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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
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jpgredsox (104 D)
02 Oct 11 UTC
Anwar Al-Awlaki
The United States has assassinated an American citizen, never having been charged or indicted; this has sent a precedent that anyone the government deems a "threat" by a legal analysis the government won't even release can be blown up from the sky. There is no outcry or even discussion among most Americans; he is a terrorist. When people exchange liberty for security, they deserve neither.
260 replies
Open
bihary (2782 D(S))
14 Oct 11 UTC
Deleting supply centers
If I was to delete some supply centers on the map to improve balance and to make the map less unit-crowded, I would delete centers in Rumania, Denmark and Portugale. What do you think?
13 replies
Open
Sargmacher (0 DX)
11 Oct 11 UTC
Ulysses, James Joyce
So, I'm reading Joyce's Ulysses this week as part of my studies. It's a renowned and controversial text so I figured many of you here would have something worthwhile to offer me on it. Although I expect and welcome a fair amount of comments of ridicule - I hope some of our more scholarly contributors might be able to offer me an insight/judgement or two.
15 replies
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obiwanobiwan (248 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
"If *I* Say Its Too Hard, Joyce Has Clearly Failed.*
^True quote from a guy so pompous even *I* can't stand him (who claims to know all about...everything, and knows nothing, INISISTING English people wore no pants or anything of the sort until Henry VIII, and that tarring a guy's ball's is ESSENTIAL to understanding Huck Finn...not kidding, he said this)
1. If a work is "too hard"/unclear to you, your fault, authors's fault, or both?
2. I argued you should read such works twice, he said bull--opinions?
31 replies
Open
jmo1121109 (3812 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
So many good games
with openings, if only they were not password protected.
0 replies
Open
basvanopheusden (2176 D)
11 Oct 11 UTC
The advice thread
Some of us are students who seek knowledge. Some of us are professors, teachers, or practicioners who have knowledge. Why not use this forum to learn?
62 replies
Open
Draugnar (0 DX)
14 Oct 11 UTC
Bug with muting and the Home screen.
I'm not on the Dev forum and don't even remember if I ever created an account so if Kestas reads this or someone wants to relay it...
4 replies
Open
rollerfiend (0 DX)
14 Oct 11 UTC
Big Mouth game password
Hi I'm trying to get into a game called Big Mouth, I'd like to play if y'all still need players
please pm me whenever!
cheers
2 replies
Open
The Hanged Man (4160 D(G))
14 Oct 11 UTC
Mute Thread
is the best feature EVAR. Okay, you can mute this one now.
11 replies
Open
Zarathustra (3672 D)
12 Oct 11 UTC
Congratulations!
I have now been back around phpDip for a couple weeks now and I just want to say to everyone that this must be one of the best forums on the web.
14 replies
Open
Putin33 (111 D)
12 Oct 11 UTC
Fanning the flames of white grievance
So I'm not accused of derailing the science thread.

116 replies
Open
santosh (335 D)
13 Oct 11 UTC
StP Fleet NC in Builds 1901
When would it make sense to build Fleet StP 1901 instead of an army there? Isn't the army there much more flexible and useful? My point is that Russia cannot hope to mount a full offensive on England this early - and certainly not a naval one, so isn't his best hope in the North to mount a flexible defense while spooking Germany into helping him? Even when he succeeds in doing so, wouldn't Germany play the major naval part with your original fleet supporting from the Norwegian?
22 replies
Open
omnomnom (177 D)
13 Oct 11 UTC
I just love it when people make contraversial threads and then...
When their arguments are blown apart, they don't respond except to correct spelling errors and declare victory because of that.
22 replies
Open
AverageWhiteBoy (314 D)
12 Oct 11 UTC
The Mormons are heretics.
But that's not the same thing as being a cult.
38 replies
Open
jpgredsox (104 D)
13 Oct 11 UTC
Iran-U.S. Relations
The Iranian government won't provoke the US into war because Iran would not win. Iran's nuclear ambitions result from a regional struggle with Saudi Arabia and having a weapon would increase local prestige/power; Iranian possession of a weapon is certainly not a threat to the US, and is less of a threat than to the US than Pakistan's weapons are.
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Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
Uh, the Soviets never threatened the Israelis with nuclear attack prior to 1973, so that was pure aggression to keep them out of the way.
the article you posted before were about reactions to iraqi WMD programs and israeli responses to the potential threat with nuclear threats...

What does it matter if it was an avoidable war, Israel was attacked and nuclear weapons were kept as a failsafe.
"This is the end of the third temple" Moshe Dayan

ie, we're fucked lets nuke them
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
They weren't mobilized as a 'failsafe'. And Israel's nuclear threat was in response to any potential conventional attack on Israel, it had nothing to do with nuclear deterrence.
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
Yeah so fucked they were charging through Egyptian and Syrian lines in two days.

