Perinquus wrote:No, in other words, we supported him. We did not put him in power.
We gave him the weapons he needed to stay in power and expand. We created his regime as we know it today. Before we supported him, he couldn't have invaded Kuwait, couldn't have gassed Iranians and Kurds, couldn't have launched SCUDs at Israel. Whether we "created" him is mere semantics, and it's my fault for belaboring the point.
In the first place, you're oversimplifying the shit out of things. Not all the Afghans who were resisting the Soviets were Muslim fundies. In the second place, opposing Soviet aggression was the focus of American foreign policy for the entire Cold War. In the third place, arming and training people to resist a blatant act of aggression by another power is not something that I think the U.S. needs to apologize for. The fact that certain elements within the mujahedin later rose to take control of the entire country was not inevitable. You're armchair quarterbacking with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight.
*snip my quotes about OBL*
Again, you're oversimplifying. The religious wackos were not the whole group, and in the case of Bin Laden, his extremism was not as apparent at that time, nor was he as prominent within the mujahedin as he later came to be. At the time, allowing the Soviets to expand their sphere of influence and take over another country seemed like a pretty bad idea at the time as well.
I can see we're getting sidetracked. This is a whole different debate. Points 4, 5, and 6 conceeded for efficacy.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote: Ostriches don't bury their heads in the sand; that's an old wives' tale.
Maybe not, but you do.
No, I just see other countries as being no better than the United States. I have condemned actions of the U.S. in the past, and will continue to do so.
Not in this thread. You can't expect me to have read and remembered your other posts in other threads.
The difference is, I also condemn other countries for their misdeeds, and don't see them as any more morally righteous. You do, apparently, since you're the one who claimed other countries have had "shifts in their modes of thinking. They don't do that stuff anymore, unlike us." This is just absurd. Other countries are just as cynical and motivated by self interest as they ever have been. They're just as willing to screw other people and other countries as they ever have been when they see themselves as having something to gain. If you think otherwise, you're naive.
Notice the strawman. I said that European nations had largely abandoned Machiavellian dog-eat-dog philosophies, not that they're aren't motivated by self-interest or that their business practices and politics aren't as shady as they've ever been. There's a difference between dishonest business and politics and invasions, airstrikes, and propping up of brutal anti-democratic regimes. The former is universal, the latter is uniquely American at this point in time.
Also notice the attempts to shift the topic from "should other countries be afraid of America?" and its logical successor "how should we reform American foreign policy?" to "is America worse than other countries and other past empires?", a question I never asked and a proposition I never supported.
Bullshit. I've said over and over again the U.S. deserves to be criticized for anything it does wrong
First I've heard of it.
but that I am irked by other countries not getting an equal share of condemnation when they do so, and that they should be viewed just as critically as the U.S., which they often are not.
We're not talking about other countries, despite your repeated attempts at subject change. If this thread were about some other country, I'd be happy to talk about all their faults and atrocities. Not to indulge a hijacking, but the reason we never talk about the faults of the USSR, French and British imperialism (Falklands war, anyone?), is because no one's making up bullshit excuses for them.
Those "dozens of failures" were not analogous to the current situation, which is analogous to the post-WWII occupations of Germany, Italy, and Japan - U.S. troops in this case, as after WWII have overrun and occupied a foriegn country whose government has been dismantled. This situation did not obtain in other countries where we propped up particular rulers during the Cold War.
I know Iraq stands a good chance of being a success story. I spent several paragraphs talking about it, remember?
Wake up and smell the coffee. We were already in danger. In case you're a little hazy on your sequence of events, let me remind you of a few things. Before all the recent U.S. saber rattling, before the war on Iraq saw our relations with some of our allies turn chilly, before all the accusations of Geo. W. Bush being an arrogant, unilateralist cowboy were being thrown around, we were attacked on September 11th, 2001. I should think that would make it unmistakably clear that we were in danger already, whether you personally felt threatened or not.
The chances of being victimized by terrorism were significantly less than the chances of being hit by lightning. You're thousands of times more likely to die in a car crash. Now that Bush has thrown rocks at every hornets' nest in sight, the chance of future large-scale attacks has been increased exponentially, which leads me to re-iterate that Bush has put us all in danger. Even disregarding Bush and talking about US foreign policy in general, events like 9/11 are what happens when you follow Realpolitik, making deals with devils and playing dangerous men as pawns.
