Our little troll was certainly in his manic phase last night. Anyway, since several people have pointed out his dishonesty in faking what I said, we'll let it go for now.
barbie - any chance you could answer post #110 without being dishonest?
From what I've read online and seen in youtube clips, it appears that he died of injuries sustained in his capture exacerbated by rough handling and delayed medical treatment.
That's our ethic, yes.
The morality or immorality of such acts are relative, then? :think:To the South Vietnamese, General Loan's actions were unremarkable.
Catch an enemy in the act of killing your soldiers, drag him to the boss and let him decide.
OK with it? No. But I understand where it comes from. I think it's remarkable that we were able to keep Saddam Hussein alive for trial. I think it's unsurprising that the Libyan rebels, fresh from battle, tired, sore, hot, sweaty, hungry, dehydrated, emotionally drained from days of watching their comrades fall were happy to see Gaddafi die, regardless of the manner in which it happened.
"Accepted as a prisoner". You make it sound as if there has been an orderly transfer of paperwork.
That ethic is what I'm defending.
The morality or immorality of such acts are relative, then? :think:
Surrender does not have to be accepted.
Could be.
If the South Vietnamese code of conduct allowed for battlefield executions, then they were acting according to their law.
And if the enemy brought before Loan was not considered to be a surrendered prisoner, but a combatant to be processed?
From what I've read online and seen in youtube clips, it appears that he died of injuries sustained in his capture exacerbated by rough handling and delayed medical treatment.
From what I've read, he was killed by a shot to the temple which he didn't have when he was captured.