Trinidad, on 2013-September-01, 10:46, said:
It seems to be mainstream American ot think that the Russians will deny the truth. So far, Putin has said that there is no evidence. According to Putin, the Americans claim that they have evidence, but they aren't showing any of it. And evidence that you are not willing to show is no evidence.
I must say that I agree with Putin. The international community should not want to condemn a country based on hearsay from a country that has hardly any credibility at all in these matters.
I would even go further. I realize a comparison with bridge is not entirely fair, but in effect we have here one government (the USA) accusing another government (the Assad regime) of cheating. If you do that in bridge, you'ld better be willing to show some solid evidence the moment you make such an accusation. The Americans say: "We have evidence, but we don't allow you to verify it.". That simply means: provide the evidence or shut up.
In addition, we have a TD walking around here (the UN). The USA is not listening to the TD, they do not want to wait for the TD's ruling, and they say that they will chose their options ignoring the TD whenever they see fit.
Is this the kind of player you want in your game?!?
Let's wait until the TD returns with evidence. Then we will see what Putin does. (We already know what the Americans will say regardless of what the UN conclusions will be.)
Rik
The bridge analogy is ridiculous.
The Russians have such a vested interest in the Assad regime continuing they will deny anything. Photos and phone taps will have been faked by the US/Israel etc.
In bridge, you don't have problems like your agents in Syria getting killed because their cover is blown if you release the evidence.
There is plenty of circumstantial evidence and eyewitness reports that would be enough to convince most people of the sarin arriving in rockets, with the rocket flashes being seen immediately before from the government positions. Also while the Syrian government have been doing well in the war, the area affected was the one place they were making no headway against the rebels.