Guardsman Bass wrote:A multi-polar world wasn't exactly good for Russia the last time it came around, now was it (i.e. pre- and during World War 2)? What makes you so confident, particularly since the technology to counter nuclear delivery systems (like ABM) is advancing quite rapidly as well?
ABM can't counter all means of nuclear weapon delivery. There are still countless ways to kill your enemy with nukes. Besides, ABM isn't easy and only major powers embark on such ventures. Until all of them have such a dense screen that not a single of a thousand nukes will fall through, means of delivery will probably shift towards ones which are non-interceptable or hardly interceptable by ABM.
You think so? I think it's the opposite, since the means of stopping those weapons is proliferating as well (ABM technology). Although no nation really wants to be the first one to re-open the use of nuclear weapons, once one of them actually does it (even on a small scale), you could see small ones being used tactically.
So defense is proliferating. It's still lacking behind the offense. And seriously, are you saying the proliferation of anti-nuclear defense is a very good thing since it would allow large wars to happen without the threat of nuclear holocaust preventing the hotter heads from starting a war?
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In that case America, the prime pusher of an all-world encompassing space and sea based ABM around the whole world, should be the first to stop building it's ABM and show others an example
What about the period from 1945-1960, when we had pretty much overwhelming nuclear superiority? Sure, you might have been able to lob what you had at an army, but that's it - and you'd be squashed from the US's nukes in the process.
What of it? I think you valued Europe too much to just allow us crush it like a bug. But then, you also constantly exaggerated our nuclear abilities to build your own, so I guess you also needed us as bogeyman for internal policy goals ("bomber gap" and "missile gap" lies propelling people to power and giving enormous sway over military aquisitions
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). And a bogeyman is no longer bogey when you kill his population, right?
Despite all the talk about this being a severe economic crisis, we have yet to reach the point here where it even approaches the severe recessions of the late 1970s and early 1980s, much less a Great Depression. Hell, even Iraq hasn't exactly broken us; Vietnam was much worse in terms of US casualties and damage to morale, and we recovered.
Oh, I'm not talking about your nation breaking down like it did in 1929.
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I'm talking about your nation losing the perceived role of the "all-wise leader", perceived being the key issue. Your authority even in Europe is shaken dramatically, I'm not even speaking about the Second and Third World which is increasingly defying your will (just a decade earlier it was in complete and utter submission to whatever you proposed, military bases, trade agreements, corporate rape, etc.).
It's not a talk about the collapse of the USA, but about the collapse of your authority as the "sole superpower".
Kane Starkiller wrote:Being one of the few developed countries with a strong population growth (US population is expected to rise from 305 million today to 439 million in 2050)
Population growth can be as much a factor of growth as a factor of poverty and social strife. It depends on the ability to integrate a growing population into industrial economy. The US currently is coping... uh... badly.
Kane Starkiller wrote:a large usable territory (compared to Canada majority of which is frozen wasteland or Australia mostly covered in desert)
Europe, Russia, China, India, Latin America have plenty of usable territory.
Kane Starkiller wrote:being the only major power native to both Pacific and Atlantic and sitting in the center of transpacific and transatlantic trade US has every predisposition to keep it's status as an undisputed superpower for a forseeable future.
"Foreseeable future"? "Superpower"? If the US economy is rivalled in size by other economies, or even surpassed, what would that mean? It's still the "sole superpower"? This can happen in our lifetime.
Kane Starkiller wrote:Ecomomic crises come and go, certainly this one is not comparable to the one that happened to Russia in 1998 yet it managed to bounce back.
Actually, what makes you think that way? The fact that Russia's economy was already pummeled in 1991-1992 and was very small compared to the US, made the crisis more severe. It's a general rule, the smaller is an economy, the heavier would the effects of a crisis be felt. The US economy is large, and thus it can take lots of damage.
But that's not the issue. The issue is the fall from a leadership position, not the destruction of the US or some other nonsense. The fall from a leading position is all to evident - at first the nation loses trust, even from it's partners (that happened to British Empire and late USSR as well). Then it loses the perceived leader status, i.e. it's unquestionable authority on things like economy, social order, trade etc. are first viewed with suspicion, and then outright rejected.
This is also happening and it's happening rapidly. US foreign policy was rebuffed by Europe, and most nations foolish enough to embark on Iraq now left the debacle; the US economic policy that led us to the current crash, was and is under strong criticism from Europe, and Europe in fact is in the process of rebuilding it's bank system along new lines, which includes scrapping the concepts the US is so fond of and which it peddled through the world. The "freetrade" frenzy is dying down, and more and more nations turn to protectionism and government investment in at least some crucial sectors, seeing how the US basically screwed them over. It's more evident in the Third World where leaders take over natural resources, massively raise taxes on foreign corporations exploiting their resources, and so on. The same situation is seen in the Second World.
The US is not collapsing - but it is losing it's perceived status, the trust connected with this status. And the loss of actual superpower status after the perception is lost is not a long way to go. British Empire and the WARPAC dismembered in short timeframes - and it wasn't for a lack of military capability to kick someone in the nuts. A lack of trust was paramount - and in causing the severe economic problems as well.