Just because a leader raises the specter of hysteria, doesn't mean it's justified.
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
And the nukes were targeting the Soviets, so your argument fails.
"Yeah so fucked they were charging through Egyptian and Syrian lines in two days."


read your own article Dayan did not think so, and how did he raise the specter of hysteria he did it in private with the prime minister

Your own article says the Soviets wern't targeted by Israel until they realized they were on the soviet target list in the 80s
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
From Hersh's book: Ch. 17

"There was an ironic twist to the spy scandal, for the senior leadership of the Israeli government understood from the moment of the first collaboration with the French that the Soviets not only were the primary targets of the nuclear arsenal but would be among the first to be told of its existence. By 1973, Dimona's success in miniaturization enabled its technicians to build warheads small enough to fit into a suitcase; word of the bomb in a suitcase was relayed to the Soviet Union, according to a former Israeli intelligence official, during one of what apparently was a regular series of meetings in Europe between representatives of Mossad and the KGB. The
Soviets understood that no amount of surveillance could prevent Israeli agents from smuggling nuclear bombs across the border in automobiles, aircraft, or commercial ships.

Israel's leadership, especially Moshe Dayan, had nothing but contempt for the Arab combat ability in the early 1970s. In their view, Israel's main antagonist in the Middle East was and would continue to be the Soviet Union. Dimona's arsenal, known by the Kremlin to be targeted as much as possible at Soviet cities, theoretically would deter the Soviets from supporting an all-out Arab attack on Israel; the bombs also would give pause to any Egyptian or Syrian invasion plans."

"Israel, preoccupied by the Soviet threat, saw the expulsion as diminishing any real chance of war. On paper, Israel's army and air force were more than a match for even the combined forces of the Arab Middle East. Without Soviet backing, no Arab nation would dare to initiate a fight. There would be no peace, perhaps, but there was no immediate threat to continued Israeli control of the captured territories. This message came through loud and clear in the late summer of 1973 to Kenneth B. Keating, a former Republican senator from New York who was Wally Barbour's replacement as U.S. ambassador to Israel. In August, Keating and his deputy, Nicholas A. Veliotes, paid a courtesy call on Moshe Dayan, whom they found to be not just confident, but swaggering. There had been constant talk that summer of an impending Arab attack, Veliotes recalls, and the embassy had been put on a higher alert. Dayan was asked if he was worried. His response, recalled Veliotes, was " 'Don't worry.' He described the Arab armies in the desert as 'rusty ships slowly sinking'—as if the desert were a sea. It was very arrogant." Dayan's comments were accepted without challenge at the time, said Veliotes: "We had a great belief that the Israelis knew more than we did. We also were mesmerized by 1967"— the Six-Day War.


Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
"and how did he raise the specter of hysteria he did it in private with the prime minister"

And was about to do so at a news conference had he not been stopped by Meir. Israel raised the nuclear alert twice. And for what? Control of the Sinai that they ended up giving up anyway?

Whatever, stop pretending like Israel has been restrained in its use of the nuclear threat. Just admit you don't want an enemy state to get nukes.
And?

What does that have to do with anything?

What happens after the attack when your Air Force position paper says that Dayan was visibly shaken and suggested the bombs should be used on Syrian and Egyptian targets. The use of the weapons was not on the table, as I said the upper echelon had reason to fear the end was near
"And was about to do so at a news conference had he not been stopped by Meir. Israel raised the nuclear alert twice. And for what? Control of the Sinai that they ended up giving up anyway?

Whatever, stop pretending like Israel has been restrained in its use of the nuclear threat. Just admit you don't want an enemy state to get nukes. "

Why did Meir stop him? The paper you posted makes it very clear Dayan thought that the end was near.
The funny thing is your author is setting up the Yom Kippur war as if it is going to prove Dayan wrong, when you have been saying all along Israel had nothing to fear. Something tells me he says diffeent in the next chapter
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
No, they didn't have reason. If they had reason then they wouldn't have won so easily. Clearly there was no reason.
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
"Why did Meir stop him? "

I don't know, why did the hysterical response get leaked to the public anyway?
ok disagree with the article you yourself posted and probably the book that you yourself posted.
"I don't know, why did the hysterical response get leaked to the public anyway? "

Because Dayan was approaching hysterical?
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
Reporting the fact that the Israeli leadership were "scared" doesn't make it justified, as I've been saying all along. You never listen. Iran is scared of being attacked, you're not going to justify their nuclear sabre-rattling, am I right? It's a weak defense.
what the hell are you talking about.

