Grinding One":2cyd1q6o said:From my perspective,if the guy released,has nothing to look forward to, so becomes a jihadist and comes back and blows up some more citizens....somebody is going to have egg on his face.
On the Viet namm thing as I understand it,The LT. was told this was a cong stronghold.He was ordered to hit it and wipe it off the map.The reason it did not come to court was that he had it right and bigger heads were going to fall all the way to the top.When you are at war if you fail to obey an order you can be shot on the spot...he had no prior knowledge that this wasn`t a hard target.You be the judge,your men are being wiped out and you are sent in to clean out the opposition (Old Men an Women can fight wars in their own ways,and even the war going on now is fought around kids so as not to be hit with air strikes)So what would you do?Get shot for refusing an direct order?
He was put in a bad situation,an I truly believe he didn`t know it wasn`t a Viet Cong village.Everybody was looking the same and a lot of villages over there would support the other side and hide munitions for the fighters...My cousin was going to give chocolate to some kids on the corner,the kids threw battery acid in his friends face,scaring him for life.On another occasion a kid threw a hand grenade at the truck in a convoy.
I`ll take the wait and see what is going to happen...then give my verdict.
Sorry grinding One - "I was just obeying orders" has never been an excuse. The Allies didn't accept it from the Germans and Japs at Nuremburg, and it was clear that the court in the Calley case didn't accept it either because he was convicted. The point that I am making is that in both the Megrahi and Calley cases, they were found guilty of an atrocity in a court of law. In each case they were released by a politician - political reasons in the case of Calley, and both political and compassionate reasons in the case of Megrahi. Calley was a healthy 29 year old on his release just 3 days after his sentence was announced, and has enjoyed 38 years of freedom, and at age 66 may potentially enjoy many more. There was no doubt about his guilt. Megrahi has served 8 years in prison and is unlikely to be still here at Xmas.
My first reaction was that he should stay in prison, but the more I read, the more I started to question whether the right man had been convicted. Dr Jim Swire, who lost a daughter on Fl103 is the spokesman for the UK families, worked tirelessly to secure Megrahi's extradition from Libya for trial in the UK because he was convinced of his guilt. Having sat through the trial, he concluded that there were very real doubts about that guilt, and is now a supporter of his release. I think it far more likely that this was an Iranian sponsored act as revenge for the shooting down of a civilian airliner by a US warship with the loss of all on board.
Personally I think this was a very difficult call, and I'm glad that I didn't have to make it. Ultimately I guess that I'd rather be remembered for showing compassion to a dying man that doesn't deserve it than for denying it to someone who subsequently turns out to be innocent.