Obama: Won't Use Nukes

[quote]DBCooper wrote:

Wrap your brain around this. If the U.S. were to respond to a 9/11-style attack by blowing the country that sponsored said attack off the face of the map with nukes, WE would become the international outcasts. I don’t like it, but if we responded to an attack that killed 3,000 people by killing 300k people with one bomb, or killed 3 million people, the entire international community would flip the fuck out. Especially since we are perfectly capable of responding to such an attack with conventional weaponry.[/quote]

Wrap your head around this as well bro. Did we use nukes after 911? Then what the fuck is all this? You keep saying If,If we did that…if . Did it happen? No, so there is no reason for this other than to make us look weak and to show the world we are push overs.

I’d rather them all think we’ll nuke em over a trade breach. Shit, what the hell has happened to our initiative?

“International Community”…yeah the “community” that really gives a shit about us huh? Don’t be such a pushover to think that the “International Community” won’t ever try to fuck us royally at every turn.

Read some History if you think I’m wrong.

[quote]Bill Roberts wrote:
So Spartiates, you believe the the government of Afghanistan decided to launch an attack on US soil?

If you don’t believe that, then your above post is completely senseless.[/quote]

I think I explained it pretty clearly. The government of Afghanistan (The Taliban) allowed Al Qaeda to train, and operate within the country, and even officially “defended” Bin Ladin, when told to hand him over “or else”.

That’s about as close to state-sponsored terrorism we’re going to get. They were the government.

What’s unclear about this? Do you remember a different version of history?

The facts are not unclear: it’s your thinking that is unclear.

[quote]Spartiates wrote:

[quote]Bill Roberts wrote:
So Spartiates, you believe the the government of Afghanistan decided to launch an attack on US soil?

If you don’t believe that, then your above post is completely senseless.[/quote]

I think I explained it pretty clearly. The government of Afghanistan (The Taliban) allowed Al Qaeda to train, and operate within the country, and even officially “defended” Bin Ladin, when told to hand him over “or else”.

That’s about as close to state-sponsored terrorism we’re going to get. They were the government.

What’s unclear about this? Do you remember a different version of history?[/quote]

Ok, just to clarify, the taliban sponsored al qaeda in order to attack the U.S.?

Thanks in advance.

[quote]Jeff R wrote:

Ok, just to clarify, the taliban sponsored al qaeda in order to attack the U.S.?

Thanks in advance.
[/quote]

[quote]Bill Roberts wrote:
The facts are not unclear: it’s your thinking that is unclear.[/quote]

So we’re going the ad hominem route?

If you remember a different version of history, please share it.

The fact is, we’re never going to nuke a country for what a small group of people within/sponsored by that country do, unless they have inflicted, or have the real potential to inflict catastrophic, wide-spread damage to us, i.e. have nukes, or some ultra-modern high-yield conventional weapons.

[quote]Spartiates wrote:

[quote]Jeff R wrote:

Ok, just to clarify, the taliban sponsored al qaeda in order to attack the U.S.?

Thanks in advance.
[/quote]

[quote]Bill Roberts wrote:
The facts are not unclear: it’s your thinking that is unclear.[/quote]

So we’re going the ad hominem route?

If you remember a different version of history, please share it.

The fact is, we’re never going to nuke a country for what a small group of people within/sponsored by that country do, unless they have inflicted, or have the real potential to inflict catastrophic, wide-spread damage to us, i.e. have nukes, or some ultra-modern high-yield conventional weapons.[/quote]
Now it’s “ad hominem” to say that an argument presented is unclear thinking?

WaaaaaaAAAAAAH!!!

As for your “if you have a different version of history, please share it”: Did you not notice above that I said it was not the facts that were unclear: the problem is the thinking you have applied to those facts.

I think probably everyone here already sees the problem with your thinking: The fact that a government was not nuclear-bombed for allowing OTHERS on its soil who had known opposition to the United States to train on its soil is NOT conclusive reason, if any reason at all, for other governments to think it safe for their leaders to THEMSELVES choose to attack the United States.

