Differentiate then. What's the real difference? The only difference I see is the state carries out one bunch of acts, a non state the other. Targetting innocents? Destroying water supplies and logistic routes that lead to starvation, that kind of non targetting? Applying sanctions that starve millions, that kind of non targetting? And even allowing this, why are military not considered innocents? I have a hard time believing donning the uniform of your country and swearing to defend it automatically qualifies you as evil and not worth a consideration before blowing you to hell.
The US isn't targeting water supplies or imposing sanctions for no reason, or for fun, or for its own benefit even. THe US imposes sanctions because someone is threatening an ally or the US itself. You can't piss on any country, and expect no reaction.
If Iran threatens the US, or France and Israel, then you can't expect sanctions to NOT take place. There's nothing immoral about stopping trade with N. Korea; yes, it means civilians die, but we're not the bad guy, we didn't threaten them. THey made the decision to piss on their civilians, and threaten us.
Military ARE considered innocents, in a way. Unless you are taking part in war crimes, you're not held responsible for fighting in war. Why? You give up your personal beliefs when you swear in to the military, and take an oath to follow all legal orders.
I would be, because it is wrong to begin with. Arguing over the method of the war's execution is like comparing two different methods of rape. Had we followed the recomendations of the military we could give ourselves a huge thumbs up for successfully invading a sovereign nation which posed no threat to us whatsoever. Oh goody. One of the most successful tricks employed by the NeoCons is to shift argument to the method of execution of the war and to shift discussion away from the fact that it was ****ing wrong to begin with. This confuses the issue of basic policy. Rape does not become acceptable if you wear a condom. Invading a sovereign nation that posed no threat to you does not become acceptable if you limit human and equipment losses.
Look: Iraq, Libya, Syria, and Iran all are/were unfriendly to the West; all are/were trying to develop nukes, or find nukes, or otherwise dabble in activities which very well could endanger the US or our allies. Saddam hadn't been involved for quite some time, but I'm not sure he wouldn't have utilized something developed by another country. The fact is we're now down to one ME country which ma pose a threat to the WEst (down from 4, after Israel eliminated a budding Syrian nuke plant in '07). I'd call this a good thing.
See, the US didn't become involved in ME politics for no reason. Contrary to popular opinion, the US didn't have much at all to do with ISrael until the late 70's. France and Britain supplied Israel's nuke program, and Eastern Europe supplied the arms. The US became involved when the USSR began courting Arab countries more heavily and expanding their influence. The US responded by courting Israel, Egypt, Jordan, etc; these countries are willing partners in the deal, as they understand the US is far more fun than the USSR, and the US, in turn, gains more than we'll ever know from the deal, including intelligence, technology, etc. Whether countering the threat from communism was necessary is a subject for another time.
We did rape Iraq, unfortunately. I'm pretty critical of the invasion and the 100k+ Iraqis it killed. The US killed more Arabs in 5 years than Israel killed in its history, with 7 wars. That's ****ed, bull****, and wrong. However, I still am on the fence as to whether the end goal was wrong, it was just the implementation which was wrong. Only history will tell. I think you and I will just have to agree to disagree.
Historic myopia. We 'liberated' them from the very dictator we saddled them with decades ago.
True. BUt we can't allow past indiscretions to dictate future action. WE need to learn from history, but not allow it to hinder progress (again, not implying Iraq was 'progress', necessarily, just a general statement).
Hence the problem with NeoCon foreign policy; it relies on people not examining any history more than five minutes old. If we hadn't installed the murderous brutal ****, we wouldn't have had to come back and 'liberate' the Iraqis later. And if our current military actions make us the source of their liberation, why don't our previous actions in installing Saddam make us responsible for his murderous and brutal rule and all the people who died during his reign? You can't have it both ways. When you're ****ing a woman any time you fail to get her off or when you cum too soon is just as much on your record as when you make her scream. You don't get to just acknowledge the times she cums and ignore all the rest. This is double speak extraordinaire from the right on this issue. If we are their saviors now, we are just as legitimately responsible for their brutalization over the years at the hands of the dictator we helped install.