The perception was that Israel was teetering on the brink of collapse.

Israel contemplated using weapons for this reason.

You have spent a page arguing that Dayan and the Upper echelon of israelis could never have believed Israel was on the brink of collapse, and that Israel's contemplation of the use of the weapons was not tied to their belief in imminent collapse. Now you want to change your argument, whatever.

I do believe Israel and Iran for that matter are susceptible to seeing imminent threats where there are none. Which is why a nuclear showdown in the middle east is not desirable
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
I'm not changing my argument. I said reacting hysterically doesn't make it justified. I've said this over and over. I didn't say they didn't have these visions of doom, I said these visions of doom were ridiculous. You'd know what I was talking about if you bothered to read instead of put words in my mouth.
I read exactly what you meant when you wrote "They weren't mobilized as a 'failsafe'." meaning that Israeli leaders did not fear the destruction of Israel.

And if you were making that argument, what exactly was your problem with my argument which from the very beginning was talking about the perception that Israel was on the brink of destruction?
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
They were paranoid about a full scale Soviet intervention. News of nuclear armament was deliberately leaked to the Soviets. They used the threat to blackmail the Americans into sending airlifts. That's exactly how Kissinger saw it. It had less to do with the Egyptians and Syrians and more to do with the Soviets and Americans. In that case it wasn't really a failsafe.
Your own article again

'The Samson Option states that Moshe Dayan gave the go-ahead for starting weapon production in early 1968, putting the plutonium separation plant into full operation. Israel began producing three to five bombs a year. The book Critical Mass asserts that Israel had two bombs in 1967, and that Prime Minister Eshkol ordered them armed in Israel's first nuclear alert during the Six-Day War.54 Avner Cohen in his recent book, Israel and the Bomb, agrees that Israel had a deliverable nuclear capability in the 1967 war. He quotes Munya Mardor, leader of Rafael, the Armament Development Authority, and other unnamed sources, that Israel “cobbled together” two deliverable devices.55

Having the bomb meant articulating, even if secretly, a use doctrine. In addition to the “Samson Option” of last resort, other triggers for nuclear use may have included successful Arab penetration of populated areas, destruction of the Israeli Air Force, massive air strikes or chemical/biological strikes on Israeli cities, and Arab use of nuclear weapons.56 "

Seems like aiming them at the soviets wasnt the only rational behind the weapons program

"On the afternoon of 6 October 1973, Egypt and Syria attacked Israel in a coordinated surprise attack, beginning the Yom Kippur War. Caught with only regular forces on duty, augmented by reservists with a low readiness level, Israeli front lines crumbled. By early afternoon on 7 October, no effective forces were in the southern Golan Heights and Syrian forces had reached the edge of the plateau, overlooking the Jordan River. This crisis brought Israel to its second nuclear alert.

Defense Minister Moshe Dayan, obviously not at his best at a press briefing, was, according to Time magazine, rattled enough to later tell the prime minister that “this is the end of the third temple,” referring to an impending collapse of the state of Israel. “Temple” was also the code word for nuclear weapons. Prime Minister Golda Meir and her “kitchen cabinet” made the decision on the night of 8 October. The Israelis assembled 13 twenty-kiloton atomic bombs. The number and in fact the entire story was later leaked by the Israelis as a great psychological warfare tool. Although most probably plutonium devices, one source reports they were enriched uranium bombs. The Jericho missiles at Hirbat Zachariah and the nuclear strike F-4s at Tel Nof were armed and prepared for action against Syrian and Egyptian targets. They also targeted Damascus with nuclear capable long-range artillery although it is not certain they had nuclear artillery shells.62 "

Again your own article disagrees with you.
Putin33 (111 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
Syria had literally stopped completely with absolutely no opposition in front of them. The article was given to demonstrate that the Arab armies had been beaten back before the American airlifts took place, demonstrating the total lack of need for this escalation, not to mention two nuclear alerts. The Hersh book discusses at length the fact that Kissinger urged the Nixon administration to airlift loads of arms because of fear of Israel going nuclear. Israel made this decision on the assumption that the Soviets would quickly find out and thereby restrain their response.

"There was an equally important second purpose for the arming of nuclear weapons, according to former Israeli government officials: such a drastic step would force the United States to begin an immediate and massive resupply of the Israeli military. There was widespread rage inside the Israeli cabinet at the Nixon White House—aimed especially at Henry Kissinger —over what was correctly perceived in Israel as an American strategy of delaying the resupply in an attempt to let the Arabs win some territory, and some self-respect, and thus set up the possibility of seriousland-for-peace bargaining. Kissinger, just sworn in as secretary of state, would direct the negotiations."

