Nothing gives a government or group of people the moral right to intervene in the internal affairs of another country other than a direct attack or a genuine call for help. — Daniel
or a genuine call for help.
intervene in the internal affairs of another country
Or do u like unwanted "help"?
large corporations, as though elected heads represent big money interests over those of the working citizenry. — FrankGSterleJr
Then I think you should be fighting for a world unified under the same flag.
One day I hope that the entire world is a member of NATO — Paul Edwards
And for the time being, I think the sovereignty of each country should be respected.
It is the moral obligation of oppressed people to liberate themselves;
otherwise, oppression will just change forms but will always be present.
Nothing gives a government or group of people the moral right to intervene in the internal affairs of another country other than a direct attack or a genuine call for help. — Daniel
I’m almost a complete pacifist, and even I’ll say it’s fine to go help someone else under attack if they want it, and they’re in the right in that conflict, and we can afford to stick our necks out for them. — Pfhorrest
I am not arguing for Paul Edwards's position, and I am not saying you are both wrong, but I don't feel that his challenges have been fully met. — jamalrob
We didn't let, we encouraged and certain corporations made money off of it. Arming both sides is not justifiable morally. Given Sadaam, as part of that, high tech computers that could be used in nuclear programs also does not fit.Yes, because the strategy at that time was to let the competing psychopaths fight each other instead of fighting us. — Hippyhead
After intelligence agency warnings that it would happen were ignored. Only after they had done a great deal of damage to at least thousands of people (and they are not finished yet). And only after the Russian took a real aggressive stance in relation to them and also Trump. IOW the regular neocons, including people like Hilary, were not that interested in crushing them. (and I am no Trump fan by the way)Yes, IS was a threat, and so the Islamic State was then effectively crushed. — Hippyhead
Most people on both sides did not give a shit about them. One side created a mass of bs that this was (after no womd were found) the reason they were there and cared. Thus giving them the hypocrisy. But further on the left there was a significant minority who had been concerned about the embargo and the first war and had also long before that been critical of neo-con support for Hussein and other policies harming people in the Middle East.Iraq war critics showed no interest in the Iraqi people before the war, and now that American involvement in Iraq has wound down they again show no interest. — Hippyhead
Most people on both sides did not give a shit about them. One side created a mass of bs that this was (after no womd were found) the reason they were there and cared. — Coben
Are you one of those people who did not care about Iraquis?
It wasn't a war to free them. The justification for the war was because they supposedly had WOMD's or Hussein did. But this was made up intelligence and manipulation. When it was obvious that there were no WOMD's, THEN the goal of the war was for the Iraqi people. Not for oil. Not for military presence in the Middle East, not for no bid billion dollar contracts to Cheney's old companies he still had connections with. Not for enormous money transferred to the private sector in the new more privitized military. The same neo cons, I mean, some of them were exactly the same people, who under Reagan had been quite friendly with Saddam Hussein, even when he used gas on the Kurds - who presumably also deserve sympathy - now demonized Saddam Hussein for the reasons above. He wasn't nice to his people back when they were pro-Hussein, but they used him for their ends at that time and even helped his military and intelligence services. When it became convenient for their ends, they demonized him. And he was easy to demonize, of course.No. Far from it. I believe everyone has the right to live in freedom, including Iraqis, and VERY much supported the 2003 war to free them. — Paul Edwards
As described in the article, Trump's term as president led to some striking cross-party unity among his opponents. Former officials of the Bush administration, and then Republican national security officials, came out in support of Biden's campaign, the latter being specifically concerned with foreign policy. — jamalrob
But this is difficult to swallow. For both of you, apparently, silent genocide victims ought to be ignored even by countries in a position to help. Aside from the sometime legality of humanitarian intervention under the aegis of the United Nations and international law, moral intuition tells us that innocent victims ought to be helped even if they don't ask for help. A strong man ought to help a frail old lady who is being beaten by someone younger and stronger than she is, even if she is not asking for help. The situation with humanitarian intervention is significantly different from that analogy, but exactly how is it different, and what are the consequences of that difference for the moral rightness or wrongness of intervening? — jamalrob
It wasn't a war to free them. — Coben
The situation with humanitarian intervention is significantly different from that analogy, but exactly how is it different, and what are the consequences of that difference for the moral rightness or wrongness of intervening? — jamalrob
Shouldn't the cost of intervening be factored in? A country like the US is often in a position to interfere, but then what are the consequences? You get embroiled in someone else's civil war? Then it turns into another nation building exercise with troops still stationed there a decade later? — Marchesk
Shouldn't the cost of intervening be factored in? A country like the US is often in a position to interfere, but then what are the consequences? You get embroiled in someone else's civil war? Then it turns into another nation building exercise with troops still stationed there a decade later? — Marchesk
I don't know. I tend to support pacifism and non-intervention. But reality is messy.
Seriously, is that the most charitable interpretation you can come up with. If you actually read my posts with humanitarian care you would see that 1) I never expressed the slightest bit of racism. 2) My concerns were humanitarian and I was critical of the motives of the people involved is making those decisions. So, stop asking me that question. See if you can imagine good motives for having the position I had and have on the war, and you can continue to disagree about what policies and actions would be best.YOU should have supported a war to free them, as I did. What stopped YOU from trying to help the Iraqis? Is it because they are brown? — Paul Edwards
I really don't see how you could know that billions of people supported the war. And now much did those who supported the war, support the war based on false intelligence and lies by the Bush administration.Billions of people the world over should have supported the liberation of Iraq to free them from state-slavery. — Paul Edwards
You want to focus on me and judge me and not focus on what I wrote, for the most part. The people around Bush, as I said before, were perfectly content with Saddam H.'s behavior toward the Kurds and his own people when it was in their interests to do that. These people lied to the American public and the world and whatever support they had was in large part due to those lies.And let's start with you, as a member of the public, who likely expects his own human rights to be protected to the nth degree. — Paul Edwards
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