Do you think that dialogue between the US/UK and Iran/Syria would improve the general situation in the Middle East?
ref #239
Iran and Syria are major influencial powers in the region and the US and UK have mostly excluded them from the peace process in the Middle East. Surely their inclusion in the process is required to ensure the general adoption of any strategic plan for the region as a whole.
number of opinions :
raised by :
Anonymous userraised on :
Tue, 2006-11-14 15:43category :
Politicslast updated :
Tue, 2006-11-14 15:43total of opinions :
15voted yes :
12voted no :
3Talking is always the best thing to do ...
What kind of dialogue?
And can any dialogue alone change anything? Do any of us ACTUALLY think that talking about it will lead to an improvement?
Does it not sicken people that that important thing in the "Iraqi Situation" at the moment is the most effective exit strategy!
Take this clown for example.. a typical self important "we are the best" arrogant bloody yank!
http://journals.aol.com/skip3366/TheMaverickConservative/entries/2006/11...





















I expect it would help. yossarian said "talking is always the best thing to do." especially if all of the diplomats and leaders got to get together to have a nice cozy chat and us humble citezens of all of those countries could watch and ask questions and get their say. that would be a definate yes!
Trouble is they'd just probably get together and talk amongst themselves, get no where, not tell you that or even ask what you would like to see them do, or morelikely talk about doing.
So the trouble is not with the people being represented it is with the people who are representing them.
The dialogue between them so far has been nothing more than them telling each other to **** off, and that's gotten us no where. So what else can we try? Maybe we could get some new people to all tell each other to **** off. Or maybe we should take a bit more responsibility for our representatives and accept that the people are not the only thing on their minds. they are struggling over power.