Vympel wrote:This notion that the US can save lives in other countries with its hectoring and more often than not blatantly hypocritical posturing (never mind its more serious meddling) is a fucking fantasy,
Because the
only way to encourage the development of democracy is by the feckless methods of the Bush administration, right?
and ridiculously presumptuous. People don't like it when other countries meddle in their fucking affairs.
It's true that some people are going to be displeased by US meddling. On the other hand it's morally and intellectually bankrupt to suggest that the USA should treat authoritarian gits like Robert Mugabe and Vladimir Putin exactly the same as Gordon Brown and Nick Sarkozy.
Oh please. The very fact that you point to Georgia's fake-ass democratic revolution as something that increased US soft-power points out what's wrong with this bullshit. The US got made to look fucking stupid by a regional piece of gnat-shit that ostentatiously tried to make itself an outpost of NATO, and that resulted in thousands of deaths when the dumbfucks in the Bush administration wrote rhetorical cheques noone was willing to cash.
More false dilemma bullshit. Because the Bush administration failed, we have to assume that the entire foreign policy initiative of encouraging democracy
must fail, even if it were conducted by an intelligent administration? Hey, the Bush administration failed in Katrina, that must mean the entire science of levee construction is inherently flawed!
The only thing that came out of the "Rose Revolution" was a fucking humiliation and worsening relations with Russia - and for who? Saaksahvili? Wow, what a great trade off that was!
As I criticized before, the Bush/McCain plan was indeed stupid. An administration prepared to deal realistically and fairly with Russia might have set stricter boundaries with Saakashvili viz. Russia, instead of unilaterally puffing him up and telling him he was going to get into NATO and thereby encouraging him to do something incredibly stupid. Had Georgia been handled as a potential in to the oil-producing Caucasus, instead of as an opportunity to piss off Russia to absolutely no result, a lot of people would still be alive and the USA would be in a better position.
And fucking Ukraine? Didn't you hear? The "Orange Revolution" is dead. Those shitstains who took over aren't bringing Ukraine to some glorious Western renaissance. They're using NATO membership to try and subjugate the significant portion of their population who want no part of them or their politics.
Did I argue that either revolution was 100% sweetness and light and every aspect of them fulfilled America's wildest dreams? Obviously not. I used Ukraine of an example of a emerging democratic state increasing US soft power in a region. Since I guess you didn't even try to dispute it in this case, and instead branched off into a tangent about the poor oppressed Crimeans and people on the right bank of the Dnieper, you're conceding that.
I'd also argue that, whereas Ukraine's move west might have something to do with trying to pull the rug out from under the easterners, it might also have something to do with the economic development that Europe could bring, and the promise of security from Russia (forced association with whom, let us not forget, got a few million Ukrainians killed in the 1920s). Might it also be that the apparent strength of the pro-Russian bloc (still an overall minority, of course) is somewhat due to the kind of malign interference in other nation's affairs which you decry, only this time on the part of Russia?
If democratic governments sprung up all over the Middle East tomorrow, nothing at all would be different.
Actually some states like Saudi Arabia would become more hostile to the USA overnight as democracies. Which is why, as I said above, it is important to use restraint and move intelligently in diplomacy rather than posturing and pursuing fixed courses in defiance of facts. But on balance democratic states tend to have positive relationships with the USA.
What a piss-weak argument that is. "The UK was willing to act like a bunch of douchebags, therefore there must be something to the accusations!"
So it's important to give Vladimir Putin the benefit of the doubt but deny it to the British government. Because obviously the more trustworthy of the two is Putin.
You know, people in this thread are talking about Russophobia, and maybe that is a problem, but it's definitely not
your problem.
That's a fucking outrageous claim.
But don't bother running it down or anything.
Okay, perhaps not the FSB specifically, but who else but the Russians had a reason to kill Litvinov, and could obtain and employ polonium to poison him?
Be realistic.
How's this for realistic: even if you're right and Litvinov was killed by martians, the UK thinks it was Russians, and the USA probably ought to trust and support it's oldest and best ally against a rival that we have no reason, no reason at all, to trust.
Even if your ridiculous argument that the FSB must have been responsible were true - and it's simply not - just what is the death of one shady shitstain by another shady shitstain worth, exactly? A stern rebuke? Sanctions? War?
The issue isn't
who was killed, the issue is sending a covert agent onto British territory to murder a dissident. Hard as it may be to believe, this is kind of a big deal. And thank you for putting words in my mouth by suggesting that I think it necessitates direct action, I never said that. I listed it as one of several reasons, patterns of behavior, that the United States wouldn't be pals with Russia.
Oh thatttt - you mean where Russia stopped selling gas to Ukraine at subsidized prices and Ukraine wouldn't foot the bill, so the supplies stopped - yes, let's dress that up as a sinister message to Western Europe as opposed to Russia deciding it wasn't going to subsidize more or less openly hostile governments.
It's funny how Russia abruptly voided binding prior agreements about the gas prices and demanded an increase of several hundred percent, shortly after Ukraine gave their rent-boy the boot and began cosying to the West, then only actually reduced pressure in the pipeline just a few days after European states attempted to use their influence to urge a reasonable settlement. And that even though Russia's energy treaty obligations with the EU would have (and indeed in practice
did) dictate that they would have to turn it back on after only a couple of days, meaning that the move would basically just produce a temporary energy shock in Europe. Oh my, it's almost as if they intended to do those things as a kind of threat and punishment. But they would
never do that, because they're such nice boys.