Your not getting that distinction was unclear thinking.

Oh boo hoo, the bad man has ad hominem’ed me again!!!

Bam should go pick up Osama Bin Laden, Taliban leaders, and Al Queda on Air Force One. That seems to get people to change their ways pretty quickly. Maybe he could convince them to turn Christian.

One more time Obama shows his inexperience. Anyone with a modicum of political savvy knows that this will embolden the terrorists and rogue countries that are now developing weapons of mass destruction. Furthermore, he made this outlandish decision against the will of his Secretary of Defense. I really do wonder sometimes who Obama thinks he is? Does he imagine that by his shear will our enemies will leave us alone? What far fetched thought process brings such a naive decision?

As I’ve repeatedly said on other threads, we will certainly be fortunate if we get through these next three years without going into an economic depression or a major war because of Obama’s misguided policies. This man truly is the worst President in modern times, God help us.

One more time Obama shows his inexperience. Anyone with a modicum of political savvy knows that this will embolden the terrorists and rogue countries that are now developing weapons of mass destruction. Furthermore, he made this outlandish decision against the will of his Secretary of Defense. I really do wonder sometimes who Obama thinks he is? Does he imagine that by his shear will our enemies will leave us alone? What far fetched thought process brings such a naive decision?

As I’ve repeatedly said on other threads, we will certainly be fortunate if we get through these next three years without going into an economic depression or a major war because of Obama’s misguided policies. This man truly is the worst President in modern times, God help us.

I don’t understand all the uproar over this. All Obama has really said is that the U.S. will not use nukes against a country that is in compliance with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. This eliminates every country that would actually be likely to attack us in any way, shape or form. Britain, France, Russia and China have basically been told that if they were to ever go to war with us, which is HIGHLY unlikely, we won’t nuke them if they don’t nuke us or attack us with chem/bio/cyber weapons. If they attack us with any of that shit, we’re probabl going to nuke them.

Nothing that Obama has defined as part of his strategy is applicable to any of the countries that pose any sort of realistic threat to us. Iran, North Korea or Pakistan are fucked if they ever attack us with nukes or carry out some sort of large-scale chem/bio/cyber attack. They’re on the nuclear hit list if they try to fuck with us (and so is Israel and India for that matter), but they always have been and for all intents and purposes, they’ve been well aware of this.

Iran has been pushing the envelope and so has North Korea and now they know that if they continue to push the envelope and attack us with nukes or other such weaponry, they’re going to get nuked. If they get in line and become part of the NNPT and do not violate it, the U.S. won’t fuck with them. Stopping nuclear proliferation is in everybody’s best interests and this clearly defined strategy, however hollow it may ring, is designed to provide some sort of incentive to not seek nuclear weaponry for countries that may try to develop them in the future, just like Iran and North Korea are trying to develop them right now.

This isn’t a weakening of U.S. strength by any means. It’s simply a way of making clear that there is a shit list and a non-shit list. Get on the shit list and the U.S. may very well may nuke you if it comes to that. Stay off the shit list and you won’t get nuked, even if you attack us. There isn’t a country in the world without The Bomb that we couldn’t wipe right off the face of the map without using nukes if they attacked us in any way, so what’s the worry?

[quote]DBCooper wrote:
I don’t understand all the uproar over this. All Obama has really said is that the U.S. will not use nukes against a country that is in compliance with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. This eliminates every country that would actually be likely to attack us in any way, shape or form. Britain, France, Russia and China have basically been told that if they were to ever go to war with us, which is HIGHLY unlikely, we won’t nuke them if they don’t nuke us or attack us with chem/bio/cyber weapons. If they attack us with any of that shit, we’re probabl going to nuke them.

Nothing that Obama has defined as part of his strategy is applicable to any of the countries that pose any sort of realistic threat to us. Iran, North Korea or Pakistan are fucked if they ever attack us with nukes or carry out some sort of large-scale chem/bio/cyber attack. They’re on the nuclear hit list if they try to fuck with us (and so is Israel and India for that matter), but they always have been and for all intents and purposes, they’ve been well aware of this.

