Nick Gillespie | November 14, 2006
From ABC News, a report on the Dems' plan for getting the hell out of Iraq:
What phased withdrawal would mean, according to Sen. Carl Levin, who after January will be the powerful chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, is that the president would tell the Iraqi government that U.S. troops would start slowly redeploying out of Iraq, into an advisory role while they are in-country, and with a lot fewer of them there.
"Most Democrats share the view that we should pressure the White House to commence the phased redeployment of U.S. troops from Iraq in four to six months -- to begin that phased redeployment, and thereby to make it clear to the Iraqis that our presence is not open-ended and that they must take and make the necessary political compromises to preserve Iraq as a nation," Levin said at a press conference on Capitol Hill. "We cannot save the Iraqis from themselves.
"They, and they alone, are going to decide whether they're going to have a nation or whether they're going to have an all-out civil war," he said. "We have given them the opportunity, at huge cost of blood and treasure, to have a nation, should they choose it. But it is up to them, not us, not our brave and valiant troops -- it's up to the Iraqi leadership: Do they want a civil war or do they want a nation?"
Levin says he's got somewhere over 40 votes in the Senate for this pretty vague ("a lot fewer" troops? what does that mean actually?), including some Republicans, but is short of a clear majority. More here.
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Ethan-
It's not about blame. It's about recognizing that there are some
problems we cannot solve.
The thing is, I don't see how the Dems could possibly lose.
If/when we pull out of Iraq (I promise to pull out, baby, trust
me), and when Iraq collapses into total chaos, they are going to
blame Bush for every subsequent burnt building and every bloody
death.
A friend of mine, who is strongly skeptical of the Iraq invasion,
conceded that "we broke it, we bought it". Well, it looks like we
are just leaving the broken vase on the floor and skipping out of
the shop. Sorry 'bout that.
The Dems are going to make some very strong short-term political
capital out of this, but at the expense of our last shreds of
international credibility.
MNG-
There's nothing we can do to fix it. If anything, we probably make
it somwhat worse by staying.
This is a tough discussion to have, because so much has to be
done behind the scenses or with a nod and a wink.
One of the major purposes of a pullback for U.S. forces is to
change the interior political dynamic in Iraq by denying the
Sunni/Iraqi nationalist insurgents the major justification for
their anti-government, anti-Shiite war. But we can't come right out
and say that we're doing this to strengthen the legitimacy of the
government among the population, or they lose any credibility they
might have as defenders of Iraqi self-determinaiton, so we have to
use language that makes our actions look more unilateral than they
actually are.
Similarly, no matter how committed we are to defending the Kurds -
and I have no doubt that there is still a large majority in both
parties that shares that commitment - we can't come out and say it,
or we (and the central government) become open to charges that
we're screwing the Arabs and redrawing Iraq's borders
unilaterally.
I used to believe we had a responsibility to clean up our mess,
MNG - in principle, I still do - but do you see any cleaning up
going on? Do you see staing the course making anything better? Or
even keeping it from getting worse?
Hopefully, the Dems are smart enough to pair this withdrawal talk
with some sort of political/peace process among Iraqi factions,
Northern-Ireland-style, and hopefully, the Republicans are smart
enough to go along with it.
joe-
We don't have to defend the Kurds openly. The Kurds are more than
capable of doing that, we can limit our assistance to quiet
deliveries of supplies and information. If the shit really hits the
fan for them we can send air support under some pretext about
guarding stable regions, and show that we're even-handed by also
helping defend one of the less-fucked-up Arab areas of Iraq.
"We cannot save the Iraqis from themselves. They, and they
alone, are going to decide whether they're going to have a nation
or whether they're going to have an all-out civil war. We have
given them the opportunity...to have a nation, should they choose
it."
I can't argue with any of that. Whether Iraq can ever be a nation
without a dictator remains to be seen, but they are
blowing a once-in-a-generation opportunity to try.
thoreau,
If the Sunni and Shiite powers, backed by their respective allies
in the region, unite to stave off Kurdish self-rule, the peshmerga
on their own aren't going to be able to hold them off. They
probably wouldn't even be able to hold off the Shiites alone.