Time for a reality check here. The fanatical Muslims hate us already. It's not Bush's fault.
No, it's not. But now a lot of the
moderate muslims and non-muslims hate us too, and that
is Bush's fault.
It took about two years to plan the 9/11 attack. This means they were already putting it into motion before the "arrogant cowboy" was ever in office. They don't hate us for the particulars of our foreign policy; they just hate us for who and what we are. In the words of Hussein Massawi, former leader of Hezbollah: ''We are not fighting so that you will offer us something. We are fighting to eliminate you. The Islamists have no negotiable demands, and no conceivable changes to U.S. policy will deflect them. And the more inventively you try to ''explain'' the Islamist psychosis as a rational phenomenon to be accommodated, the more you risk sounding just as nutty as them.
I've heard this argument before. They hate us for our freedoms, they're jealous because we have choice and democracry and because we're secular heathens. Either that or the more subtle variation: They hate the West because it's part of their culture and they can't let go of history. Either way, you realize it's bullshit as soon as you remember that there are other Western countries that are just as wealthy as us, freer than us (Patriot Act means we're no longer the Land of the Free), more secular than us (less fundies), and yet none of them are the Great Satan. We are. Your theory does not fit the facts.
So what? Bill Clinton never even tried to get U.N support before he bombed Kosovo fro 77 days. I don't remember all this endless round of condemnation about that little adventure.
*rubs temples* What the fuck does Clinton have to do with anything? Can I take this red herring as a concession that Bush doesn't listen to advice?
We shouldn't have to go crawling to the U.N., hat in hand, to get permission to act in our own national interests. And I'm sorry, but I think the moral approval of an organization that puts a country like Libya at the chair of a human rights commission isn't worth spit.
OK, but remember that what's good for the goose is good for the gander. If we have the right to act unilaterily against Iraq, then China has the right to act unilaterily against Taiwan, North Korea has the right to act against South Korea, etc. Is that what you really want?
Since you do seem inclined to argue that the U.S. behaves worse than other countries, who supposedly have had "shifts in their modes of thinking", and "don't do that stuff anymore, unlike us", I don't think it is inappropriate of me to refute that line of argument.
And you still haven't addressed the point, which I can't even remember anymore. Your diversion tactics worked, you can pat yourself on the back. Now let me go re-read and refresh my memory.
Ahh yes, the Kurds. The Kurds will get screwed, they will be granted things that will later be taken away from them, maybe by force. You apparently think this is honkey dorey because the British did it to the Czechs before my father was born. It was wrong when the British did it, and it will be wrong when we do it. Comparisons with other countries in the context of this discussion is irrelevant. A wrong act is wrong no matter what.
Good lord! You're not seriously comparing the U.S. with Switzerland with regard to foreign policy. A continent-spanning superpower and a tiny little landlocked country? Could you possibly find two more dissimilar nations among the first world countries?
OK, so it was a bad analogy. The point is that while Realpolitik works in the short run, in the long run it's a disaster, and while it seems at the time that installing favorable regimes, making deals with militant fundamentalists who oppose your enemies, etc. will help the country, it always comes back and bites you in the ass eventually (9/11 being a tragic example). Realpolitik has benefits in the short run, but fast forward a few decades and you start to see the catastrophes, culminating with the toppling of the empire and its replacement. If the country hadn't aspired to be an empire in the first place, the citizens would be wealthier, happier, and more of them would be alive. Live by the sword, die by the sword.
I will agree that it would certainly be nice for us to be well liked and be the enemy of no one. Now it's time to come back down to earth. You cannot get as large and powerful as we are, and have interests in as many corners of the world as we do, and not make enemies.
No, but if you refrain from killing people for economic interests, those animosities wouldn't have flared up violently like they have and are.
Even Europe, though it may settle many of its internal differences, is going to find its interests conflicting with those of other countries in other parts of the world. And the E.U. will promote those interests just as selfishly as the U.S. promotes its interests.
Maybe. Maybe not. That doesn't change the reality that the US can't be trusted as an ally.
Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:Realpolitik flows logically from its premises, but it's premises are fucked up. As they say, the proof is in the pudding, and what the US and other countries that use Realpolitik are serving tastes like shit.
Hey, welcome to the real world.
Welcome to the real world, indeed. Now that we understand it, let's try and improve it.
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