Iran has been pushing the envelope and so has North Korea and now they know that if they continue to push the envelope and attack us with nukes or other such weaponry, they’re going to get nuked. If they get in line and become part of the NNPT and do not violate it, the U.S. won’t fuck with them. Stopping nuclear proliferation is in everybody’s best interests and this clearly defined strategy, however hollow it may ring, is designed to provide some sort of incentive to not seek nuclear weaponry for countries that may try to develop them in the future, just like Iran and North Korea are trying to develop them right now.

This isn’t a weakening of U.S. strength by any means. It’s simply a way of making clear that there is a shit list and a non-shit list. Get on the shit list and the U.S. may very well may nuke you if it comes to that. Stay off the shit list and you won’t get nuked, even if you attack us. There isn’t a country in the world without The Bomb that we couldn’t wipe right off the face of the map without using nukes if they attacked us in any way, so what’s the worry?[/quote]

I agree up to the fourth paragraph. America has shown that the people on it’s shit-list get preferential treatment (Aid to NKorea under Bush, Obama’s willingness to engage Iran), and at best, America’s willingness to blindly ignore possession of nuclear technologies by non signatories (india, pakistan) renders the entire idea of the NNPT subject to convenience. We made white a grey area in our foreign policy and received nothing in return. At best, the Obama administration received a nebulous and useless approval from the ‘international community’.

Giving something up for nothing is a rookie and ideological mistake.

[quote]Otep wrote:

[quote]DBCooper wrote:
I don’t understand all the uproar over this. All Obama has really said is that the U.S. will not use nukes against a country that is in compliance with the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. This eliminates every country that would actually be likely to attack us in any way, shape or form. Britain, France, Russia and China have basically been told that if they were to ever go to war with us, which is HIGHLY unlikely, we won’t nuke them if they don’t nuke us or attack us with chem/bio/cyber weapons. If they attack us with any of that shit, we’re probabl going to nuke them.

Nothing that Obama has defined as part of his strategy is applicable to any of the countries that pose any sort of realistic threat to us. Iran, North Korea or Pakistan are fucked if they ever attack us with nukes or carry out some sort of large-scale chem/bio/cyber attack. They’re on the nuclear hit list if they try to fuck with us (and so is Israel and India for that matter), but they always have been and for all intents and purposes, they’ve been well aware of this.

Iran has been pushing the envelope and so has North Korea and now they know that if they continue to push the envelope and attack us with nukes or other such weaponry, they’re going to get nuked. If they get in line and become part of the NNPT and do not violate it, the U.S. won’t fuck with them. Stopping nuclear proliferation is in everybody’s best interests and this clearly defined strategy, however hollow it may ring, is designed to provide some sort of incentive to not seek nuclear weaponry for countries that may try to develop them in the future, just like Iran and North Korea are trying to develop them right now.

This isn’t a weakening of U.S. strength by any means. It’s simply a way of making clear that there is a shit list and a non-shit list. Get on the shit list and the U.S. may very well may nuke you if it comes to that. Stay off the shit list and you won’t get nuked, even if you attack us. There isn’t a country in the world without The Bomb that we couldn’t wipe right off the face of the map without using nukes if they attacked us in any way, so what’s the worry?[/quote]

I agree up to the fourth paragraph. America has shown that the people on it’s shit-list get preferential treatment (Aid to NKorea under Bush, Obama’s willingness to engage Iran), and at best, America’s willingness to blindly ignore possession of nuclear technologies by non signatories (india, pakistan) renders the entire idea of the NNPT subject to convenience. We made white a grey area in our foreign policy and received nothing in return. At best, the Obama administration received a nebulous and useless approval from the ‘international community’.