I'd like to see facts on the ground that nip such thinking the bud.
The likelihood of the Kurds being abandoned when the war went bad
was one of the biggest reasons I opposed the war. I wonder, does
William Saletan still run the "Kurd Sellout Watch" feature he was
running Slate in 2002 and 2003?
Whether Iraq can ever be a nation without a dictator remains
to be seen, but they are blowing a once-in-a-generation opportunity
to try.
I don't even think that "they", or at least most of "them", are
blowing this opportunity. At least not deliberately. Rather, I
think that there are elements that cannot be controlled by
anybody, at least not easily, and the instinctive reaction
to these elements, the instinctive defense mechanism, is to revert
to tribal loyalties. In a dangerous situation, that defense
mechanism is probably the only thing that works. It does, however,
make it much harder to bring about a situation of order and unity
by minimally violent means.
I don't know what the answer is, but I don't think anybody is
"blowing it." I think they're almost as clueless as we are on how
to fix this. But because they are slightly less clueless, we have
to put matters in their hands and hope for the best. There is no
other option.
joe-
The Kurds defended themselves against Saddam Hussein, and the only
open support they had from us was the no-fly zone. We didn't even
provide air support against ground troops, we only provided air
support against Saddam Hussein's air force.
If they were able to defend against Saddam Hussein back when they
were more divided than they are now, they can defend against the
more fragmented Arab state that remains. We shold provide arms and
information on the down low, and whatever help our clandestine
forces on the ground can provide. But they don't need our open
support against the Arabs of Iraq, and we don't need that sort of
mess.
Look how much trouble we're still reaping from our decision to be
Israel's best friend forever. Do we really need to openly babysit
yet another ethnic minority state in the Middle East?
The price of our friendship with the Kurds should be a guarantee
that they will not secede. They should at least continue to use the
same letterhead and every now and then wave hello to the folks in
Baghdad, maybe even send a representative to march in the parades.
They can be like Taiwan: "One Iraq, two systems." Or whatever
fiction it takes to prevent outright, open secession and the
inevitable regional war that would result.
It's not about blame. It's about recognizing that there are
some problems we cannot solve.
It's true that the Bush Iraq policy has painted us into a corner,
and I support immediate withdrawal, but saying "We have given them
the opportunity, at huge cost of blood and treasure, to have a
nation, should they choose it. But it is up to them..." does make
this about blame. Mr Levin is claiming that if Iraq fails it will
be the Iraqis' fault. But the "opportunity" we handed to the Iraqis
is better described as a "calamity," and if Iraq fails it will be
more our fault than theirs. Denying this is to blame the
victim.
What frustrates me is that the Dems, despite their recent victory
at the polls, are still scared to death of the GOP and its spin
machine, and are still acquiesing to the terms of the debate
dictated by Bush. Note the ridiculous sounding addition of "not our
brave and valiant troops." The man is terrified of being cast as
anti-troops.
thoreau,
Since the mid-90s, Kurdistan was also a "no-drive zone." We made it
quite clear to the Saddam government what would happen if they
tried to use armored vehicles agains the Kurds, and that played a
large role in their ability to maintain theie
self-determination.
But I agree on the "Taiwan" solution. We need a policy of
deliberate ambiguity. I recommend we put John Kerry in charge of
explaining Kurdistan's official status.
Ethan,
Bush is still the Commander in Chief. Without his buy-in, there
won't be any sort of withdrawal or solution, just more of the same.
If Levin has to offer him a fig leaf to win his acquiesence, I have
no problem with that.
