From
Kuntsler this morning:
The US claims to have interests
in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and Libya. These nations are respectively
11,925, 11,129, 10,745, and 10,072, miles away from America — not
exactly neighbors of ours. All of them, one way or another, and partly
due to our exertions, are checking into the homeless shelter of failed
statedom. Afghanistan was, shall we say, a special case, since it was being used thirteen years ago explicitly as a “base” (al Qaeda)
for launching attacks on US soil. But that was then. No other war or
“war” in US history has lasted as long. And it remains unclear whether
our presence there yet today is a “nation-building” project or a mere
occupation, in the absence of some better idea of what to do.
Got that? Ponder the "national interest" for the United States in all of the named countries. Remember Libya? Quick now . . . why did we overthrow Qaddafi again? Oh yeah, it was so we could turn that country into a seething caldron of Islamic militias with no government at all in the nation. James Kuntsler again:
How many educated, media-marinated
professors in their Ivy League turrets can explain in one paragraph what
the necessity of overthrowing Muammar Gaddafi was, exactly? Anyone
remember? I suppose, like many actions in history, it just seemed like a
good idea at the time. If the idea was to keep the oil and gas flowing
to western nations — i.e. the “Carter Doctrine” —well, excuse me while I
cough into my sleeve. Production is about one-eighth what it was before
Mr. Gaddafi exited the scene. That really worked.
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