Giving something up for nothing is a rookie and ideological mistake.[/quote]

I understand your argument about placating North Korea and Iran, but what else is the U.S. supposed to do? War is in no one’s best interest and fostering massive anti-American sentiment isn’t in our interest either. But if we were to enact crippling economic sanctions against North Korea or Iran all we’ll do is make the people who are best able to change those regimes without us getting involved hate us even more.

If we place heavy sanctions on Iran, the Iranians will hate us even more, which on the surface doesn’t seem like such a big deal. But it will also lead to a legitimizing of the deep anti-American sentiments in Iran that have allowed that country to get as far out of whack as they are. Right now, they’re divided over there; half the people don’t want to see the govt continually try to egg us on and the other half gets a real big kick out of telling us to go fuck ourselves. But if you want to see that country galvanize itself really quickly, watch how fast it would happen if we enacted huge sanctions against Iran far beyond what we’re trying to do right now. Those crazy fuckers will see it as nothing short of an all-out attack on their way of life and will unite against us just like this country galvanized itself right after 9/11.

Of course, the sanctions might create a lot of anti-Ahmadijenad sentiment instead and have the opposite effect described above, but if it doesn’t and the above scenario happens, we’ll set our diplomatic efforts back for decades, at which point Iran will probably have a nice little arsenal of nukes.

Now the other option, besides what Bush and Obama have been trying to do, is to simply blow through there with a few F-22s and decimate all the nuclear reactors. Or give Israel carte blanche to do it instead. But this will only galvanize the ENTIRE Middle East against us, probably permanently. We would eliminate their nuclear capabilities, but then we’d have a whole new set of problems that we can’t even fully envision now. Plus, a lot of countries around the globe would condemn us for foregoing diplomacy, regardless of how fruitless our diplomatic efforts were, and we’d be hard-pressed to find anyone, outside of Britain and maybe France, to go along with any efforts we made to clean up our mess in the Middle East.

It’s almost a situation in which we don’t want the ball in our court because there really aren’t any good options for us, so we’ve attempted to put the ball in Iran’s and North Korea’s court instead. Many countries look at us and say, “why should we not pursue nukes, why should we get rid of ours? You have them.” We aren’t going to get rid of ours to make them happy, but we are trying to tell them that if they don’t pursue nuclear weaponry then they won’t have any reason to fear us and our nukes anyways. But if they do try to pursue nukes, they are only creating a scenario in which we will become increasingly more likely to use them.

[quote]DBCooper wrote:

[quote]Jeff R wrote:

[quote]Spartiates wrote:

[quote]Jeff R wrote:

Hey, smart guy, I WANT the bad guys to be unsure of our response. It’s called deterrance. If the bad guys THINK about using any form of weapon against us, I want them WONDERING if we’ll use nuclear weapons on them.

Now this guy has removed the doubt.

Makes me wonder if anyone on the left has ever faced down a bully. They don’t seem to understand the basic premise.

JeffR
[/quote]

Because I’m sure anyone who would attack the US directly really cares if we nuke their population. Right?

And I’m sure someone will just attack us to attack us, right? Because that’s how war is fought. You go somewhere, attack, and then leave, right? Oh, wait, you invade right? I’m sure Cuba, or Albania are going to be trying to invade us, with their massive navies…

Seriously. I’d like someone to devise a half-way plausible scenario where this hurts us. Where some non-nuclear power is able to successfully invade us. Let’s hear them.[/quote]

Hey, smart guy, why does it have to be invasion?

So you are a nation funding terrorists, if you think you are going to get nuked for that support, chances are YOU WON’T DO IT.

Can you wrap your brain around that?

[/quote]

Wrap your brain around this. If the U.S. were to respond to a 9/11-style attack by blowing the country that sponsored said attack off the face of the map with nukes, WE would become the international outcasts. I don’t like it, but if we responded to an attack that killed 3,000 people by killing 300k people with one bomb, or killed 3 million people, the entire international community would flip the fuck out. Especially since we are perfectly capable of responding to such an attack with conventional weaponry.[/quote]

it would show the world our resolve. the international community is joke. they wouldn’t dare move against us. it would strike fear in their hearts. the chinamen and slavs would shit their pants.