It is real simple, the Democrats sold out the South Vietnamese in 1974 after a decent interval, never enforced the 73 peace accords and let the North invade and conquer the South producing, millions of boat people and a complete humanitarian disaster. As a result of that, the Democrats spent the next thirty years as being painted as the "get the U.S. out of North America" party by the Republicans and lost every Presidential election in which foreign policy was a major issue. Some Democrats are sentient enough to not want that to happen again. They also realize that the U.S. is bound under a Security Council resolution to stay in Iraq until the country can operate on its own. Further, everyone talks so blithely about Iraq failing and whose fault it is, but none of that matters. What matters are the effects of a regional war or Iraq turning into Somalia or worse a Taliban Afghanistan. Of course the Democrats are soft paddling withdrawal. They have some responsibility now. It is easy to talk shit when what you say means absolutely nothing. It is a little different when you win an election and what you say has some consequences.
Except, John, that what you're calling "soft-paddling" (which
sounds kind of fun, actually) is what the Democrats have been
saying throughout the entire election campaign.
There hasn't been a change in the Democrats' message, although
there certainly has been a change in yours. One month ago, you were
declaring that the policies which you now describe as so
responsible to be a shameful abandonment comparable to the end of
Vietnam.
It's nice how an election can focus the mind.
Hopefully the tough talks is just staking out bargaining positions and the Dems will angle for a smarter policy overall.
the instinctive defense mechanism, is to revert to tribal
loyalties
Of course. Saddam kept a lid on the simmering tribal hatreds,
brutalizing all oppostion. I'm not at all convinced after three
years that anything other than another dictatorship can put the lid
back on it. Oddly, much of the world seems to prefer the
dictatorship option. And I think that's probably what they'll
get.
"There's nothing we can do to fix it."
That may be true. that also may not be true. I'm not sure where
your certainty comes from.
Certainly there's nothing we can do to make Iraq an idyllic
paradise with rainbows and unicorns, but I'm willing to wager there
are a series of possible outcomes that range from bad to epic
disaster. I'm in favor of whatever strategy gives us a bad result,
and opposed to whatever strategy gives us a disastrous
result.
And I haven't a clue what that is, so it's hard for me to believe
that anyone can be that certain at this point.
There is no question that from the decision to invade through most
of the decisions leading up to now, the administration has
blundered terribly. But that doesn't mean I'm confident that the
Bush the elder cabinet and the democrats won't continue to blunder
just as bad.
I have mixed feelings on putting Kerry in charge of Kurdistan's
status. Surely the Kurds must have somebody who is just as good at
ambiguity. On the other hand, I recognize that with the US military
interest in the region it is important to have a player who can
fail to communicate with Americans. A nuanced situation like this
requires a balanced proposal wherein both parties are able to
confuse the appropriate audiences.
What I'm trying to say is that I was against your proposal, now I'm
in favor of it, but the underlying concerns and rationale have
always been the same. There's no inconsistency here in my changing
views.
Joe,
I have always been ambivilent about this election. Further, perhaps
I am too much of an optimist, but I think people generally rise to
the occasion when presented with real responsibility. The Democrats
clearly didn't do that in 1974, but they may do that now because
the stakes are a lot higher now than they were then. That said, I
think there are a whole lot of people on the left who are going to
be pretty angry and disapointed when the Democrats don't force a
complete withdrawal.
Thoreau,
What everyone is horribly afraid of with Kurdistan is that the
Kurdish zone will sponsor Kurdish terrorism in Turkey and the
Turkey will launch an incursion into Northern Iraq to do something
about it. Imagine that, a NATO country invading Iraq. I like the
Kurds a whole lot and would love to see them get their own country
and stick it to the Arabs and especially the Iranians. But, there
are some Kurds that are real problems and giving the Kurds their
own country is going to cause the Kurds in Turkey to want out and
join the greater Kurdistan. That is why the U.S. will never support
Kurdish autonomy.
thoreau,
I have always been very clear that ambiguity needs to be equally
applicable (and when I say equally applicable, I mean that each of
the parties is given the same opportunity to be placated through
clear and principled doubletalk, although not necessarily in the
same manner or to the same degree) to both sides, without creating
any false equivalancies. I have consistencly said that, right from
the beginning.
each of the parties is given the same opportunity to be
placated through clear and principled doubletalk, although not
necessarily in the same manner or to the same degree
That sounds like a stable solution.
