An Indian talking about a country having a bad reputation, LOL. The country where cows are valued above human life and a family vacation is gangraping a female child on a fucking bus in broad daylight.
It's well documented that Saddam used his chemical weapons ineffectively and ended up harming his own soldiers you dumb prick
Not that I'd expect an animal that shits in the streets to be able to provide evidence of any of your bullshit arguments
You quoted me first randomly now tell me to go!
get fucked and go cry to the moderators as usual whilst you insult me and Iran in the same breath
You learn well from Pakistani posters! Deflect when you are squirming. Get a bit more personal, you may just convince everyone
Personally I do not think rape threads belong on PDF and their policy as stated is also the same (although implementation is lacking). The propensity to try and score 'brownie points' by cheering rape reports merely serve to exhibit an underlying misogynist approach. It remains a shame for every society and country and reporting it is better than sweeping it underground to hide and deny. But here look at your own country:
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/fea...oken-atrocities-witnessing-alarming-rise.html
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/jun/24/jailed-iran-opposition-activists-rape
And the coup-de-grace, the case of Rayhaneh Jabbari, who was sentenced to death for defending herself from a government official trying to rape her!
https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/ppmkmz/rayhaneh-jabbari-rape-death-sentence-iran
Back to the point.
In Halabjah, in 1987, the Iranians had two divisions, the 84th Iranian Division
and the 55th Parachute (Airborne) Division. The Iranians entered Halabjah
near the area of Darbandikhan Lake, and the dam, which has a high elevation.
They occupied this area and moved to take the Shadiran Mountain, after which
the land becomes flat all the way to Sulaimaniyah. So if they succeeded in getting
past Shadiran Mountain, they would be able to infiltrate much more and reach
Sulaimaniyah. Our defensive line here was desperate and relying especially on our
special forces.
The Kurds in Halabjah had evacuated. They left because the battle
had been going on for over a month before the use of chemicals. Jalal Talabani
controlled the eastern sector, and the Iraqi government contacted him, as it had
become an operational area, fearing for the safety of the Kurdish residents [and
warned them] not to stay in the area. Talabani notified [the Iraqi] command that
the Kurds had evacuated the area. To my knowledge, he signed a document confirming
that the evacuation took place from the village.
Then, we used the artillery to launch chemicals on this sector. The attack
almost entirely exterminated the Iranian division. This was the first true mass use
of chemicals, where the air force fully exterminated the 84th Division. It was limited
to Halabjah Valley. This had a tremendous psychological effect on the rest of the
Iranian soldiers. This is not meant to be a defense of what we did, but for the purposes
of historical honesty, the Kurds were not the target of this attack. We had focused
it on the Iranian forces present in that area. The Kurds who died during that
attack were those folks who refused to obey orders to evacuate the city, and their
numbers did not exceed 75–150 killed.53 And another thing is that the Iranians also
retaliated by using chemical weapons.
Murray: It seems that the Iranians did not use the chemical weapons until
the very end of the war. Why?
Hamdani: It was their lack of capabilities and limited production. They
only had a limited capability when we started using chemical weapons, not to mention
all the effort to produce those.
- Saddam's War: An Iraqi Military Perspective of the Iran-Iraq War, Kevin M Woods, Williamson Murray & Thomas Holaday with Munir Elkhamri