Of course we're responsible. Absolutely. By that standard, the Iraq invasion was righting a wrong, and it comes back to botching the implementation, not the original goal being bad.
One intervention leads to another, and another, and another, and another, and another, and another, and another, and another, and another, and another, etc., etc., etc., etc., etc., etc., etc., etc. All of which serves the purpose of the policy-makers because all actions are seen as right or at least arguably justifiable in their current circumstances. Until you take a longer look at history and note that the current proposed intervention is just another in a long series of prior interventions, all of which could have been avoided if we'd have just minded our own ****ing business.
I'm not a libertarian, or a historian. I really don't know what a purely, consistently isolationist policy would have brought the US and the world over the last 100 years. My gut says we, and the world, would be far far poorer place if we had not gotten involved as we have. I really don't know, I'll have to think about it.
I still believe strongly that the US, on the scale of world super-powers throughout history, has done far more good, and far less bad than any other super-power; and that the US is inordinately generous with it's largesse and success.
I know it's simplistic, but I'm not one to ignore those in need, or stand by while others are harmed. Looking on as others suffer and are abused is wrong, if you have the ability to help. The question is, where do you draw the line.
Actually it is that simple, because the flip side is the irrational claim that US foreign policy can have no negative consequences. The plain reality is that in any country over there is a spectrum of ideology and feelings toward the US, and our policies over there can have no other effect but to push those on the margins either against us even further to the extremist side or to enahnce whatever support they feel. Which feeling do you honestly think is more prevelant, and thus, which will our policies help support in the end? We are in effect subsidizing hatred of the US with our actions, and as such we will get more of it.
I never made the claim about consequences. Every action has consequences, including inaction. You can't assume inaction or un-involvement is always superior. You need to take each action on a case-by-case basis. Everything else is folly.
You can't say 'we are subsidizing hatred with our actions'. A true statement would be 'some of our actions subsidize hatred', or 'our actions subsidize hatred among some people', but no action has the same effect on all people in every instance. A great many Iraqis are/were happy we ousted SAddam. They're just unhappy we ****ed it up.
If the US became isolationist, there'd still be hatred for the US. It wouldn't go away. This leads to a discussion of radical Islam, which I'd rather not enter.
I disagree. You can not do good by doing evil.
I find it a stretch to call anything we did in Kosovo 'evil'. That's like saying I'm evil for killing the armed mugger of a passersby in his defense. There is a time for everything under the sun. I'm Jewish: I'm not saddled with 'turn-the-other-cheek' teachings.

I'm not religious, but in Jewish law, there are very few things (2, IIRC) you CAN'T do to save a human life. That's 616 commandments you MUST break, to save a life.
What's more, where is the constitutional authority for Kosovo? I see nothing in that document giving our government the power and responsibility for policing the world. I see every reason against it; the frames did not want a standing army because they new the very presence of a standing army was an inducement to use it.
You raise good points, re the Constitution. Random policing is one thing; watching others suffer because it's 'not our problem' is another; and not getting involved when it is in our countries best interest, because it's against the Constitution, is something else too. There are a lot of grey areas there, and I'm no lawyer. I believe the Constitution has been pissed on, yes, but I also believe the Constitution, being written by humans, may also be flawed, and may not cover every eventuality, either. I'll freely admit I'm not knowledgeable to comment on every instance.
Not the issue. It is not our ****ing problem. Nor is it our problem or our purview to decide for them what is and is not an appropriate means of defense for the land they claim is theirs. I don't agree with their methods either but I'm not the one insisting we insert ourselves into a centuries old war where there's enough bull**** on all sides to make choosing allies a decision between which stench is less offensive. That's the problem with getting involved in foreign conflicts; by chosing sides you also chose an enemy; you really don't have a ****ing clue who is right or not, or how those stands may have changed over time. Let them fight it out and who ever is left standing, be friendly with them. The wisdom of the founders shines brightly when George Washington warned us, and I'm paraphrasing here, to "stay the **** out of foreign ****holes where we will get entangled and involved in a whole host of bull**** we don't ****ing need," or words to that effect.