I think that the McCain solution is the better than any of other
alternatives. Put more troops in Iraq or get out (I know it is a
little bit more nuanced than that, but I think that is the
gist of it). I don't think that it is right that we leave the
country without assuring some stability. If Iraq loses
stability a few years down the road, then that is there
fault.
Leaving Iraq the way it is now would be disastrous for Iraq, U.S.,
and the region. It would do almost unrepairable damage to our
reputation in the world. I agree with John that pointing fingers
will not solve the problem. I think we (we meaning Americans) can
fix the problem, we just need a shit load of help from other
countries. To this day, I still can't believe that the President
actually thought that we can do this by ourselves.
joe,
While I fully agree with you, I must take issue with you on several
areas of disagreement. I have consistently said that the
distribution of ambiguity must be clearly equitable, with complete
uncertainty about the degree to which each side is
compromising.
They, and they alone, are going to decide whether they're
going to have a nation or whether they're going to have an all-out
civil war. We have given them the opportunity...to have a nation,
should they choose it.
This is a fallacy that libertarians, of all people, should
recognize. There's no such thing as "they" when it comes to blame.
It's just a copout. Saying "the Iraqis" are responsible for their
country's instability is like saying "the Americans" are
responsible for the invasion. Superficially true, until we ask:
which Iraqis? which Americans?
RC,
"That sounds like a stable solution."
thoreau and I are just riffing on Kerry-speak.
thoreau,
Of course you are correct, and I agree with you wholeheartedly.
We're really on the same side here. But it is one thing to say that
the distribution of ambiguity must be clearly equitable, and quite
another to say that ambiguity must be distributed equally in all
times and places. I have been clear on this point, right from the
beginning. I believe my position is now clearly incomprehensible,
and will fight to keep it that way.
In 2004 I got a friend of mine to laugh so hard he started
crying when I gave a 3 minute discourse on the question "eggs or
pancakes" (in a John Kerry voice).
"Well, you have to give due consideration to all of the relevant
factors. Do I like the maple syrup absolutely. Will I show
favoritism toward Vermont because of that? Of course not. Will
Vermont hold a special status as a result? Definitely. But we must
also consider the protein content. I have always been a strong
supporter of protein consumption, because as a veteran I recognize
the importance of physical fitness. But when I report for that
duty, when I accept the charge, I have to balance the need for
muscle mass against the effects of the cholesterol. I have a plan
to have my yolk and eat it too."
And so forth.
I support an extremely radical course of action. Partition the
country into Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish states. Then leave and let
the chips fall where they may.
Iraq is NOT a nation. Rather, it is an artificial
construct from the aftermath of WWI. Churchill himself called it a
mistake. As he was involved with Iraqs creation, he probably was in
a position to know.
Surely somebody above has already said this, but does the
American voter give a shit if Iraq and the whole region collapses
into chaos?
Give me a break.
Let it go. Give it up. Just stop shedding American blood on a
fool's errand.
Ruthless,
The Kurds have had self-determination and a somewhat liberal
democratic repbulic for a decade and a half. Would preserving it
really be a fool's errand?
"We have given them the opportunity...to have a nation, should
they choose it."
Well if it weren't for terrorists, criminals, intervening foreign
powers, and militias, i am pretty sure that most Iraqis would love
a stable and free country.
For fucks sake, look at the turnout in their elections. It is not
like the majority don't want freedom.
We Americans want freedom and prosperity too, but yet we have
corrupt politicians.
John once again, entertains:"t is real simple, the Democrats
sold out the South Vietnamese in 1974 after a decent interval,
never enforced the 73 peace accords and let the North invade and
conquer the South producing, millions of boat people and a complete
humanitarian disaster."
