yeah. when Iran was enemy no.1, the US supported Saddam so he'd have the means to keep them in check. Unfortunately, he turned out to be a brutal dictator himself and soon turned on his own people after the Iran-Iraq war, using WMD on some minorities.
Same with Osama and the Taliban. The US supported them in their fight against the Sowjets in Afghanistan. After the russians had left, and the whole country basically was a minefield, the US said "well, the bad guys are gone good luck with your torn-up country, you can go f*** yourselves, good bye". The taliban themselves weren't really angels, they were as brutal mass murderers as the russians back in the days. And they were muslim fanatics with no sense of democracy whatsoever, a fact with didn't seem to bother the US as long as they were fighting the russians...
I am not saying foreign politics is an easy business, but I believe that the US foreign policy has been somewhat short-sighted over the last 25 years or so.
Kinda ironic, isn't it ? The US helped considerably to bring both regimes to power, and 25 years later you have to go in and overthrow them again. Well, at least you are cleaning up after yourselves...
but I am going OT, sorry about that...
so, where do we go from here ? Obviously, the US is trying to install a western-style democracy in the heart of the middle east, in an attempt to promote their image of freedom and democracy. As much as I admire that, I do have considerable doubt wether it will be a success. It might take 10 years or more until that country can safely govern itself. look at the balcans. It's been, what, ten years since the end of the war there, and there are still UN forces present. You cannot erase hundreds of years of ethnic rivalries by saying "well, there you go, the tyran is gone, each of you now got his own nation, now go on and live side by side in peace. remember, you are living in a democracy now".
It is already terribly obvious that the insurgency (sp?) is no longer fighting the US forces, they are fighting for political dominance in a future Iraq government. Who knows who will be in charge of that country after the elections ? A democracy ? freedom ? come one. those tribes have been fighting each other hundreds of years before Saddam came, and it is bound to continue. You cannot force democratic values on people. They need to develop from within them, as a product of rational thinking.
It looks like iran might be the next target of the World Community. Interestingly, the current iranian government was elected in a democratic election ( as democratic as those can be over there ).
Sure, everybody had hoped for a different outcome, a more liberal, approachable head of state. But the people chose differently. Democracy at its best, isn't it ?
terrorism is bound to go on, and so is the war on terror. there are always going to be people that for some reason are angry at their own government or some other government.
As far as motivation is concerned, I have a couple of interesting question / options.
1. middle eastern terrorists simply do what they do because they want the west to stay out of their internal affairs. terrorism will stop on a dime as soon as the west ends its support for israel, withdraws from Iraq and Afghanistan and allows the natives to battle each other for supremacy until they are all wiped out. Personally, I am fine with that as long as the oil is flowing...
2. as xanthpi has argued, the main reason for terrorism and the most important motivation behind it is Islam.
Accordingly, terrorism in the middle east is not a fight for dominance in that specific region, it is merely a preparation for the unification of all muslim nations in the fight against the "infidels", as requested by the Qu'ran. Therefore, even if the west did pull out of the middle east and stayed out of their affairs, we would eventually be faced with a fight against Islam for predominance of this planet. and we would soon be cut off of their oil supplies for the same reasons. what do you make of that theory ?
the conclusions scare me.
Same with Osama and the Taliban. The US supported them in their fight against the Sowjets in Afghanistan. After the russians had left, and the whole country basically was a minefield, the US said "well, the bad guys are gone good luck with your torn-up country, you can go f*** yourselves, good bye". The taliban themselves weren't really angels, they were as brutal mass murderers as the russians back in the days. And they were muslim fanatics with no sense of democracy whatsoever, a fact with didn't seem to bother the US as long as they were fighting the russians...
I am not saying foreign politics is an easy business, but I believe that the US foreign policy has been somewhat short-sighted over the last 25 years or so.
Kinda ironic, isn't it ? The US helped considerably to bring both regimes to power, and 25 years later you have to go in and overthrow them again. Well, at least you are cleaning up after yourselves...
but I am going OT, sorry about that...
so, where do we go from here ? Obviously, the US is trying to install a western-style democracy in the heart of the middle east, in an attempt to promote their image of freedom and democracy. As much as I admire that, I do have considerable doubt wether it will be a success. It might take 10 years or more until that country can safely govern itself. look at the balcans. It's been, what, ten years since the end of the war there, and there are still UN forces present. You cannot erase hundreds of years of ethnic rivalries by saying "well, there you go, the tyran is gone, each of you now got his own nation, now go on and live side by side in peace. remember, you are living in a democracy now".
It is already terribly obvious that the insurgency (sp?) is no longer fighting the US forces, they are fighting for political dominance in a future Iraq government. Who knows who will be in charge of that country after the elections ? A democracy ? freedom ? come one. those tribes have been fighting each other hundreds of years before Saddam came, and it is bound to continue. You cannot force democratic values on people. They need to develop from within them, as a product of rational thinking.
It looks like iran might be the next target of the World Community. Interestingly, the current iranian government was elected in a democratic election ( as democratic as those can be over there ).
Sure, everybody had hoped for a different outcome, a more liberal, approachable head of state. But the people chose differently. Democracy at its best, isn't it ?
terrorism is bound to go on, and so is the war on terror. there are always going to be people that for some reason are angry at their own government or some other government.
As far as motivation is concerned, I have a couple of interesting question / options.
1. middle eastern terrorists simply do what they do because they want the west to stay out of their internal affairs. terrorism will stop on a dime as soon as the west ends its support for israel, withdraws from Iraq and Afghanistan and allows the natives to battle each other for supremacy until they are all wiped out. Personally, I am fine with that as long as the oil is flowing...
2. as xanthpi has argued, the main reason for terrorism and the most important motivation behind it is Islam.
Accordingly, terrorism in the middle east is not a fight for dominance in that specific region, it is merely a preparation for the unification of all muslim nations in the fight against the "infidels", as requested by the Qu'ran. Therefore, even if the west did pull out of the middle east and stayed out of their affairs, we would eventually be faced with a fight against Islam for predominance of this planet. and we would soon be cut off of their oil supplies for the same reasons. what do you make of that theory ?
the conclusions scare me.