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View Full Version : tPF What is US goal in the world? Does anyone know?



Peter1469
05-13-2017, 03:52 AM
What is US goal in the world? Does anyone know? (http://www.wnd.com/2017/05/what-is-u-s-goal-in-the-world-does-anyone-know/)

Pat Buchanan gets it right again. I have said too often to remember that the US lost strategic vision after the Cold War. And that is dangerous. In the most annoying way, we waste money on shit-holes that have little to no interests to the US. [Big-boy word for those who don't know English]

If you have an Ad hom fit over the source start your own thread rather than shit in this one.

I will have you tossed aside like rubbish.


For the World War II generation, there was clarity.

The attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec 7, 1941, united the nation as it had never been before – in the conviction that Japan must be smashed, no matter how long it took or how many lives it cost.
After the defeat of the Axis powers in 1945, however, Americans divided.


Only with the Berlin Blockade of 1948, the fall of China to Mao and Russia’s explosion of an atom bomb in 1949, and North Korea’s invasion of the South in 1950, did we unite around the proposition that, for our own security, we had to go back to Europe and Asia.


What was called the Cold War consensus – that only America could “contain” Stalin’s empire – led to NATO and new U.S. alliances from the Elbe to the East China Sea.


Vietnam, however, shattered that Cold War consensus.


The far left of the Democratic Party that had taken us into Vietnam had repudiated the war by 1968 and switched sides to sympathize with such Third World communists as Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, Ho Chi Minh and the Sandinistas.
Center-right presidents – JFK, Nixon, Reagan – accepted the need to cooperate with dictators who would side with us in fighting Communism.


And we did. Park Chung-Hee in Korea. The shah in Iran. President Diem in Saigon. Gen. Franco in Spain. Somoza in Nicaragua. Gen. Mobuto in the Congo. Gen. Pinochet in Chile. Ferdinand Marcos in Manila. The list goes on.


Under Reagan, the Soviet Empire finally fell apart, and the USSR then disintegrated in one of the epochal events of history.


The American Century had ended in America’s triumph.


Yet, after 1989, no new national consensus emerged over what ought to be our role in the World. What should we stand for? What should we fight for?


What Dean Acheson had said of our cousins in 1962: “Great Britain has lost an empire and has not yet found a role,” was true of us.


What was our role in the world, now that the Cold War was history?


George H.W. Bush took us to war to drive Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait. Soaring to 90 percent approval, he declared America’s new role was to construct a New World Order.


Those who opposed him, Bush acidly dismissed in Hawaii on Dec. 7, 1991, the 50th anniversary of Pearl Harbor:


“We stand here today on the site of a tragedy spawned by isolationism. … And it is here we must learn – and this time avoid – the dangers of today’s isolationism and its … accomplice, protectionism.”


Neither Bush nor his New World Order survived the next November.


Then came payback for our sanctions that had brought death to thousands of Iraqis, and for the U.S. bases we had foolishly planted on the sacred soil of Saudi Arabia – Sept. 11, 2001.


George W. Bush reacted by launching the two longest wars in our history, in Afghanistan and Iraq, and announced that our new role was to “end tyranny in our world.”


The Bush II crusade for global democracy also fizzled out.


Barack Obama tried to extricate us from Afghanistan and Iraq. But he, too, failed and got us into wars in Yemen and Syria, and then started his own war in Libya, producing yet another failed state.


What does the balance sheet of post-Cold War interventions look like?


Since 1991, we have lost our global pre-eminence, quadrupled our national debt and gotten ourselves mired in five Mideast wars, with the neocons clamoring for a sixth, with Iran.

donttread
05-13-2017, 05:51 AM
I've long said our goal in the ME is instability to keep power and protect American/Western megacorps. I'm sure there are other places where the goal is similar. As for the world as a whole? We have our own problems we really should at least try to fix.

As for balance sheets releted to our foriegn policy though, they tend to be bad for the American tax payer and good for the megacorps.