Actually, John, the "peace accords" which the corrupt &
dispised Thieu regime ignored from the start, allowed free movement
of the NLF and a political campaign leading to a general election,
one that would allow the massive, S Vietnamese based opposition to
our flying monkeys in Saigon speak, campaign, & vote freely.
Unlike the phoney '68 "election" which was for domestic US
consumption.
I guess Hannity never mentioned that.
The reason the US gotout of Viet Nam was because what passed as a
government there- a US construct, leavened with coups, thugs, &
kleptocrats- would NEVER stand on its own. Any more than Diem could
in a general election in '54. Ithaqd no legitimacy, you see.
And any more than this imposed by the US arrangement will stand in
Iraq.
Believe it or not, John- Viet Nam, like Iraq, will have to be
sorted by its own citizens. OUR citizens cant do much more than
stir hatred, division, & bloodshed. (By the way- please, if you
will, enumerate the rights of citizens of "S"Viet Nam as recognized
by the various cabals of thieves & murderers in Saigon? Surely
they must be on the tip of your tongue.)
Snce we fucked over the Kurds before- look into current Iraq
advisor Henery K's betrayl of them- and the fact the Turks would
kill them ALL if they could- we should arrange a base lease deal in
de facto Kurdistan, in, say, 5 year increments, with the written
agreement the US will pull out if asked by the Kurdish Gvt- which
the US will NOT create/sabotage/buy-so as to assure - clearly
-permanent bases are not a goal.
CAREFULLY we withdraw from the rest of Iraq, in stages. leaving
behind engineering, medical, & administration supplies, while
our Engineers destroy/render unuseable all stockpiles of heavy
weapons, artillery, tanks, etc, that are not ours & destined to
be left behind.
The vast stockpiles of munitions will have to be destroyed also,
& there you go.
Its not complicated. Eventually, they will get tired of eating
sand, & will have to pump oil. We will stand ready to assist in
the fields & infrastructure rebuilding, under open, transparent
contracts.
really, John, you ought to turn off the radio.......
Fuck you mutt. Try reading Decent Interval or A Better War sometime. Then maybe you would know your ass from a hole in the ground about Vietnam. But why bother, it is much easier to know nothing and think everyone who disagrees with you does so because Hanity told them so, who ever that is.
"US construct, leavened with coups, thugs, & kleptocrats-
would NEVER stand on its own."
Bullshit. Leaving a government without any military aid alone next
to an agressive neighbor recieving millions in aide from the
Soviets would never stand. The Soviets broke the peace accords from
day one and rebuilt the North Vietnamese army and waited until
Janurary of 1975 for Ford to say that the U.S. would never become
involved in Vietnam again and immediately invaded. Those are the
facts. Try learning them sometime.
John,
If we're doing an Iraq/Vietnam comparison, this isn't 1974. It's
1968. And you are just as determined to stick it out as Nixon. What
did those extra 6 years get us? Death, destruction, and
humiliation, that's what.
We leave now on terms that we establish ourselves, or we'll surely
be leaving on our enemies' terms in a few years. There's no pony
you're going to find in the mound of manure, John, no matter how
long you look.
Look at all of us weak-kneed, anti-American, anti-war,
BDS-suffering lefties arguing for leaving a force to protect the
Kurds. Do you think public opinion is going to leave that option on
the table two years from now?
Joe,
I never said there was a pony in the manure. But unlike Vietnam,
this war is not going to go away. We can't chalk up a few million
dead Iraqis to tough luck they way we did the South Vietnamese and
the Cambodians. The enemies in this war, unlike the North
Vietnamese are not going to stop in Iraq, they are going to keep
coming after us. Belive, I wish you were right. I wish we could go
home and tell the Iraqis sorry but you are on your own, but we
can't do that. You are right, there are no good options, but
leaving and pretending the whole thing will go away is the worst
option, no matter what you call it.
Please tell me if I'm being too simplistic here, but we went to Iraq to give the Iraqis democracy and freedom/freedom of democracy. A lot of people are talking about what the U.S. should do about Iraq, but no one has mentioned what the Iraqis want. If the Iraqis don't want us there, and if we truly went to give them the freedom to govern their own country, why should we stay?