[quote]kodiak82 wrote:

[quote]DBCooper wrote:

[quote]Jeff R wrote:

[quote]Spartiates wrote:

[quote]Jeff R wrote:

Hey, smart guy, I WANT the bad guys to be unsure of our response. It’s called deterrance. If the bad guys THINK about using any form of weapon against us, I want them WONDERING if we’ll use nuclear weapons on them.

Now this guy has removed the doubt.

Makes me wonder if anyone on the left has ever faced down a bully. They don’t seem to understand the basic premise.

JeffR
[/quote]

Because I’m sure anyone who would attack the US directly really cares if we nuke their population. Right?

And I’m sure someone will just attack us to attack us, right? Because that’s how war is fought. You go somewhere, attack, and then leave, right? Oh, wait, you invade right? I’m sure Cuba, or Albania are going to be trying to invade us, with their massive navies…

Seriously. I’d like someone to devise a half-way plausible scenario where this hurts us. Where some non-nuclear power is able to successfully invade us. Let’s hear them.[/quote]

Hey, smart guy, why does it have to be invasion?

So you are a nation funding terrorists, if you think you are going to get nuked for that support, chances are YOU WON’T DO IT.

Can you wrap your brain around that?

[/quote]

Wrap your brain around this. If the U.S. were to respond to a 9/11-style attack by blowing the country that sponsored said attack off the face of the map with nukes, WE would become the international outcasts. I don’t like it, but if we responded to an attack that killed 3,000 people by killing 300k people with one bomb, or killed 3 million people, the entire international community would flip the fuck out. Especially since we are perfectly capable of responding to such an attack with conventional weaponry.[/quote]

it would show the world our resolve. the international community is joke. they wouldn’t dare move against us. it would strike fear in their hearts. the chinamen and slavs would shit their pants.[/quote]

The international community may not move against us, but it would be extremely detrimental to any sort of foreign policies we try to enact if they refuse to move WITH us. As much as people want to deny this, we NEED the international community. We needed them in Iraq, we need them in Afhganistan and we’ll need them anywhere else we go to fight terrorism in the future. We can’t pretend they mean nothing and that we can go around and do whatever the hell we want with total disregard for them. It’s that sort of attitude that will get our nuclear missile sites removed from Europe and that would make us shit our pants.

[quote]DBCooper wrote:
I understand your argument about placating North Korea and Iran, but what else is the U.S. supposed to do? War is in no one’s best interest and fostering massive anti-American sentiment isn’t in our interest either. But if we were to enact crippling economic sanctions against North Korea or Iran all we’ll do is make the people who are best able to change those regimes without us getting involved hate us even more.

If we place heavy sanctions on Iran, the Iranians will hate us even more, which on the surface doesn’t seem like such a big deal. But it will also lead to a legitimizing of the deep anti-American sentiments in Iran that have allowed that country to get as far out of whack as they are. Right now, they’re divided over there; half the people don’t want to see the govt continually try to egg us on and the other half gets a real big kick out of telling us to go fuck ourselves. But if you want to see that country galvanize itself really quickly, watch how fast it would happen if we enacted huge sanctions against Iran far beyond what we’re trying to do right now. Those crazy fuckers will see it as nothing short of an all-out attack on their way of life and will unite against us just like this country galvanized itself right after 9/11.

Of course, the sanctions might create a lot of anti-Ahmadijenad sentiment instead and have the opposite effect described above, but if it doesn’t and the above scenario happens, we’ll set our diplomatic efforts back for decades, at which point Iran will probably have a nice little arsenal of nukes.

