barmar, on 2014-December-19, 11:03, said:
Maybe I'm looking through rose-colored glasses, but I don't see America as having an "appetite for war" (although there certainly are some legislators who do). Rather, due to our ideals and the fact that we have the most powerful military force on the planet, we've effectively become the policement for the world. If we don't do it, who will?
The argument then becomes whether it needs to be done in the first place. Unfortunately, it seems like it does. The world is too small to say "What happens in the Middle East isn't our problem."
When people point to Africa and say that we're not intervening there, I don't see that as an argument for also staying out of the Middle East, I think we should also try to help Africa. Of course, I know why our government treats them differently: oil. But if we were living up to our humanitarian ideals, we would be in both places (in fact, we probably should have been trying to resolve problems in Africa for a long time).
what humanitarian ideals?
The US is no different from any other superpower that has existed in history. It has a propaganda that it uses on its own citizens, and with lesser effect on the rest of the world, while its actions are almost always motivated by the self-interest of the ruling class.
The land of the free systemically murdered the original inhabitants in vast numbers, while importing slaves. It cynically attacked Spain through the use of a false pretext (remember the Maine). It stayed out of both WWI and WWII for years, making huge amounts of money while doing so. It invaded Panama because of the canal, and overthrew elected governments around the world in order to install dictators friendly to it. It fought wars to sustain other dictators in power and treated entire nations as pawns in its strategic contests with the USSR and China. Its military routinely used weapons of (limited) mass destruction on civilian populations, including chemical warfare (remember agent orange? remember napalm? Remember the illegal bombings of Laos and Cambodia?)It dropped a second a-bomb, on Nagasaki, too soon after Hiroshima to expect the Japanese government to be able to assess the situation, and arguably did so to show Stalin that the US had more than 1 bomb and was prepared to be ruthless.
It imprisoned its own citizens of Japanese descent in WWII. It turned away ships loaded with jewish refugees before WWII. It supports a brutal state in Israel without in any meaningful way attempting to force it to stop using reprisal methods for which The US and allies prosecuted Germans after WWII for committing war crimes.
It maintained Jim Crow laws in much of the South for a hundred years after the Civil War, and now has a society in which socio-economic mobility is virtually non-existent and a plutocracy funds very effective campaigns that get the middle class voting against its own self-interest, to support the plutocrats. It has only a semblance of a civilized health care system. Many states actively disenfranchise entire classes of voters. It imprisons far more of its citizens than almost any other nation, and routinely, in some states, executes people. One of its leading jurists has said that it is better to execute an innocent man than disturb precedent, and he routinely speaks for the majority of the Supreme Court.
Note that there is nothing exceptional about this. It doesn't make the US any worse, or any better, than any other super-power or indeed any other nation.
Smaller nations, less powerful and lacking the resources to ever become so powerful, can claim a higher moral ground, but I don't have any illusions that that makes, say, Canadians, any 'better' as individuals than 'Americans'. I forget the name of the 19th century English stateman who said in relation to the Empire's foreign policy, and I paraphrase: England does not have friends...she has only interests
Humans are tribal animals and we don't seem able to set aside the consequences of that even when our tribe is numbered in the hundreds of millions.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari