Yes, we can help. Yet that is a delicate issue just how to do it.. In the end it's your job in Australia to either to cherish uphold democracy. No foreigners can do it, it's only you and your society can do it. And no bombing of Australians will make things better.It's the way democracy SHOULD spread. These people shouldn't have to fight alone, to be mowed down by automatic weapons. The only thing that is standing in the way of success is YOUR BRAIN. It's literally that simple. Western brains are the ONLY thing preventing worldwide democracy. — Paul Edwards
And both of these are failures. You don't look at the real examples of success.Now to answer your actual point - why did 87% of Afghans support the US military intervention if foreign forces are so bad? Why did 50% of Iraqis support the US military intervention if foreign forces are so bad? What percentage of Australians do you think would support a US military intervention if we had a military coup and a cruel dictator? I would hope 99%, but I don't know. Whatever percentage it is, those are the only ones I actually care about. I don't care if my ideological enemy opposes my intervention. I will arm my ideological allies and they will take care of the rest. — Paul Edwards
You mean to turn their Islamic revolution into a success or breath new air into it?What is needed for freedom in Iran is an external military invasion, to make their revolution a success. — Paul Edwards
then you have vigilante justice. Hmmm... One wonders why no modern civilization accepts that. We're all fools! Oh, if only we were all batman and listened to Paul Edwards.
We've previously established that not all methods of preventing crime are acceptable.
You even agreed but we're now back at "anything that will stop the crime is allowed, including another crime". That just opens the door of allowing me to shoot the cop, because he's committing a crime so I'm justified in doing so, which in turn allows someone else to stop me... Ad infinitum. In other words, what you just came up with is logically inconsistent and unworkable to reach any form of justice.
Yes, likely an external military invasion will indeed unify the Iranian people to fight a holy war alongside their Mullahs just as it did with Iraqi invasion. — ssu
The US, especially when acting as part of a coalition, especially a coalition that includes Australia, will be seen as a liberator — Paul Edwards
There was a reason to disband the old security forces in Iraq and do nation-building. This is no longer the case. The target country's security forces can take care of any hostile non-state actors, and anyhow, this is the same result you would get with a revolution. Are you saying revolutions are always wrong because there might be some hostile non-state actors? — Paul Edwards
It did work in South Vietnam. South Vietnam was a non-communist state like South Korea. It worked in South Korea. It worked in Panama. It worked in Grenada. It worked in Kosovo. It worked in Afghanistan. It worked in Iraq. It worked in Libya. It will work in Iran too if we can just get people to recognize reality. When Iraq has 300+ political parties instead of 1, you should be able to recognize that something changed. And if democracy indexes don't note that, don't trust them. Also, none of the 300+ parties wins 100% of the vote like Saddam did. — Paul Edwards
The Iraq war may not even deserve to be called a war of liberation, the US has made it clear many times that the war was to prevent Iraqi acquisition of WMDs. The war cost billions of dollars for the US, many lives were lost and WMDs weren't even there. The war damaged US credibility, it undermined US leadership and still today, Iraq is not far from anarchy, it is a place of instability and violence and its very existence is under threat. — Judaka
He's committing fallacies, dismisses things he doesn't even take the effort to understand what he's arguing about and you think he's "kicking ass". Good to know you can't tell the difference between a fallacy and an argument. — Benkei
You can call it vigilante justice if you want. I call it a "posse". Internationally, there is no "modern civilization". There is a cesspit of dictators enslaving their populations. Yes, everyone should be Batman. The state of the world as it currently is, calls for the US and others to be Batman, and we should be thankful for it.
One day hopefully there will be wall-to-wall liberal democracies, and at that point I can agree for Batman to stand down. — Paul Edwards
I'm not sure what you're quoting, but it's true that I don't think you should rape a woman to prevent her from jaywalking, even if you knew for certain that she was going to jaywalk. — Paul Edwards
Actually this is exactly what we face internationally. The USSR could have taken over the world. A posse was formed to contain the USSR. There was no justice in the USSR, and no justice when the USSR invaded someone else. There was no justice when the communists took over Vietnam with USSR help. We live in a fundamentally unjust world. One day I hope that will change, but right now, dictators are committing human rights abuses, and even if we wanted to, we can't stop all of them at once. I'm at least trying to establish a baseline of "we want to", combined with "call Batman IF NECESSARY (which it most definitely is)". — Paul Edwards
Yeah, Ciceronianus the White @Hanover, what do you think? Lawyer material. :snicker: — Benkei
I'm not sure how you can blame Hussein for decisions the US government made. It's not as if he made you do it, right?I have no difficulty heaping the lion's share of blame upon Hussein. — Hanover
Seems that you have no military training, because this is again nonsense.Actually, even Iraq could have been done with US air power alone, but it was never tried (for good reason). — Paul Edwards
Well, I hope that Australian politicians will not listen to your politico-military strategy, because it's a disaster waiting to happen. Your reasoning is perhaps a direct result of assuming war being as the one sided as it has been with the US engaging dirt poor Third World countries in it's war on terror.And if the US follows my playbook, they will prove that it can be done purely by air, purely supporting revolutionaries. — Paul Edwards
Actually, even Iraq could have been done with US air power alone, but it was never tried (for good reason).
— Paul Edwards
Seems that you have no military training, because this is again nonsense. — ssu
Even Rumsfeld didn't believe that US air power alone would do it, even if he had widely erroneous ideas of how little troops you need to invade and occupy a country.
You're subscribing to might is right but only if you're a certain type of country. We're back at selective justice, which is no justice at all.
We already established you shouldn't commit a crime to prevent a crime.
If starting a war is a crime, even though it prevents another crime, it is still a crime and therefore can never be just.
That's a matter of definition. A purely consequentialist approach necessarily fails, as was already illustrated several posts ago because you can't tell the difference between a crime and a just action without taking into account intent (which is why proving intent in criminal law is important).
Of course there was justification. You just happen to disagree with it but it's exactly the same hubristic bullshit you're peddling now. The USSR thought they were bettering the world by installing communist regimes through violence. You believe installing liberal democracies through violence betters the world. Welcome to the world of aggressors.
No, that is not my position. If you need to jaywalk in order to stop a rape in progress, then by all means jaywalk. It depends on exactly what the circumstances are. — Paul Edwards
Any way, for what it's worth the Iraqi war was unjust because:
1. The US has subscribed to the UN system and therefore cannot declare a war of aggression single-handedly unless it was in defence of an immediate threat to itself or an ally, (in other words; if you agree another authority makes these decisions, you abide by that: pacta sunt servanda);
2. There was no right intention, the grounds for war were a lie, probably hiding other intentions but at no point was it to prevent the cutting of tongues or rape;
3. There was no just cause (please note that if preventing rape and torture would be a just cause then on that basis we can invade the US as well);
4. It wasn't a last resort because it was already proved no WMDs existed;
5. It fails because it was disproportional, causing more deaths in a timespan of 3 years than Saddam murdered during 24 years in power.
And that opens up the question as to how to deal with non-state sponsored terrorists in the first place. — Benkei
You make me embarrassed for being part of the human race. Well done.
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