believer;426129 wrote:So what do you suggest we do to deal effectively with the blowback?
We've made the mistake and now we have just about no choice but to carry on. If we withdraw, all the forces you mentioned above will conduct civil war to achieve supremacy in the region and then set its sights on the West. If we stay, we could very easily go bankrupt in the process as you suggest and probably make things even worse in the long haul. No matter what we do or try we will piss someone or some radical group off.
Although Obama secured his party's nomination by promising the anti-war left he'd withdraw our troops from the region in a year or two. Here we are almost two years into his presidency and what I see is a BHO Administration that sees reality and is struggling with this very same question.
I agree we can't just leave now that we're there.
My larger point was that America needs to learn to come to grips with the idea that there may be situations on the globe we don't like, but that we need to learn to live with them.
Invariably there will be situations in the future where it will be tempting to try and overthrow or destabilize regimes, or fight proxy wars like we did with the Russians in Afghanistan. We need to avoid them no matter how big of a slam dunk they seem.
We also need to downsize our empire. We have military bases in over 100 countries I think it is. China is kicking our ass in the development of all types of technological and industrial fields because we are spending 100's of billions on weapons, bases and war that aren't doing a damn thing to advance our economy and develop tomorrows technological advances.
It is time to get back to our isolationist roots. I am surprised with the Tea Party coming to power that none of them have picked up on that. Sadly, since WWII, outside of the 1st Gulf War our military engagements and interventionist foreign policy have largely ended up creating more long terms harm for us than good. For every good outcome we get, it is typically associated with at least 1-2 problems that end up being more harmful to us than the status quo had previously been.
Part of the American Hubris/Exceptionalism idea is that we are somehow different. Someone how we will be able to manage an empire without economically crumbling underneath it the way every other empire in history has fallen. It is just madness. I feel like its a bad dream sometimes that you can see unfolding before your eyes but for whatever reason no one changes course even though they know what waits at the end of the cliff.
The days of funding/training gorilla forces so they can eventually take what they learn and turn it against us needs to stop. Removing dictators/unfriendly regimes who pose no tangible threat to us, only to see their neighbors emboldened because they know we're bogged down next door and pose no credible military threat needs to stop. The days of funding and supplying Israel with billions of dollars of weapons (that they use to impose their will on their neighbors) a year so as to alienate an entire region that is already skeptical of us (and home to 70% of the world's known oil reserves) needs to stop.
The days of selling weapons to Taiwan needs to stop. In the future, as China continues to evolve into a major power they day is going to come they are going to (by force) I believe take Taiwan back. This is an example of a fight the U.S needs to stay the hell away from. Defending democracy is great, but it is a perfect example of a situation where we would naturally love to go join the fight as we have the past 50 years where the likely downside so drastically outweighs the possible good that can come from a positive outcome it is not worth butting our noses in.
It should not be the responsibility of the American citizens to pay (through lives and treasure) for the freedom of all the citizens of the world. Only when it is a direct material threat to our national security (not just strategic interests) should we get involved in conflicts. That would be entirely consistent with what our founders envisioned for our foreign policy.
We all know in very concrete terms what the fallout is to all of the actions above, yet I continually hear more of the same from our politicians.