Still, the State Department guys should have been more protective of the boundary and of a citizen, and State should have made it very clear to the Saudi Ambassador and to all embassies that that type of behavior is not tolerated. It should not have depended on a slip-up in communication.
Economic reasons are part of the political reasons. Political reasons include giving us an Arab "ally" in the region, and military bases from which to project power. These are intertwined with oil, but not solely about oil.
Don't kid yourself. They are solely about oil. Without oil we wouldn't give a damn about "projecting power in the region."
Amen.
Now I've come full circle with this post.![]()
Don't kid yourself. They are solely about oil. Without oil we wouldn't give a @#!*% about "projecting power in the region."
The director of The Institute For Strategic Studys in the U.K says Roger it's mainly about surrounding China which is seen as the major war threat in the next fifty years with a military presence, although oil is also a consideration.Don't kid yourself. They are solely about oil. Without oil we wouldn't give a damn about "projecting power in the region."
it's mainly about surrounding China which is seen as the major war threat in the next fifty years.
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