Once again: what rights did S Viet Namese citizens posess that
were recognized, never mind respected, by the (various, ever
changing) US clients in Saigon?
Why was the vast bulk of S Viets completely opposed to the US
construct? Why did the US forecefullyremove vast numbers of S Viet
peasants into what can opnly be called concentration camps?
What were the terms of the 72-3 accords?
What was the basis for the US canceling the elections of '54?
What were the perameters to be able to run in the '68 Viet
"elections"?
And, finally- what was the biggest secular holiday in "South " Viet
Nam?
A freebie: Ho Chi Minhs birthday. Why was that, John?
Answer the above, John & ill think you might have actually
looked into Viet Nam history. As of now, Ill put it up there with
your grasp of the US & Iraq.
...does so because Hanity told them so, who ever that
is.
I don't know about anyone else, but the deliberate misspelling of
"Hannity" here sure convinces me that John never heard of
Hannity.
"If the Sunni and Shiite powers, backed by their respective
allies in the region, unite to stave off Kurdish self-rule, the
peshmerga on their own aren't going to be able to hold them off.
They probably wouldn't even be able to hold off the Shiites alone."
- joe
Ok, that's creepy. You actually wrote what I would have
written.
"I wonder, does William Saletan still run the "Kurd Sellout Watch"
feature he was running Slate in 2002 and 2003?" - joe
Here's the latest on Timothy Noah's Kurd Sellout Watch that I could
find:
http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=4977
"Look at all of us weak-kneed, anti-American, anti-war,
BDS-suffering lefties arguing for leaving a force to protect the
Kurds. Do you think public opinion is going to leave that option on
the table two years from now?" - joe
This is totally a "through the looking glass" moment. Realistic
evaluation of Kurdish defensive military capability followed by a
reasonable political argument for withdrawal as being in the Kurds
best interests? What happened to the "real" joe? Oh, wait, he pokes
his head out by talking about how Dems haven't changed positions on
anything.
One bone to pick: I have to say that I highly doubt that joe's
position falls in line with those "weak-kneed, anti-American,
anti-war, BDS-suffering lefties" he claims to be representing here.
His position has gone all realpolitik pragmatism suddenly - or
maybe it was always his position but that part just didn't shine
through the partisan manure he often shovels.
"We didn't even provide air support against ground troops, we only
provided air support against Saddam Hussein's air force." -
thoreau
That's patently false. Saddam's ground forces would have been
completely decimated by the Combined Joint Task Force's air power
if they had tried to roll on the Kurds. The point of Operation
Northern Watch was an extension of the protection and humanitarian
aid of Operation Provide Comfort.
"Phased Withdrawal?" Isn't that what they used to do on Star
Trek: The Next Generation in the last five minutes to deal
with whatever problem they were having?
Hmmm, the Romulans are about to fire a plasma torpedo. Oh, that's
okay, because I'm going to phase modulate the shields to perform a
phased withdrawal :)
John,
Sunni nationalists are going to come to the United States and
attack us? Really?
Were Iraq to descend into civil war without Americans present, the
Shiites would squash the foreign jihadists like a bug.
rob,
There is a world of difference between being realistic by the
dictionary definition, and adopting foreign policy Realism as an
ideology.
I am doing the former, not the latter.
rob,
Its commitment to the pursuit of power over human rights and
democracy.
Its ignorance of the benefits that accrue to us from being "a
shining city on a hill."
Its inability to grasp the essential differences between the
interests and character of a democratic republic vs. an
empire.
We are not merely one of a number of piggies fighting over a load
of slops, and we should neither behave like one, nor conceive of
outselves as one.
It[']s ignorance of the benefits that accrue to us from
being "a shining city on a hill."
