Quote:
Originally Posted by
The Mad Arab
Ah, good, so now we've something to spend all the money we were giving Mubarak on!
$1.5 billion a year is so miniscule as to be rendered completely irrelevant in comparison to the damage even a 1% increase in oil prices inflicts on Western economies.
Quote:
Okay, regardless from your age, let's talk about something different. How involved have you been when it comes to the Middle East? Do you regularly speak people from Yemen, Oman, Egypt or Algeria? Have you ever been to Lebanon, Syria or Morocco? Do you check on events happening as they are in the Middle East, even when there's not that much to report? Do you visit congresses or talk with opposition leaders in exile?
I follow events in the Middle East closely. I have not talked to opposition leaders in exile, though. :laugh4:
Quote:
There's been a struggle for freedom longer than just today, you know. The only alternative is not al-Zarqawi or bin Laden. It's not a choice between radical, sword-swinging, kalashnikov-wielding afghan jihadis.
I understand that. I never insinuated that Al Qaeda would come to power in any of these countries. What is likely, however, is that whatever governments come to power will be significantly less favorable to the West.
Quote:
There's a sizeable intellectual, young, and generally well-educated movement.
There are also throngs of uneducated, highly religious, and easily manipulated people who are more interested in their standard of living than democracy. These protests are just as much about economic conditions as political ones, and people who have grown up in autocracy are often just as willing to accept a new autocracy that promises change than a democracy that promises change. Witness Iran.
Quote:
Strategically, it's even dumber to suggest that it's in the best interests to support your frenemies.
Is it? Now it is my turn to ask you if you are fully educated on the beneficial relationship the West has enjoyed with these countries for the last 60 years. Every American president, Democrat or Republican, has understood it and gone to great lengths to protect it. Few realize how much Western and particularly American economic growth has been subsidized by very favorable oil prices.
Quote:
It's what the US did when Khomeini returned to Iran, and you know, that worked out quite well. Y'know, if you can look over the use of chemical weapons on the battlefield, something not seen since World War I. Maybe if we'd condemned Iraq then, and there, the Iranian people would have no reason to hate the US. Or when the Kurds got slaughtered Halabja and the blame was put on Iran. Maybe if we'd listen to Robert Fisk and his colleagues, Ahmadinejad wouldn't have been elected in the first place. Wouldn't have been necessary.
Focusing on Iran misses the half-dozen other nations where Western influence has proved highly beneficial.
Quote:
There's no moral high ground to take anymore, and you know it as well as I do. The Libyans know, the Egyptians know, the Tunisians know and the Yemenis know too. It's time for people to deal mano-a-mano. Like real people. Not master to servant, but man to man. Or woman to woman! I'd support that, too.
That is the problem. You can bet the Chinese, Russians, Indians, Brazilians and many other countries are lined up in Egypt to make deals (and who would blame them?). We're losing the preferential treatment that has underpinned much of our post-WW2 growth. That may be unavoidable but it is nothing to be jubilant about.