Now the other option, besides what Bush and Obama have been trying to do, is to simply blow through there with a few F-22s and decimate all the nuclear reactors. Or give Israel carte blanche to do it instead. But this will only galvanize the ENTIRE Middle East against us, probably permanently. We would eliminate their nuclear capabilities, but then we’d have a whole new set of problems that we can’t even fully envision now. Plus, a lot of countries around the globe would condemn us for foregoing diplomacy, regardless of how fruitless our diplomatic efforts were, and we’d be hard-pressed to find anyone, outside of Britain and maybe France, to go along with any efforts we made to clean up our mess in the Middle East.

It’s almost a situation in which we don’t want the ball in our court because there really aren’t any good options for us, so we’ve attempted to put the ball in Iran’s and North Korea’s court instead. Many countries look at us and say, “why should we not pursue nukes, why should we get rid of ours? You have them.” We aren’t going to get rid of ours to make them happy, but we are trying to tell them that if they don’t pursue nuclear weaponry then they won’t have any reason to fear us and our nukes anyways. But if they do try to pursue nukes, they are only creating a scenario in which we will become increasingly more likely to use them.[/quote]

You make a good point of showing how American administrations suffer from a lack of options. I think though, it has more a lack of political will than political options.

What should have happened, is that the moment the US or any reasonable democratic government received intelligence that Iran, Nkorea, or Pakistan was trying to develop nukes, they should have invaded and laid the heavy hand of justice upon the rogue nations. Nukes are too important to be entrusted to a government without a clear separation of powers and the safeguards of an honest democracy. Russia’s bad enough- the world should not be held ransom by madmen, and it’s the responsibility of it’s leaders (leaders being the rich, prosperous, developed nations) to see that.

I don’t think most nations need a reason to not invest cash in developing nukes. Most nations are content to outsource their defense to the US. The only people who want nukes are belligerants, and democracies actively engaged in regional conflict with belligerants (Israel and India, who I have no problem calling good guys, because they’re both stable democracies).

I have no problem with the US+Israel bombing nuke sites in NKorea and Iran. Skorea and Japan might, because they’ll take the fall from NKorea if we don’t get them all, but that probably doesn’t enter the equation. I don’t care if the Europe complains, and I don’t care if the ME complains. I don’t know why anyone would. Or rather, I don’t know why America should be more afraid of the negative opinion of some sackless peaceniks who can’t pay for their own entitlement programs or a string of retributive despots than letting nuclear technology into the hands of evil men.

But it’s easier to go along to get along than to accomplish lasting change. C’est la vie.

I’m glad you post here.

Pussy

This is nothing new, and it is a healthy step in the right direction. Similar policies are why the world didn’t explode during the Cold War.

It’s simply trying to deter nations from wanting nuclear weapons, unfortunately with the rise of America’s technology, less developed countries see nukes as the only way to prevent American hostilities.

I dunno, I guess we could threaten Iran and South Korea with nukes, thatll make the world love us again!!

[quote]Otep wrote:

[quote]DBCooper wrote:
I understand your argument about placating North Korea and Iran, but what else is the U.S. supposed to do? War is in no one’s best interest and fostering massive anti-American sentiment isn’t in our interest either. But if we were to enact crippling economic sanctions against North Korea or Iran all we’ll do is make the people who are best able to change those regimes without us getting involved hate us even more.

If we place heavy sanctions on Iran, the Iranians will hate us even more, which on the surface doesn’t seem like such a big deal. But it will also lead to a legitimizing of the deep anti-American sentiments in Iran that have allowed that country to get as far out of whack as they are. Right now, they’re divided over there; half the people don’t want to see the govt continually try to egg us on and the other half gets a real big kick out of telling us to go fuck ourselves. But if you want to see that country galvanize itself really quickly, watch how fast it would happen if we enacted huge sanctions against Iran far beyond what we’re trying to do right now. Those crazy fuckers will see it as nothing short of an all-out attack on their way of life and will unite against us just like this country galvanized itself right after 9/11.

Of course, the sanctions might create a lot of anti-Ahmadijenad sentiment instead and have the opposite effect described above, but if it doesn’t and the above scenario happens, we’ll set our diplomatic efforts back for decades, at which point Iran will probably have a nice little arsenal of nukes.