You know, this is the argument against realpolitik that I
find the most compelling. Even with some of the nastiness that
we've occasionally been involved in, I think we still are, by and
large, the good guys. Even when compared to our brothers and
sisters in Europe. However, letting go of our principles for some
short term gains distracts from that. When the world saw us as
largely good versus the increasingly obvious badness of the Soviet
Union, there was a definite move towards liberal values. We have
lost some of that already, in the relatively short time since the
fall of the U.S.S.R.
I'm not suggested that being the paragon of Western Virtue would
buy us peace and harmony with every culture in the world--the
Middle East is an obvious question mark in that regard--but I'd
feel better living on the high ground, and I also think we'd be
less of a target. We're going to get some hate because of our
envious position, but we don't have to go adding to that hate by
doing too many bad things. I'm realistic and know that we're going
to kill some people that don't need killing and support some
leaders who probably do need killing, but I'd like that to be more
of the exception.
That's a heck of an indictment of realpolitik... But it's funny,
I don't find references in which realpolitik advocates the evils
you mention, and I can't find a definition that rules out the
benefits of behaving as a shining city.
My concern with the ideology-bound approach is that if you let
ideology box you in rather than examining all options, you miss
opportunities to make real gains.
For example, do you really think Nixon should never have engaged
China - because the shining city ideological example prohibits us
from doing anything other than "staying the course" of implacable
enmity against the evil, human-rights violating Chinese?
That's too bad, rob. Based on your question, I has assumed you
had some grounding in theories of international relations, but you
clearly don't.
Read some Henry Morganthau; that's always a good place to start. He
openly states that the purpose of international relations, like all
politics, is the advancement of power, with other goals being
subordinate to that.
I think you're using the dictionary definition of "realism" as your
working definition of the political theory that goes by that name.
A highly misleading confusion, as Realists can be highly
unrealistic, while Moralists can be very grounded in reality.
"That's too bad, rob. Based on your question, I has assumed you
had some grounding in theories of international relations, but you
clearly don't." - joe
What a polite way of claiming the other guy is ignorant - all
because I asked you a couple of questions about your
position.
"I think you're using the dictionary definition of "realism" as
your working definition of the political theory that goes by that
name." - joe
Frankly, I think you equate realpolitik with power politics, not
exactly an uncommon tendency... The point of the questions I asked,
which you couldn't be bothered to answer, would have demonstrated
this even more clearly than you've done.
"Realists can be highly unrealistic, while Moralists can be very
grounded in reality." - joe
Sure, because even a blind squirrel will stumble across an acorn
now and then. But who is more grounded in reality in your opinion -
Henry Kissinger or Pol Pot? Both have a pretty good body count
attributable to them, but only one killed a genocide's worth of
people for his ideals.
Isnt "realpolitik" simply a euphimism for savage war for private
(ie, whoever controlls the apparat at a given moment)profit?
Realpolitik saw Henry K arming the Kurds to force the Shah to spend
petrodollars with Boeing.....money spent, Kurds abandoned.
"Realpolitik" is only "real" if you/your constituency profit. It
aint mystical; its simple greed, and powermongering. No more "real"
than the purported "invisible hand".....
"Isnt 'realpolitik' simply a euphimism for savage war for
private (ie, whoever controlls the apparat at a given
moment)profit?" - MUTT
Nah, that's power politics.
"Realpolitik saw Henry K arming the Kurds to force the Shah to
spend petrodollars with Boeing.....money spent, Kurds abandoned." -
MUTT
Well, just because we see a reason to support one side or another
at some point, it doesn't mean we have to stay "best friends
forever."
For example, just because we were allied with Russia against the
Germans in WW2 doesn't mean that we have to stay allied through
them - and of course we didn't all through the Cold War
period.
"'Realpolitik' is only 'real' if you/your constituency profit." -
MUTT
I'd argue that simple self-interest by a nation is generally a good
way for a democracy to go. The U.S. already has a tendency to want
to fix everything for everyone all over the world. A little
rational self-interest certainly helps to moderate that and to curb
our tendency to roll into everyone else on the planet's
problems.
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