ulukinatme
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Middle East is one big pain in the ***.
Don't we have enough of our own problems? Where did we sign on to be world police? Isn't that more the United Nations role?
Don't we have enough of our own problems? Where did we sign on to be world police? Isn't that more the United Nations role?
Perhaps, yes, we do have enough of our own problems. But at the end of the day, the United States represents itself to the rest of the world as the nation with the biggest influence and power (both economic, political, and militarily); essentially, based on our actions in the last century we're the self-appointed democratic beacon of light in the world. Not only can you gain from the world what we do and not have any responsibility towards maintaining it, but the US simply cannot hold themselves out to be some shining example of democracy without having some sort of responsibility uphold the principles underlying that in major world crises.
I'm not necessarily saying that Syria is the right example or time to do so, but the argument that we should just "mind our own business" because we have our own problems just isn't feasible in the modern era and quite simply, with the way that we have conducted our affairs, would be hypocritical and wrong.
The reason nothing will ever be fully resolved in the middle east is because the hatred there isn't "by country", the hatred there is by faction, religion, tribe, and thousands of years of history. They have borders on the countries, but the different factions exists in every one of them. Take one dictator out, another one with a different agenda will appear.
Like i said America as a country has an obligation to defend civiliians due to our large amount of resources. Killing kids in a school is not ok by any standards. Does rolling into Syria make me nervous? Yes, Do i think we should allow this to continue? Absolutely not
Looks like France is ready to go:
BBC News - France's Hollande backs US on Syria action
This is a damned if you do, damned if you don't situation. We have people on this site who love to assume that America has an exterior motive outside of helping civilians. I assume you are the people who say we didn't do enough to help Haiti as well. Just so every one knows, i fully support us helping the people of Syria. We cant allow children as well as adults to be hit with chemical weapons, as a country we just cant sit and watch this unfold
I'm telling you, man.... and i'm not a conspiracy theorist. You can clearly see that something is up. China and Russia both walked out of the UN and then Syria chemical bombs a school the very next day? They didn't even try to hide it. Before that, they even let the UN investigate them when they had to have known that the UN would discover obvious chemical attacks.
I'm worried that China, Russian and Syria are in cahoots. That would be a very bad deal for us.
I called it. Ratheon stock has been rising for 2 months.06-25-2013, 12:24 PM
Replies: 566
Government Spying on Millions (Verizon)
Views: 16,806
Posted By Cackalacky
Don't worry about Russia and China. We will be...
Don't worry about Russia and China. We will be seeing them in Syria soon enough.
For the record, I think US interests alone, let alone the humanitarian aspects, permit action, assuming (and this is a big if) we have appropriate and reasonably achievable goals and a logical legitimate follow up plan, undertaken with a full assessment of collateral problems. These are not always easy criteria to meet, as we all know. Of course, sometimes you need to act in direct national self defense (think Pearl Harbor), but that isn't this case.
I am still not convinced that it was the Assad government and not the insurgents who used the nerve gas. The only side that would gain if we intervened is the insurgents.
- Even if we wanted to intervene for humanitarian reasons, we'd still have to pick a side-- foreign jihadists v. brutal secular dictator is a no-win situation for us; and
- Any definition of "US interests" that could justify going to war here is so broad as to be meaningless;
- Even if we wanted to intervene for humanitarian reasons, we'd still have to pick a side-- foreign jihadists v. brutal secular dictator is a no-win situation for us; and
- Given the massive amount of misinformation that was deliberately disseminated in order to generate support for the invasion of Iraq, we ought to be extremely skeptical of any justifications for intervention we're hearing now, especially from the Executive branch.
- Any definition of "US interests" that could justify going to war here is so broad as to be meaningless;
- Even if we wanted to intervene for humanitarian reasons, we'd still have to pick a side-- foreign jihadists v. brutal secular dictator is a no-win situation for us; and
- Given the massive amount of misinformation that was deliberately disseminated in order to generate support for the invasion of Iraq, we ought to be extremely skeptical of any justifications for intervention we're hearing now, especially from the Executive branch.
- Any definition of "US interests" that could justify going to war here is so broad as to be meaningless;
- Even if we wanted to intervene for humanitarian reasons, we'd still have to pick a side-- foreign jihadists v. brutal secular dictator is a no-win situation for us; and
- Given the massive amount of misinformation that was deliberately disseminated in order to generate support for the invasion of Iraq, we ought to be extremely skeptical of any justifications for intervention we're hearing now, especially from the Executive branch.
I agree with you. But nothing makes sense in this mess and if we get involved how can we support the insurgents? Do we want another right wing Islamic theocracy in the area? Is Iraq better off now?I have a hard time believing that. They are in the midst of a civil war. If the insurgents were the real group using gas, then why aren't the Syrian government screaming from the rooftops that its them that is doing? Right now, they are denying it happened all together. Which is an obvious lie.
The community here at IE is very enlightened

I have a hard time believing that. They are in the midst of a civil war. If the insurgents were the real group using gas, then why aren't the Syrian government screaming from the rooftops that its them that is doing? Right now, they are denying it happened all together. Which is an obvious lie.