| |||||||||||
| |||||
| Re: Canada's Future Quote:
The United States Military in Iraq is composed of highly trained and motivated individuals conducting successful missions, while spectacularly meeting the operational goal of destroying the enemy, unlike the futile attempt of underachieving community college students and their related academic goals consisting of educational subsistence. |
| |||||
| Re: Canada's Future Quote:
List of states with nuclear weapons - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
| |||||
| Re: Canada's Future WHY THE US INVADED THE MIDDLE EAST INSTEAD OF CHINA Holiday, you had asked why the US had gone to war with the middle east instead of china. The middle east is one of those specific, strategic areas of the world where everything just seems to converge. If people are astonished by coalition troops in the middle east, then they haven’t looked too far back into history. The Macedonians tried in vain to hold onto the region to no prevail after the conquest of Alexander. The ancient Romans had the highest concentration of Legions along the eastern boundaries, the Mongol empire had been cautious when dealing with the middle east, the British had tried to hold Iraq and Afghanistan during the first and second world war (which is why the British occupy Basra today, not because it is just a given position to them, but because it has always been the British area of interest.) It’s even a problem for the locals. The people of Ur, the Persians, the Ottoman Turks (whose empire just fell a hundred years ago) have all tried and failed to hold some sort of structure in the region. People will say “it’s for oil” or “Bushes Dad told him to” or "war mongering!" No. The middle east has and will always be the locus of a major conflict every century (as it always has been) because it is a nexus point of civilizations and trade, etc. UNEASY RELATIONSHIP Also, the US will not go to war with china because it cannot…and vice versa. It’s not because of weaponry, armies, or that kind of thing… its economics. The Chinese government holds more than 70% of all government Treasury Bills and Bonds. Those Bonds pay for everything from the war in Iraq to the school lunches kids eat in the U.S. That is the dynamic of national debt and global credit. If China were to invade the US, they would lose Trillions of dollars in investments (nearly 30% of the contries net worth) because when a country declares war on the US, all foreign assets are seized. It would severely shake the economic health of China. The US on the other hand is one of China’s biggest trade partners. I’m sure you are aware…everything in the US comes from China. So when you hear Lou Dobbes ragging on exporting American and not to buy Chinese things, you are in a sense giving china more of a reason to invade. To tell the truth, this is only one more clue about the dangers of leftists. ASYMETRIC WEAPONS But the Chinese also know that the US is a superior aeronautical power. We have something in far greater numbers that they don’t… satellites. The Chinese have been on an accelerated fast track to develop their space program… but also their anti-space program. It was in the news for a little while about how the Chinese had launched a missile into space to hit a satellite. They were testing asymmetric weapons to even the field in case a war did break out. (the Chinese rent American satellite's)The US recently tested their own version of this. They have also stepped up their missile defense shield system development. NUKES Nuclear weapons are that one chess piece that everyone wishes they did not keep. The nuclear cache is a scare tactic more than an actual option. No responsible culture will ever use a nuclear weapon… especially today. Now I’m sure you say “never say never” but a nuclear weapon is something you can’t take back. The world pretty much agrees with this (the big boys club) but the fears are that the newbies to the club (North Korea, Pakistan, and now Iran) will use nuclear weapons irresponsibly. NOW. The US holds what is aptly referred to as the “nuclear umbrella.” This umbrella is a protection agreement between different countries and the US. A little less than 40% of the world is covered by this nuclear umbrella, from Japan to Iceland, to Canada (I think) to Puerto Rico, and beyond to place in Malaysia, etc. Now say if Iran nukes Israel, that nuclear umbrella has been punctured and the US is obligated by national treaty to retaliate “in fold.” “in fold” is probably the scariest thing you will hear if there is a nuclear war. It is the equivalent of “an eye for an eye.” Now say Iran launches a nuclear weapon at Israel and destroys 25% of the country. The US (by obligation and treaty) must retaliate by destroying 25% of Iran. A much bigger distance than Israel, but still 25%. It is proportionate and just (in the terms of the umbrella pact. Will the US do this? The first and formost rule of international law is "all treaties MUST BE OBSERVED" Stay tuned. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - VideCorSpoon for the above post! | ||
| |||||
| Re: Canada's Future Of course the U.S. only observes the treaties when convenient to national policy. As soon as an international agreement stands in the way the U.S. ignores it.
