So the good Colonel never heard of Vietnam or Korea and the massive expenditure of resources we spent in both? We expended far more 'blood and treasure' in both of those individually than we have in the last 15 years of war.I did not say isolation. I agree with the first lines of the article: During the Cold War, the United States preferred to husband, rather than expend, its military power. The idea was not to fight but to defend, deter, and contain...
I see no reason to spend trillions of dollars and wear down our military equipment on neo-conservatism in Afghanistan or Iraq or Libya or Syria when they are sideshows to Russia and China.
So the good Colonel never heard of Vietnam or Korea and the massive expenditure of resources we spent in both? We expended far more 'blood and treasure' in both of those individually than we have in the last 15 years of war.
While I think that invading Iraq was a mistake (in hindsight) the others were necessary, and Afghanistan in particular demonstrates the exact reason why we should be involved in many places. We ignored the country while it slipped into anarchy and chaos that in turn enabled the rise of the Taliban and their support of numerous terrorist groups that found shelter under their rule, including Al Qaeda. We paid a dear price for that ignorance, we would be wise not let it happen again.
Korea and Vietnam have to be viewed in the context of Kennan's containment strategy which is a completely different animal than inserting ourselves into the internal workings of irrelevant foreign states.
I agree that Iraq was a huge mistake (in hindsight as well), but other than giving a hunting license to the CIA, SEALS or Green Berets (or the occasional Tomahawk strike), I think it is mistake to waste time, money and lives on nation building in either areas ruled by a strongman (Libya, Syria) or failed states (Afghanistan, Somalia). If they can't sort themselves out, that is their problem. I see no reason to send our sons and daughters on missions that are not of utmost importance. Likewise, we can maintain a Cold War size Army and Navy to deter Russia in Europe and China in the Pacific - or we can spend trillions trying to bring Wal-Mart and the Kardashians to Kabul. We can not afford to do both.
[Citation Needed]Likewise, we can maintain a Cold War size Army and Navy to deter Russia in Europe and China in the Pacific
Hate to nit pick but NSC68 vice Kennan's "Long telegram" put us into Korea and Vietnam.Korea and Vietnam have to be viewed in the context of Kennan's containment strategy which is a completely different animal than inserting ourselves into the internal workings of irrelevant foreign states.
What are the legalities of shooting down the Syrian planes in their own airspace?
In the words of W, "International law? Better call my lawyer"What are the legalities of shooting down the Syrian planes in their own airspace?
I'm ok with "because we say so, therefore you're covered" but I was thinking more along the lines of the international community.If it's IAW the ROE, then it's good.
Kennan had the foresight to realize not every place was worth expending blood and treasure and to pick the important fights.
I'm ok with "because we say so, therefore you're covered" but I was thinking more along the lines of the international community.
Some fancy lawyer comes around with the argument that the US has not declared war so why is it shooting down planes, basing troops on the ground to train groups to fight the 'legitimate peace loving soldiers of the light defending the democratically elected government by the people of the society of the republic' lol, and so on.
For better and worse, the law of international relations is basically still the law of the jungle.Some fancy lawyer comes around with the argument that the US has not declared war so why is it shooting down planes, basing troops on the ground to train groups to fight the 'legitimate peace loving soldiers of the light defending the democratically elected government by the people of the society of the republic' lol, and so on.
For better and worse, the law of international relations is basically still the law of the jungle.