Good points.
Why? Aren't these democracies? Aren't those people the ultimate decision makers in reality? All terrorists have done is make an honest assessment of where their limited resources are best spent for effect, and they're right. There is no legitimacy in nondefensive violence to begin with. Are you honestly suggesting rules for how to acceptably massacre people? It's okay if it's incidental to another goal like taking out a power station or something? Nonsense. That's the rhetoric of kids who think there are 'rules' to fighting and then complain when their opponent wins by kicking them in the balls.
It's effective is what it is. And for good reason. We threaten what they hold most dear, they threaten what we hold most dear. Their mistake is in truly conflating the people and the government as one. If they'd realize their mistake there and start attacking government slugs and elected officials they'd see change real quick. As it is they target us because they are under the mistaken belief that we truly have a say in how our governments act.
No, I'm suggesting rules on how to behave as a human. I believe it's OK to protect me and mine, and yours too, with violence. There must be a means to the end, and it must be with respect to the lives you are taking. If someone hurt my children, I wouldn't hesitate to kill them by any means possible. I would not, however, torture them.
Believe me, I understand terrorists thought process. It's flawed. Blowing up children on purpose is inhuman, and reprehensible by any standard. But even moreso, it hardens MY resolve against them, and whatever reason they had to display outrage becomes incidental and meaningless.
The US parked troops on Saudi soil with Saudi permission. OBL's Islamist little soul saw that as an affront to the supremacy that he sees as Islam, so he killed 2500 US civilians on the other side of the planet.
Imagine how differently we'd see things if he had attacked the SAudi royal family, in protest, or even the US troops based there. At some point, we'd capitulate and run. But attack our men, women, and children HERE, in their beds, so to speak? Oh no you didn't, OBL. All bets are now off. Same for Israel: If the Palestinians had limited attacks to IDF troops only, they'd likely have a LOT more world sympathy, as well as Israeli sympathy, and Israel might have already capitulated. But see a baby's guts hanging from a Tel Aviv tree, sheets of skin hanging from a balcony, and blood pooled in the street, like I have, and guess what? You leave me no opportunity, no wiggle room. I'm coming.
That's the game, and those are the rules.
There's room to discuss what the Islamists hold dear, here, but again, I'd rather not. Suffice it to say: I don't give a **** what they hold dear, there's no room in this world for their thinking, just as there's no room in the world for the thinking of Christianity circa 1450.
Yeah, if only other people would live by your standards and rules, the world would be a better place
.
:lol: Please. I don't give a **** what you do, as long as you are human as you go about it.
Then why the massive difference in body counts? Or is it okay to kill innocents so long as it's the result of a UN sanction with the 'intentions' of getting rid of Saddam?
Since when was a bodycount the standard by which legitimacy is judged? Since when did the 'legitimate' side have to have a lower bodycount than the 'non-legitimate' side?
The sanctions weren't imposed to kill innocents. Saddam made the choices he did, and he's responsible for those deaths. He could have fed those people, but chose to build gold palaces and cutting edge underground bunkers and superguns.
Since when were we required to do business with someone? Let's say you walk into my store, and mouth off, maybe threaten another customer; the cops haul you off to a night in county, and you get stabbed, is it my fault? Screw you and your big mouth, ass. Saddam mouthed off, threatened others, and undertook illegal activity; we ceased to do business with him. **** him and his threats. We didn't kill them, nor did the sanctions; he did.
I'm also not convinced on the water boarding issue. Is it unpleasant? Yeah, no doubt. Torture? Not sure on that one.
Eh, I read the accounts of some people who had been water-boarded, as well as psychologists who had viewed it. After reading that, I believe it is torture. This doesn't change my view on torture, I'd just lump water-boarding under that heading. Apparently it breaks people RIGHT NOW.