Free Counter
ab scissors

Tales from a small town

Short stories about life in a small town. Non-fiction. Great reading.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

my 2 cents

So I'm reading alot about people who have a strong amount of mistrust against the current administration on issues of foreign policy - especially the war in Iraq.

This is just my 2 cents worth - again, opinions are like assholes: everyone has one, and they all stink. There - I said it before you can. Ha!

I'm not trying to convince anyone to change their mind - I'm just trying to offer an alternate viewpoint.

Why I think we're in Iraq instead of Saudi Arabia
This is one of the most common complaints I hear about concerning the war in Iraq. Why aren't we in Saudi Arabia? 15 of the 19 September 11th hijackers were from Saudi Arabia, so why not go after them? What did Iraq have to do with anything?
We can't go after Saudi Arabia. They have the 2 holy cities of Mecca and Medina. If we set foot on Saudi soil in an aggressive posture, I'm sure something would happen to America that would make 9-11 look like a boy scout excursion. These two cities are where the Prophet Mohammed received his revelations that he wrote down - which became the Muslim Holy Book. Mohammed traveled between these two cities for 40 days and nights while receiving his revelation, which is where we get the holiday, Rammadan - and that's why this holiday is 40 days.
So, if we can't hit Saudi Arabia, what can we do? I mean, if we don't do something about it, we'll look like a prison-yard bitch in the eyes of the international community. In my opinion, that would just invite more terrorism, because the Islamic culture is a male-dominated culture, and males tend to pay attention to things like strength and force - and tend to laugh at things that appear to be wishy-washy and indecisive.
So what do we do? How about if we take a country in the Arab world that is really a secular dictatorship, and supplant that dictatorship with a Muslim democracy? Saddam was hated by all of his neighbors (except Syria) and was generally hated in the Middle East as a whole. Sure, the Arab Street would put up token resistance to an American invasion of a "Muslim" country, but everyone in the Middle East knew that under Saddam, Iraq really wasn't a Muslim country, it was a secular dictatorship; therefore, they just didn't feel as sorry for him as they would've, if it was a true Muslim country like Egypt or Yemen.
Now, let's draw the Marshall Plan/Japanese Occupation parallel. How often have we had to fight Germany or Japan since WWII? In my opinion, that's because we marginalized their royal families to create some stability, then we turned those countries into democracies, while rebuilding them into an image similar to America's, while at the same time allowing for cultural differences to shape the final outcome of their countries. Bada-boom, bada-bing! 60 years of peace, and nary a shot fired.
Oh sure, there were insurgencies that challenged America's reconstruction plans - in both Europe and Japan. But the press was different then. They were a little more sympathetic to the current administration of their day, and gave presidents much more leeway back then; but that still doesn't mean everything was "peachy-keen" as far as a transition from monarchies, to democracies. In the end, we still got 'ir done - and 60 years of peace with nary a shot fired is the proof.
If it works (and I realize that "if" is a big word for only being 2 letters) but if it works - what if democracy spreads? What if democracy spreads all the way to Saudi Arabia? Then, you've got a situation where Muslims are affecting change in an Islamic society - not Americans.
Maybe it won't work, but I hope it does - something has to.

5 Comments:

  • At 1:11 PM, February 23, 2006, Blogger Intellectual Insurgent said…

    Put your seabelt on Boris, we're going for a ride. I disagree with most of what you wrote in here and I am going to step up on my soapbox. :-)

    Why the U.S. did not attack Saudi Arabia? Two main reasons.

    First, why should it? Just because the citizens of a nation commit a crime, does not mean the government was complacent in it. The racists who ask that question are forwarding a guilt by association argument - if someone in your community commits a crime, the entire community must be punished. By that logic, any city with a KKK chapter should be firebombed since the people in that city provide aid and comfort to those terrorists.

    Second, the U.S. economy is intertwined with Saudi's economy. The Saudi royal family is a filthy, corrupt bunch of cockroaches who keep power solely by the grace of the American military. Before Saudi Arabia was a country, the Al Saud family were bedouin thieves who used to rob the pilgrims headed to Mecca. The British correctly saw them as corruptible and made a pact with them -- betray the Turks, secure the oil, and we will give you a country and name it after you. The Saudis not only took the offer, but to keep their people in line, adopted the most extreme interpretation of Islam that most of the Islamic world has rejected outright as insane. The West has supported Saudi Arabia since.

