Well I don't know what his reasoning was for pulling back from the conflict, but in hindsight it looks to have been a good call. — Punshhh
A legacy of foreign policy decisions in regard of the Middle East going back decades, perhaps even to the late 1940's. — Punshhh
Thanks for the Frontline clip, have to watch it! — ssu
Intervention in other countries' sordid affairs would be a great idea if their various sordid situations weren't so damned messy. — Bitter Crank
What decision made in the 40's influenced the present situation? — Mongrel
Well, in my view the US Middle East policy has been a slow moving train wreck that went off the rails totally years ago when the younger Bush had this brainfart of invading the country his father had wisely stayed clear of ( — ssu
Heard of a country called Israel at all? — Barry Etheridge
None of the upheavals and coups and wars that have followed has ever been free of the issue of how to respond to Israel's continued existence whatever the headline excuse may be. — Barry Etheridge
talk of the 'Arab spring' — Wayfarer
To invade Iraq itself was the incredible mistake. Not lack of long term commitment. Before in the case of Korea and Vietnam, at least there had been a country that had wanted US intervention. Now the US went on the invasion business, last seen was it during the Spanish-American war?The invasion of Iraq contributed for the same reasons we've already pointed out: lack of long-term commitment on the part of the US. — Mongrel
Actually Russian propaganda is extremely successfull and is not allways disinformation, but often biased information or picked information/facts that simply serve their objectives... and isn't fabricated. Russia is extremely good at this.I didn't mean that literally, but it is the kind of line that is typical of Russian disinformation — Wayfarer
Well, when the Caliph of the IS was first detained by the US forces in 2004, imprisoned and then sent free, then was the head of ISI (Islamic State in Iraq), which basically was Al Qaeda in Iraq, I think the events in Iraq do play here a major role.We're talking about the impact on Syria. Maybe the invasion itself had some psychological impact (encouraging revolt, for instance), but the material contribution was that the US mangled Iraq and then left, allowing ISIS to form. — Mongrel
Admittedly, the US has definitely made mistakes with regard to the civil war, but our poor foreign policy the last few years didn't just magically create the longstanding Assad regime out of thin air, — Heister Eggcart
...that is the democratic process ought to give power to a Pro-US, secular administration that has similar ideas about democracy and liberal freedoms as the West does. The US isn't so excited when islamists win free and democratic elections, you know.The US thought the uprising would result in a stable democratic state. — Mongrel
I agree. I don't think the uprising would have taken shape in the way it did if it hadn't been for repeated encouragement from the US.
That's how the US helped screw Syria.
Why do you say that?
Well take your pick, the alienation caused by U.S. involvement in the Middle East has been building bit by bit since the paranoia over the creep of communism after WW2, led to a cat and mouse game between the U.S. and Russia all around the world.What decision made in the 40's influenced the present situation? It's interesting that you bring up the post-WW2 world-scene. To me, this question is really about what we owe one another on a global scale... and what we don't.
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