"It's the same argument used against Barack Obama in 2008," Sanders told NBC News' Kate Snow. "He doesn't have any experience in foreign policy. But it didn't work then, won't work now."
pulling troops out of a losing fight
How long are you going to keep troops in Iraq? 100 years?
You can't antagonize a region and people and hope to ever leave peace in your wake.
Quote from: DAS B00T 2016 on February 07, 2016, 07:51:19 PMQuote from: challengerX on February 07, 2016, 07:43:58 PMHow long are you going to keep troops in Iraq? 100 years? We've been in Korea for over sixty.And look how great that's going.
Quote from: challengerX on February 07, 2016, 07:43:58 PMHow long are you going to keep troops in Iraq? 100 years? We've been in Korea for over sixty.
Quote from: challengerX on February 07, 2016, 06:55:15 PMpulling troops out of a losing fightIraq wasn't a losing fight by any means. It was stable and repairing -- the absence of U.S. forces post-2011 is precisely what allowed ISIS to gain strength in the region and Maliki to radicalize a significant portion of the population. The withdrawal from Iraq was an immense mistake and destabilized the country.
Quote from: challengerX on February 07, 2016, 08:15:05 PMQuote from: DAS B00T 2016 on February 07, 2016, 07:51:19 PMQuote from: challengerX on February 07, 2016, 07:43:58 PMHow long are you going to keep troops in Iraq? 100 years? We've been in Korea for over sixty.And look how great that's going.Pretty great if you ask me.
The neat thing is, before the rise of crude oil, in the early 19th century before and as the industrial revolution began, we used different sources for oil in machinery. The only reason we use crude oil today is because of it's ease of use and access. Doesn't mean we can't use the older forms of oil, even if they're slightly harder to produce.
Quote from: Sandtrap on February 08, 2016, 12:47:17 PMThe neat thing is, before the rise of crude oil, in the early 19th century before and as the industrial revolution began, we used different sources for oil in machinery. The only reason we use crude oil today is because of it's ease of use and access. Doesn't mean we can't use the older forms of oil, even if they're slightly harder to produce.We can't really go back to the industrialized hunting of whales.
Quote from: Kupo & the Two G-strings on February 08, 2016, 10:00:53 AMI don't know why this came to be about Obama and Iraq, but whatever. The absence of Saddam is what allowed ISIS to gain strength. US involvement only enabled that chain of events.Fantastic, then, we would have Saddam doing most of what ISIS does, just to minorities and unopposed.The problem isn't that we did the job. The problem is that we left it half-finished. You cannot just fix a middle eastern country. All of them are interconnected through ideology, allegiance and ethnicity. The whole region is going to have to reshape itself before the dying stops, and the US absolutely must have a hand in making sure things are in the best arrangement possible when the dust settles.Also please don't tell me you think North Korea is a legitimate threat to anything but the northernmost parts of Seoul.
I don't know why this came to be about Obama and Iraq, but whatever. The absence of Saddam is what allowed ISIS to gain strength. US involvement only enabled that chain of events.
What is Japan and Germany.
All electorate are morons. All people are morons period. This is a fundamental flaw with Democracy, I agree. I don't claim to necessarily know what government is best for which people. But it's hard to do any worse than Saddam if you actually try.
This happens all the time everywhere because Democracy a shit.
In which case we should handle it like we handled the Nazi party gaining power through the democratic process. Ideally, though, we can foster a culture of liberal individualism and separation of church and state. It will take time, work, and money, though, because separation of church and state is problematic for Islam. The concept of a caliphate is more important in their theology than most people realize.
I would say something like a regime that protects human and minority rights and levels of violence close to that of eastern Europe. We can't turn Mesopotamia into France in a lifetime, but there is room for improvement.
lmao what. Even China is tired of NK's bullshit lately. They're still at like early 1970s levels of military technology, if even that, and only because they spend all of their money on it. The only threat North Korea poses to anyone is the threat of collapse. If North Korea ceases to be a state, and South Korea or China has to incorporate the land and people, we'd have an economic and refugee crisis the likes of which have never been seen before. South Korea would go bankrupt overnight.
In some magically ideal scenario it'd be cool if you could just enforce the borders of the east. Shut all traffic down and box the entire area in. A little bit like what south korea does. Rather than throw all the troops away into the heart of the mess, keep them on a line on the outskirts of the mess.Let the shit sort itself out. Of course, people immediatly scream "muh oil."
Quote from: Sandtrap on February 08, 2016, 12:47:17 PMIn some magically ideal scenario it'd be cool if you could just enforce the borders of the east. Shut all traffic down and box the entire area in. A little bit like what south korea does. Rather than throw all the troops away into the heart of the mess, keep them on a line on the outskirts of the mess.Let the shit sort itself out. Of course, people immediatly scream "muh oil."Nah, it'd be more likely to be "muh only western-equivalent-civilised ME state ally" Israel. Can't really build a wall around the area if it just so happens an ally is slap-bang in the middle and has neighbours from hell.