cr4ytonic said:
Currently they have nothing to fear because due to popular political climate in the US elected officials will not order retaliations that might harm a large # of innocent civilians.
It's those innocent civilians that are the mailman in my analogy. I do admit we didn't hear much from Japan as an enemy after we dropped nukes on them though. Given the possible extremity of the situation it might be justifiable.
Countries to survive must do what is in their best interests.
It is not our best interest to kill innocents. The best and most effecient way to deal with enemies is not to make enemies in the first place. We have more to gain through voluntary interaction than military dominance.
It's called self preservation. While the scenrio you bring up could happen there's no way to defend against it, other than doing what we're already doing in trying to track and inventory nuclear material as best we can. Pissing Iranians off isn't a way to make them less likely to do something of this nature. Iran wants power and to be taken seriously as a nuclear power. Despite the existence of hostile nuclear powers throughout the years, none has ever attacked us. Treat them as equals, trade with them and irreversibly tie our economic interests together and you do more to achieve safety for US citizens.
You forget to mention one thing about all the past civilizations you mentioned which is very relevant: They all fell, violently so, and very arguably because of their foreign and domestic policies of military dominance.
If you read the quran you will find that people that read it literally are called to kill anyone who does not (take a look).
I have. If you read the Bible literally you will find some freaky **** too. Your point? I could point to
The Next Christendom: the Coming of Global Christianity, by Philip Jenkins to counter your cite of
Clash of Civilizations.
Clash of Civilizations is written from a distinctly neoconservative point of view, that necessarily slants his opinions. And to address something you said before, neocons are
not realists. They are largely war mongerers with a memory problem that doesn't allow them to think more than five minutes into the future or see more than five minutes into the past. Hence your quote about our current policy being a "response" in the Middle East.
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Life has always been about survival first, and this holds true for nations.
You mean mobs, but I digress. Survivial is better served through other means than killing some of your enemy and leaving the rest to take revenge, or as it's otherwise known Interventionism. That's a continuing cycle which
threatens survival in the short and long term. As for those experts you've studied under, they're the same people that have brought us our current situation, which to me suggests they might be too caught up in their own BS to see beyond their own precious theories. I'd suggest some alternate, outside reading you may never have heard of:
Interventionism and
Omnipotent Government: The Rise of Total State and Total War, by Ludwig Von Mises;
The Myth of National Defense, by Hans Herman Hoppe;
Wall Street, Banks, and American Foreign Policy, by Murray N. Rothbard;
Diplomacy, by Henry Kissinger (which I assume you've already read, but you know it's got to be on the list);
The Sorrows of Empire, by Chalmers Johnson. Many are written from an economic perspective.
If you don't mind I've assembled some quotes from your other posts to reply to:
The UN is now pointless, there is a reason we don't pay our dues. Basically because voting is done in the assembly, it is run by the arab league and africa, who really just want to bash Israel (they passed 17 resolutions against israel last year or the year before), and the US for being allied w/ israel. The reason the french voted against Iraq is they wanted to flex their political muscle (they look powerful if they can stop the US) but they clearly failed.
We're in agreement about the UN, possibly for slightly different reasons though. I don't think the UN ever had a point or was justified in any way.
Current US policy is a response to the middle east, not a self-started initiative.
This is more than a bit disingenuous, and borderline bullshit. In 1949 we supported Colonel Husni az-Zaim in Syria, and he ended up turning agaisnt the US. Syria has essentially been screwed since our intervention there. In 1952 we first support Nasser in Egypt hoping he'll support us in anti-soviet actions. Instead he turns against us and then in '56 we rescinded foreign aid for the Aswan Dam, which he uses as a pretext to nationalize to Suez Canal. This causes a shitstorm with France, Israel and Britain, and oddly enough made us very popular with Arabs for about two minutes.
In '53 we help install the Shah in Iran, the Savak which were trained by the US overthrow the Shah and in the late 70s Iran turns against the US just as Syria did. In '58 we help overthrow the Iraqi royal family and help install Kassem as ruler of Iraq. He gets executed in '63 because he was a bloodthirsty bastard and we maneauver to support a little thing called the Ba'th Socialist Party in Iraq. There's a shitload of coups and in '76 Saddam Hussein emerges as ruler of Iraq, bloodily taking control of the very government we helped him install in the late 60s. 1958 is also the year we attempted to support the president of Lebanon from being overthrown, and that country has been fucked ever since.
Then oil is discovered in Libya and we support a young Muammar al-Khadafy, who after he achieves power turns against the US, says we're exploiting Arabs and procedes to nationalize the oil refineries in his country. He also persecutes the Jews and foreigners living there, taking their property, etc. In 1980 we support Iraq against Iran, Saddam invades Iran and the war lasts 8 years. We supply Hussein with weapons and intelligence. In '83 there's Lebanon to deal with, the bombing of the US barracks there. CIA agents attempt to kill Sheikh Fadlallah leader of the Hezbollah with a bomb. We end up killing/wounding just over three hundred civilians and not getting the Sheikh. In '86 we bomb Lybia and admit we're trading arms with Iran. Then comes Iraq I and II and we're into current territory. We supported the Taliban in '95 to try and end the civil war in Afghanistan
and to further the drug war in the Middle East, and we end up fighting them in our current war.
Current US policy in the Middle East is a
continuation of an idiotic policy of interventionsim, and to say they hate us because of cultural or religious differences is denying a history of misery we've brought upon that area, lasting more than half a century, which could do
nothing but give birth to extremists like Bin Laden.
I hear people all day claiming the US needs to change it's foreign policy on the middle east, but they never present a realistic alternative.
Agreed. This is because the bulk of criticism comes from the American left, which is ideologically foggy to begin with. The left was perfectly happy to use sactions to starve kids to death in Iraq under Clinton, but somehow thinks killing them directly with bombs under Bush is a bad thing. In fact I'd be willing to bet the number of civilians who died as a result of the sanctions was higher than the current war's civilian death count. Maybe it's an aesthetic disagreement, I haven't figured it out yet. One of the reasons I'm not so critical of Bush is because even though I think this problem is more than certainly of our own making, I see few if any coherent alternatives offerred.
No government has an obligation to other nations, governents have obligations to their own citizens - not the citizens of a foreign nation.
Governments serve themselves, not their citizens.