Now the other option, besides what Bush and Obama have been trying to do, is to simply blow through there with a few F-22s and decimate all the nuclear reactors. Or give Israel carte blanche to do it instead. But this will only galvanize the ENTIRE Middle East against us, probably permanently. We would eliminate their nuclear capabilities, but then we’d have a whole new set of problems that we can’t even fully envision now. Plus, a lot of countries around the globe would condemn us for foregoing diplomacy, regardless of how fruitless our diplomatic efforts were, and we’d be hard-pressed to find anyone, outside of Britain and maybe France, to go along with any efforts we made to clean up our mess in the Middle East.

It’s almost a situation in which we don’t want the ball in our court because there really aren’t any good options for us, so we’ve attempted to put the ball in Iran’s and North Korea’s court instead. Many countries look at us and say, “why should we not pursue nukes, why should we get rid of ours? You have them.” We aren’t going to get rid of ours to make them happy, but we are trying to tell them that if they don’t pursue nuclear weaponry then they won’t have any reason to fear us and our nukes anyways. But if they do try to pursue nukes, they are only creating a scenario in which we will become increasingly more likely to use them.[/quote]

You make a good point of showing how American administrations suffer from a lack of options. I think though, it has more a lack of political will than political options.

What should have happened, is that the moment the US or any reasonable democratic government received intelligence that Iran, Nkorea, or Pakistan was trying to develop nukes, they should have invaded and laid the heavy hand of justice upon the rogue nations. Nukes are too important to be entrusted to a government without a clear separation of powers and the safeguards of an honest democracy. Russia’s bad enough- the world should not be held ransom by madmen, and it’s the responsibility of it’s leaders (leaders being the rich, prosperous, developed nations) to see that.

I don’t think most nations need a reason to not invest cash in developing nukes. Most nations are content to outsource their defense to the US. The only people who want nukes are belligerants, and democracies actively engaged in regional conflict with belligerants (Israel and India, who I have no problem calling good guys, because they’re both stable democracies).

I have no problem with the US+Israel bombing nuke sites in NKorea and Iran. Skorea and Japan might, because they’ll take the fall from NKorea if we don’t get them all, but that probably doesn’t enter the equation. I don’t care if the Europe complains, and I don’t care if the ME complains. I don’t know why anyone would. Or rather, I don’t know why America should be more afraid of the negative opinion of some sackless peaceniks who can’t pay for their own entitlement programs or a string of retributive despots than letting nuclear technology into the hands of evil men.

But it’s easier to go along to get along than to accomplish lasting change. C’est la vie.

I’m glad you post here.[/quote]

I wish we could just roll right into Tehran or PyongYang and wipe out all the nuclear reactors, but that isn’t as easy as it sounds. Our standing army is about 1.4 million, which gives us an advantage over Iran (945,000), but it would create absolute havoc in the region. Using logic and reason, there should be no reason why the rest of the ME would flip out if we rolled in and wiped out the reactors and took Ahmadijenad out at the same time, but they WILL flip out because they don’t subscribe to the same logic and reason as the rest of the world. And what they will do is far more relevant than what they should do.

North Korea could be far more problematic. For starters, they already have nuclear capabilities, they just don’t have a delivery system that can take a warhead out of the country. But Kim Jong Il is deranged enough to use one in his own country if he could use it one U.S. troops. Plus, whereas we have a standing army of 1.4 million, they have 2.1 million. And unless we pulled every troop out of the Middle East, we would be at a severe disadvantage from a pure manpower standpoint. We could still defeat North Korea, but it would probably get pretty ugly over there.

If we just bombed the sites, assuming we could do so with the aid of surrounding countries in order to launch our jets from their airbases or from aircraft carriers in their waters (can we do so without aid from other countries? I’m not really sure), we would still suffer a fallout regarding any future foreign policy. It would be bullshit if other countries got pissed off at us for preemptively hitting Iran or North Korea, but the reality is that they WILL get pissed and we will be forced to deal with it.