10-12-2004, 08:13 AM | #11 | |
typical college boy
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Archbio, regardless of whether or not Iraq is justified, we are tied down in that country. It is eating up our manpower, money, and attention. Even if it *is* the wrong war, wrong place, wrong time, we are there. We don't have the resources to be everywhere at the same time. That is my point. Other countries who aren't fighting any wars could easily gather together some troops and send them to Sudan.
The UN is content to sit by and allow genocide to carry on. In Sierra Leone when the RUF rebels were killing 10,000 people with dull machete blades the UN made it a point not to use the word "genocide" in their meetings because that would require them to take action. They stayed silent -> people were murdered. The only thing that saved the people of that country was actually a 60-man American mercenary unit that literally fought a war for a price and won. After that group had stabilized the country the UN forced them out and spend 50 times as much money with 20 times as many people on the ground and the UN couldn't stop the violence from starting back up.
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10-12-2004, 08:30 AM | #12 | ||
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But yes, if you consider only Darfur, the US couldn't do a thing. Even if they would have (which I find doubtful). Quote:
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10-12-2004, 08:42 AM | #13 | |||
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10-12-2004, 09:02 AM | #14 | ||
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My point was that the US has chosen to get into Iraq (a choice was made to get into it), above whatever humanitarian causes there were at the time. And also before it, since the manpower obviously wasn't recalled from any crisis to get to Iraq). So no, I'm not saying they should pull out of Iraq now, but that since Iraq is (you might not agree with that) a situation of their own creation that it shows an order of priority that makes the US being able or not to carry out humanitarian interventions meaningless, since it was never on the "to-do list"). It was predictable that it made them less versatile, even if for only a short time (by then, Congo was still being played out, I think. I really should look that up). World policeman? No, but I won't get into that. Quote:
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10-12-2004, 09:14 AM | #15 | ||
typical college boy
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Also the war does have humanitarian outcomes. Saddam was killing on average, 10,000 people per year. saddam's rule has been cut short by a number of years, and his sons will not inherit his power. on a projected scale the US may have saved as many as 100,000 people. but that is another issue which i can't summarize in this post, so i don't expect you to swallow that whole. my other point, that i failed to make clear, is that by the US mearly continuing its presence in Iraq it is preventing a civil war for the time being, therefore it is preventing mass killings of innocent people that usually happen in civil wars, therefore the occupation is humanitarian a round-about way. believe me, i don't like it either. my whole point is, that france or germany or japan or russia could easily send 1,000 troops to sudan. it wouldn't take that many, even, to stop the violence, as the EO proved to the world in Sierra Leone with only 60 men and 20 million dollars.
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10-12-2004, 09:32 AM | #16 | |||
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10-12-2004, 09:51 AM | #17 | |||
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but i see your point and agree, too.
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10-17-2004, 02:38 PM | #18 |
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As far as I can tell, it hasnt really ever mattered what the US does in ANY situation. The world always hates us. And, forgive me if I'm mistaken, the war with Iraq has been brewing for a long time. Even under the Clinton administration we bombed Baghdad. I don't really remember much about it because I was too young to care at the time. Saddam has had it a long time coming, and the whole "Bush is just continuing what his daddy started" is ridiculous.
In other words, this war was not decided on in lieu of Darfur. We already had it in the works.
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10-17-2004, 04:54 PM | #19 | ||
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I'm sorry I brought Iraq into this, and I never said it had been chosen instead of an intervention in Darfur (since basic chronology of things seems to contradict that). How long the war has been on a drawing board doesn't change anything, I think, and the arguments I made before just hinges on the idea that it was a "frivolous war". That, in itself, is another argument altogether. Quote:
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