    The Saud family has proven itself to be incredibly corruptible over the decades. It has agreed to keep oil production at levels acceptable to the U.S. and when major US corporations need business, they dream up infrastructure projects and the Saudis pay for it with the oil money. What they don't pocket or spend from the oil money, the Saudis invest in the U.S. Chase Manhattan and many huge banks are floating on petrodollars. Bush spouts a load of nonsense about addiction to oil, but it is American corporations that profit from that "addiction". Why bomb the country? It's already ours. If people are honest about the fact that this military conquest is about oil, it becomes quite clear why there is no reason to go after Saudi Arabia. This is one reason why Bush is full of shit.

    The U.S. offered Saddam the same deal - to privatize the oil, give the exploration contracts to American companies and to regulate the price of oil (which under American law would be illegal) and he refused. Saddam wanted to peg the price of oil to the Euro instead of the dollar, he entered into several exploration contracts with the Chinese in the late 90's and wouldn't invest the petrodollars in American banks. Hence, the b.s. about WMD's. It is worth noting that the first thing Bremer did when the US colonized Iraq was to declare all existing contracts null and void.

    Follow China and you will see the American military right behind it. China is on the road to superpower status and, to retard that progress, the US has to control the world's oil resources. Out of the top 5 oil producers in the world, the US has troops in all but one -- Iran. It is no coincidence that the neocons are now dreaming up excuses to attack. Especially since Iran has been doing deals with Russia and China (i.e. committing the same sin that Iraq did).

    Your thought that Arabs just need a role model in order to have democracy is ill-informed. There have been many efforts at democracy in the Semitic and Muslim worlds and the U.S. has thwarted every single one. When the Islamic party won the democratic elections in Algeria, the U.S. backed military voided the elections, which precipitated a bloody 10-year civil war. In 1958, Iran had a democratic election that brought a true reformer. Mossadegh's error, however, was to nationalize the country's oil. The CIA organized a coup and a more US-friendly government (known to the Iranians for its brutal police SAVAK) held power until the Islamic revolution. In Egypt, Mubarak has held power since 1981 and Egyptians hate him. He is armed, funded and supported by the U.S. however, so Egyptians know that they will never get rid of him without a bloody revolution. And if things keep up the way they are, that's exactly what is going to happen.

    It's not just the Middle East. The U.S. has thwarted democracy in Panama, Ecuador, Chile, Guatemala, Haiti, Nicaragua, etc. And each time it happened, bloody, tragic conflicts followed. All in the name of protecting American interests.

    Since much of your argument rests upon 9/11 and the nonsensical story the government has sold us, I ask that you return to your starting point. While I am quite skeptical of "conspiracy theories", enough intelligent people have asked important questions that remain unanswered to this fay. For example, the government identified Mohamed Atta as a hijacker because his passport was allegedly found at the site. A fire that incinerated two jets, two towers and thousands of people somehow didn't affect the guy's passport. Sorry - I don't buy it. Also, I know a lot of engineers, none of whom have a political axe to grind (most engineers I know are apolitical) and they question the story of how the towers came down, especially Building 7, from an engineering perspective.

    Here is a link to a book written by a religious Christian professor of theology who critiqued the 9/11 Commission Report:
    http://911review.com/articles/griffin/commissionlies.html

    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1566565847/002-6315383-6041609?v=glance&n=283155

     
  • At 1:19 PM, February 23, 2006, Blogger Intellectual Insurgent said…

    One more thing. Engineers at Brigham Young University have been studying the collapse of the towers and have questioned the official story. I'll send the link when I find it.

    Also, there is a group of professors from around the nation challenging the official story.
    http://www.st911.org/

     
  • At 4:08 PM, March 06, 2006, Blogger Leesa said…

    I don't think we have any reason to enter Saudi Arabia or Iraq.

    Just because Mecca has the Mosque of The Haram does not mean that we should never invade that nation. But why should we go into Iraq.

    Okay, after 9-11, with Saudi Arabian terrorists who were trained in Afghanistan, we attack Iraq. Makes little sense to me. We (the US) had some responsibility in the Iraqis' attacking Kuwait in 1991 with our "wink wink" answers.

    Personally, I think we did a disservice to most when we attacked.

     
  • At 11:27 AM, March 21, 2006, Blogger MZPEACH said…

    This was a really good read. Very inforomative.

     
  • At 3:06 PM, March 21, 2006, Blogger Boris Yeltsin said…

    Thanks Georgia Peach!

     

Post a Comment

<< Home