Well, put it this way.Destructionator XIII wrote:Well, it depends on if they believe your threat or not. If they do, it won't come to that.Simon_Jester wrote:But then bin Laden would have gotten away already and we'd be bombing the crap out of them just to prove that we don't take bullshit. Which would be kind of a waste, compared to actually chasing bin Laden.
Very important realization with threats though is they need to believe you when you say you're going to do it.... but they also need to believe you when you say you aren't going to do it.
If it was me, I like to think I could make people believe me like that. I think, if it was you assuming you really stick to your avowed ideas about how to do things... people wouldn't believe your threats. And you'd wind up having to do nasty things just to prove you could, which is probably worse than doing nasty things because someone wronged you.
Maybe. I'm not sure what read I'd put on that chain of events in hindsight. And to be honest, I was more worried about eleventh grade and my broken ankle at the time.If they think they're screwed anyway (or of the demands are so outrageous they may as well be screwed), there's no incentive to cooperate.
That's the big problem with President Bush's strategy. He made it very clear that he wasn't going to put up with their bullshit... but, at the same time, he didn't give them much of a way out.
Frankly, it's about "real politics." That is, politics about things that are real, not things that aren't.Now, I don't know what Realpolitik actually means, but if it is about power, let's put ourselves in their shoes. Suppose you're a powerful guy, or consider yourself to be one.
Only ignorant people try to translate it as "burning ambition for ULTIMATE ALL-POWERFUL POWAH at any cost! Do you hear me? ANY COST!"
To tell the truth, the importance I attach to giving people a face-saving way out depends on how much I think their face deserves saving.And a few days later, it became "show us the evidence and your allies can have him" (Oct 17).
Obviously, they were willing to budge in the offers, but they still wanted something out of it.
Refusing to give some kind of face-saving way out misses the pride aspect of power. We should have showed them the evidence and crossed the next bridge when we came to it.
Maybe I'm wrong, maybe their budging was just more bullshit, but we should have tried.
Some countries, yeah, cut them some slack. But for all I care, the Taliban can go spray acid on their faces like some of their guys do to teenage schoolgirls they don't like. I feel the same way about other regimes too, some of them US allies- but I definitely feel that way about the Taliban.