Tolstoy (1962 D)
14 Oct 11 UTC
Much as it pains me to +1 Putin, as it says in Revelations... 'It is done'.

Israel was never under any real threat in the Yom Kippur War. The Arab forces never passed beyond their objectives (the '67 borders), despite having crushed the Israeli defenses at the Bar Lev line (due largely to the massive airlifts of weapons and supplies to the Israelis by the Nixon regime) and generally catching them flat-footed (as Israel had done to the Arab states in the Six Day War). Initial Egyptian/Syrian victories in the Yom Kippur War and the (militarily unjustified but psychologically understandable) scare it produced in Israel caused the most positive (arguably) result of all the Arab-Israeli Wars - a permanent peace treaty between Israel and Egypt.


54 replies
jgcrawfo (100 D)
13 Oct 11 UTC
Live anonymous gunboat, starting in five minutes!
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=69958
Join up! Fast & fun!
0 replies
Open
wacki (132 D)
13 Oct 11 UTC
no orders possible in all World Diplomacy IX games
since more then 2 hours it is not possible to fill in orders in my World Diplomacy IX games. There is only the message orders loaded... but nothing happened. Reload, Reconnect and Restart of game, browser, internetconnection and computer do not change anything so I guess the problem is not local...
2 replies
Open
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
07 Oct 11 UTC
NFL Week 5 Pick 'Em
Cocnkey topped the field of WebDip NFL Experts--sure, we're experts, right?--with 14 games picked correctly...congrats! (Full standings inside!)
But its a new week! The Jets and Pats enter a game neither can afford to lose with the upstart Bills at 3-1! Buffalo can drop Philly's Dream Team to 1-4 with a win! Oakland, Houston, Tampa, and San Fran all play as upstarts trying to gain standing! GB@ATL in the nightcap, and DET@CHI on Monday Night! Week 5...PICK 'EM!
53 replies
Open
tricky (148 D)
13 Oct 11 UTC
Fast dilema
I'm looking to organise a 5min turn anon with no in game messaging this evening but only have two points. Is there a way around this problem?
6 replies
Open
Yonni (136 D(S))
11 Oct 11 UTC
As G, what do you tell R about Sweden in S01?
I've always felt that this is one of the more awkward talking points in S01. How do you normally approach this as Germany (or Russia for that matter)?
24 replies
Open
The Situation (100 D)
13 Oct 11 UTC
Five Finger Death Punch
So how 'bout their new album - American Capitalist?
0 replies
Open
Zarathustra (3672 D)
11 Oct 11 UTC
Still looking for players....
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=69707

It would be really sad if gryncat and I's welcome back game started with civil disorder.
3 replies
Open
Draugnar (0 DX)
13 Oct 11 UTC
Quote of the day - Read in a business article regarding study criteria.
"Like any good negotiation, we've managed to make all parties moderately dissatisfied,"

Just felt so Diplomacy related on oh so many levels.
1 reply
Open
Cynical Naif (142 D)
13 Oct 11 UTC
Suggested press variants to spice up the game
Make the diplomacy phase more challenging with the outside-the-box message variants contained within.
6 replies
Open
SantaClausowitz (360 D)
11 Oct 11 UTC
DC Plot
This thing is wild. Let your thoughts and inevitable conspiracy theories fly.

http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2011/10/11/official-fbi-dea-disrupt-terror-plot-in-u-s-involving-iran/?hpt=hp_t1
88 replies
Open
Tsarwash (100 D)
11 Oct 11 UTC
Player collusion in anonymous, nil message games.
Do people think that it actually happens much, in games with no messaging at all, that two players decide before the game to help each other. I'm not complaining, or accusing, I just wanted to know what people's thoughts are about this. I have only come across one game where I suspected that the two players were in cahoots from before the game started, but whether or not it happened, the actions of two players kind of ruined the game.
5 replies
Open
Riphen (198 D)
12 Oct 11 UTC
Top 10 Stoner Movies
And no. This is not a list of movies that you liked while high. It is about the movies that have actors acting like they are high.(or are really high)
18 replies
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Lando Calrissian (100 D(S))
12 Oct 11 UTC
live game
I am tired of shitty live games. Anyone interested in a high quality gunboat tonight?
27 replies
Open
fulhamish (4134 D)
12 Oct 11 UTC
''never forget that everything hitler did in germany was legal''
I wonder what people think of the MLK quote?
24 replies
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Diplomat33 (243 D(B))
12 Oct 11 UTC
Teen Diplomacy Tournament registration
Post your profile name followed by age if you intend to participate. Post nothing else. This is a list of participants only.
4 replies
Open
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