Is the US going to get involved again, and will Cameron be standing shoulder to shoulder?
The Middle East/Iraq
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostIs the US going to get involved again, and will Cameron be standing shoulder to shoulder?
(Iraq, by the way).
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Richard Barrett
From The Nation:
... here are five straightforward lessons—none acceptable in what passes for discussion and debate in [the USA]—that could be drawn from that last half century of every kind of American warfare:
1. No matter how you define American-style war or its goals, it doesn’t work. Ever.
2. No matter how you pose the problems of our world, it doesn’t solve them. Never.
3. No matter how often you cite the use of military force to “stabilize” or “protect” or “liberate” countries or regions, it is a destabilizing force.
4. No matter how regularly you praise the American way of war and its “warriors,” the US military is incapable of winning its wars.
5. No matter how often American presidents claim that the US military is “the finest fighting force in history,” the evidence is in: it isn’t.
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Originally posted by jean View PostThe only problem is that it was the original invasion (misguided as it was) that caused or exacerbated what is being experienced now.
That being so, if a request for help from the Iraqi government is ignored or denied, isn't that an abrogation of responsibility?
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by jean View PostThe only problem is that it was the original invasion (misguided as it was) that caused or exacerbated what is being experienced now.
That being so, if a request for help from the Iraqi government is ignored or denied, isn't that an abrogation of responsibility?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIf the US government were now to say "let's spend the money we would have spent on killing people on rebuilding the infrastructure of your country, giving you a reason to support our supposedly peaceful and democratic way of doing things" - assuming anyone would believe them, which most reasonable people would find extremely difficult given past form - that would be taking their responsibilities seriously. But the chances of this are approximately zero.Last edited by ahinton; 13-06-14, 12:40.
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Perhaps the concept of 'war' has changed. The idea of two powers pitting themselves against each other and stopping when one side admits defeat seems to have no meaning. In the case of nuclear war the likely outcome would be mutual annihilation, but leaving that aside, does conventional warfare exist any more? Dissident factions have learned that attrition works, and they can never be 'defeated' in the traditional sense. They just need to melt away, re-group and maybe re-name themselves. The major powers' armed forces, OTOH, are still trained and maintained as battle-winning entities
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostPerhaps the concept of 'war' has changed. The idea of two powers pitting themselves against each other and stopping when one side admits defeat seems to have no meaning. In the case of nuclear war the likely outcome would be mutual annihilation, but leaving that aside, does conventional warfare exist any more?
In answer to your initial question, though, I'd like to think that any attempt by Cameron to join Obama in some kind of military escalation in Iraq is going to fail like the idea to "intervene" in Syria did.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostNot since the war in Vietnam in fact. And, as you say, the "major powers" appear not to have realised that; but actually their bloated "defence" industries exist more to make enormous profits than for any reason connected with defence, and their lobbyists carry more weight than the realities of 21st-century conflict so I don't imagine the situation is going to change any time soon. On the other hand, while the US and other military powers aren't able to "win wars" they certainly are able to spread death, destruction and misery as well as they ever could.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIn answer to your initial question, though, I'd like to think that any attempt by Cameron to join Obama in some kind of military escalation in Iraq is going to fail like the idea to "intervene" in Syria did.Last edited by ahinton; 13-06-14, 15:10.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI thought this was a very interesting article, which seems to make a good job of outlining the current crisis.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostTrue, thanks for the link, except that (being in the Economist) the article does seriously downplay the role of the USA and its satellites in creating the conditions for the present situation to evolve, don't you think?
You certainly have to read everything on situations such as this with more than one eye on who is feeding lines, whose interests are being served, and so on. Governments and others are very good at getting their message into the mainstream and treated as "givens".
I do think it is probably a very difficult task to describe the evolving situation in the area clearly , and to provide a serious historical context risks the writer embarking on a book rather than article.
One problem I suspect is that there are myriad interests at play on the American side alone. CIA, arms manufacturers, politicians with domestic agendas, wider US foreign policy goals (!!!) military leaders, oil and engineering powers, and so on and so on. Disentangling even these is certainly hard enough.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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The current position, according to news programmes last evening, is that Cameron has opted out of 'boots on the ground' but offered intelligence co-operation (big deal...it's all shared anyway) but Obama hasn't ruled anything out. He did sound far less gung ho than his predecessors, and my bet is that he'll deploy air or rocket power....stuff which doesn't mean body bags (American ones, that is).
One incredibly knowledgeable interviewee pointed out that all the Middle-East problems arise from the lines in the sand drawn by the Brits and the French in the last century; lines which ignored racial and religious boundaries. In his opinion it would have been best for these to be sorted out (e.g. fought over) without Western interference. All well and good, except for the West's dependence on oil....oh and maybe Israel's expansionism, and...well it's probably more complicated than we can ever know.Last edited by ardcarp; 14-06-14, 08:18.
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