Since the end of WWII, our foriegn policy seems to be jumping from one hole into a crater then out again only to look for another hole to jump into and from there to the next crater. In every case, be it Korea, the Middle East, Vietnam or Iraq we seem to be following in the foot steps of the old and now defunct British and French Empires.
The Suez War, the one sealed the fate of the two old Empires was supposed to also end the era of Empires. Apparently not.
You would think this futile effort in building an empire is in the interest of the people, since it is their democratically elected governments who are trying desperately to build that illusive Empire. But in every case the people were and today they are against that.
The question then becomes, are the people foolish and don't know what are their interests, or those Governments are bunch of idiots who didn't and still don't know how to achieve the interests of the people who elected them with sane, well-thought and honestly- debated policies. The more surprising question is when the people are clearly against a certain policy why those governments just keep pursuing the same misguided objective? of course there will always be a minority who support that mistaken policies. But isn't the government job to follow the opinion of the majority? Why isn't that happening?
Looking at some of the opinions that supports our current (and obviously past) policies in the Middle East i wonder, if these statements have any validity, to what end are we heading?
here is a sample:
"you can't be ignorant enough to overlook the foothold situation we can achieve in the region"
"a superpower willing to make them (the Kurds) a budding Israel, at least I hope so"
"If Richard had hung out another year he probably would have taken Jerusalem, but he left, and when Saladin died and the Arab world splintered there was no one there to take advantage of it "
"when Sadat was assasinated, egypt got a little more radical. when Arrafat died, we got hamas and hezbollah grabbing power. we put in the shah, they forced him out and gave the keys to kohmenni. there seems to be a pattern that after a leader who would "deal with us" we get ones who won't as easily and lead the anti-us rhetoric."
Are we really looking for a foot-hold and to create another Israel in the Middle East? The last of those statements is really telling and confirms that we seem to be always pursuing the wrong policies, the ones made us a target not only to "anti-us rhetoric" but to terrorism and its violent hate.
Why aren't they listening to the majority of the people?. We all suffering from these misguided policies.