|
| |||||
| Re: Canada's Future Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
|
| The following users say: THANK YOU - Didymos Thomas for the above post! | ||
| |||||
| Re: Canada's Future Theaetetus, Does the US renege on minor treaties? Yes. Do they do it just because? No. But is it in the national interest to do so? Sure. The US assumes a utilitarian approach to these kinds of things. It is vital that “all international treaties be observed,” but it is also vital to uphold national interest. If they didn’t, we wouldn’t be around for very much longer. I cannot give the government that much credit to assume that they run about like a bully and break any promise they make. You have to ask yourself… if they were indeed like that, don’t you think other countries would pause before dealing with the US? Many if not all countries with the rare exception trade and hold assets in the US. So there is at least some credit for the promises the US makes. The US does occasionally bend a promise. But that’s their job. Sometimes those promises interfere with the overall good of the community. The government has a fiduciary duty to its citizens to represent their interests (like a lawyer on retainer). Didymos, I totally agree with you that the culture of china is spectacular, unfortunately the government is oppressive and ruthless. Its a shame that such a rich culture is suppressed the way it is. But even that is a relativistic statement on my part. Things may not be the way we perceive them because it is not our culture. Also the same is true for most countries that break treaties. But I have to agree with ruthless on his statement as far as the military is concerned. The US military is very efficient in its own way. It is not perfect, but what military organization is? This rings of Vietnam-istics, but look at what the military is doing. They are put in the middle of an entire theater against them and expected to solve a crisis that couldn’t be solved for thousands of years. Furthermore, the army is composed largely of citizen soldiers (reservists)! And further still, and this is a bit morbid, look at the ratio of losses the military is taking. I saw on the news that a military outpost was attacked in Afghanistan and 9 soldiers were killed. But the attackers sustained more than 100 causalities. More than ten to one losses for the enemy. Some of the most decisive wars in history never even came close to that number. The British in Afghanistan lost tens of thousands last time they attempted to hold Afghanistan in less time. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - VideCorSpoon for the above post! | ||
| |||||
| Re: Canada's Future Quote:
Quote:
The idea that the Middle East crisis is thousands of years old is bull. Sorry to say it. War has been a constant on every continent as long as man has been present. The current crisis in the Middle East is relatively modern stemming from the end of colonialism which began after the French and British split up the area after the Ottoman Empire collapsed under the Young Turk revolution. The ratio of death is irrelevant - the US maintained an equally impressive ratio in Vietnam. Vietnamese loses regularly approached 200,000 per year, but this didn't matter because the 200,000 North Vietnamese came of military age every year. The bottom line is that our military strategy in Iraq, and in Afghanistan, does not work. We need to adopt more effective anti-guerrilla tactics if we want to gain a real military advantage in these places - the problem is that this calls for an even more repressive stance towards the citizens of those nations. The British lost so many more troops in Afghanistan due to the military tactics of the period. That was, what, 160 years ago? And even the British faced constant, that is constant, bloody conflict with rebels - the British, like the US, forced the official government to surrender but never subdued the population. Heck, even the government that surrendered to the British waged constant war against rebels - just as nearly every ruler of Afghanistan has done. |
| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Didymos Thomas For This Useful Post: | ||
| |||||
| Re: Canada's Future Quote:
Quote:
Hallucinogen...I think that religion stops any possibility of winning the war. The people in the middle east are influenced by religion and the extremists view seizing power through religion. Religion fuels the apparent axiom of war in the middle east. Look at what Bush did with Israel. He advocated for Israel because there are more Jews in Manhattan than there are in Israel. Also, is it true that the US wants to invade Iran? ( I mean of course the gov.) It seems absurd, and Stephan Dion wants to as well. What kind of reasoning would persuade that. If war on Iran happens then surely the public would not even advocate for that, and for that kind of decision shouldn't there be a referendum? There's a good chance for conscription if it keeps up.
__________________ My country is the world and my religion is to do good. - Unsure who said this. |
| |||||
| Re: Canada's Future Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
If my government institutes a draft, I might have to crash your sofa for a while. Those bastards are not getting me to fight their war. One nukes - I wouldn't be so sure that no one wants to use them. Tactical nukes were considered against the Vietnamese some many occasions. First, US military advisers suggested their use against Vietnamese forces surrounding the French at Diem Bien Phu. Once the US became involved with troops on the ground, tactical nukes were regularly considered for use against Hanoi and other major NV positions. Maybe no one wants to use them, but when politicians and military leaders become blindly pragmatic, considering action on a day by day basis instead of looking at long term issues, nukes become a real option for them. Especially when the target doesn't have any. |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Future government | SummyF | Philosophy of Politics | 12 | 09-30-2008 08:15 PM |
| The Future. | Pessimist | Logic | 13 | 08-07-2008 01:00 PM |
| An Obligation to Future Generations? | iconoclast | Philosophy of Politics | 19 | 02-20-2008 08:53 PM |
| If You Want to See the Future... | Electra | Internet & Computers | 3 | 02-09-2007 08:51 PM |