Not likely, if the history profession is done using the scientific method as usually now is done.Because the history from 60 years ago is full of propaganda. So 600 years is gonna be even worse. — Asif
I think that when you investigate how power functions, the types of narratives that tim wood is peddling start to fall apart. I think it is due to a lack of appreciation for how oppressive power can be, how centralised it can be and well, pretty much always is. Perhaps within some childish view of democracy, an American can see themselves as part of the winning team but within the middle east, we're talking theocracies, dictatorships and monarchies, it is really astonishing to listen to people who give power and responsibility to groups that include all various components of society - like racial groups or as citizens of a nation, or just people who live in the region! — Judaka
Will any history paint the 2003 invasion on those lines? — ssu
We have our presidents, not that we are our presidents. Nor, in a world that has outpaced horses and wind-powered ships have we the people solved the problem of timely intervention in presidential misadventures. And that is a very serious problem. To date, however, on balance more a strength than a weakness - so far.Western critics of the 2003 invasion are also typically guilty of the most blatant forms of moral hypocrisy. — Hippyhead
Which was the main argument for the invasion btw. And now thoroughly shown not to be true: the last remnants of Saddam Hussein's WMD project were destroyed during Clinton's strike Operation Desert Fox.It's certainly true that Saddam didn't have WMD, and that such reports may have been blatant lies, or at least manipulative bendings of the known facts. This is a reasonable claim which the critics are justified in making. — Hippyhead
Perhaps Iraq would have had it's civil war like Syria during the Arab Spring. That's the likely outcome. Saddam's WMD program had all but collapsed. The only real threat would have been if Saddam hadn't invaded Kuwait. Then his armed forces would have been intact and hadn't faced basically the Western coalition that still had the Cold War armies intact to be deployed to Saudi Arabia.But then the critics almost never go on to consider what the WMD situation would be today if Saddam had remained in power. — Hippyhead
Not actually, what they did was to anticipate the mess that following the invasion would cause. Yet at the time very many believed the "mushroom cloud" propaganda and still would believe that Bush just got bad intel, if it wasn't for Trump. Bush the elder that heeded the advice of his Arab coalition partners: they did not want to march on Baghdad when they had the chance in 1991.Western critics of the 2003 invasion are also typically guilty of the most blatant forms of moral hypocrisy. — Hippyhead
Lol.Official American Republican academic history. — Asif
You're a cynic. Cynicism - do you know its history? - in modern form is a pose. History itself is work and has its own standards and criteria arising to its own scientific method. Cynicism itself is something to use sparingly, a test, but not something to be unless you're selling something, in which case you're merely an entertainer, a difficult way to make a living.History is a lie agreed upon. — Asif
Which was the main argument for the invasion btw. And now thoroughly shown not to be true: the last remnants of Saddam Hussein's WMD project were destroyed during Clinton's strike Operation Desert Fox — ssu
Seems to me that the national boarders were intentionally designed by the League of Nations to keep Iraq unstable. I don't see any way to reverse the disaster caused by the Mandate for Mesopotamia. Perhaps a redrawing of boarders would help - I'm interested in your view on that. It didn't go well for Pakistan and Bangladesh, at least to start with. — Banno
Here's an open question.
What distinguishes the "scientific" modern history of the
US,Russia and North korea?
Is the implication US history is more "scientific" and honest than Russia and North korea?
A huge amount of assumptions go into this kind of thinking.
Let's see a case for this myth of objective history. — Asif
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