Roxanne Appleby
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- Aug 21, 2005
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Thanks Roxanne.... the 1st rational response.Roxanne Appleby said:Bush is an average man trying to do an impossible job in a very difficult world, earnest but without any rational and consistent set of principles to guide him. The lefties will someday look back on their hyperventilating Manichean fever-swamp fantasies regarding this administration with deep embarrassment. If anyone should be be furious at Bush it's my people - limited government libertarians.
Chavez, on the other hand, is truly evil. He does have a consistent set of principles, which are the same depraved ones that guided Stalin and Mao - power from the barrel of a gun, the truncheons of the secret police, and the bullying of his brownshirt street thugs. Poor Venezuela . . .
Is that all just too un-PC for AH? Be glad you're not in Hugo's gulag.
Gosh, Mr. Secretary of State, could you be a little more clear? The Foreign Relations chairman awaits your response, and he's not amused by snippy, snide little slurs that attack others without stating any opinon of one's own.Pure said:well, i thought that as a friend of freedom, that you had a problem with dictators. silly me.
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roxanne said, when asked about whether she supported treating Musharref as an ally and funding his military.
I don't know, what do you think? Really. Are you suggesting it's a no-brainer? If you were Secretary of State what would you recommend?
Very well put. Even though I don't agree with someone does not mean I will not support that person or defend that person when slurs are fired their way.Joesephus said:is that Americans seem to have lost their understanding of democracy. My country, will, someday achive what the USA has, but not until we learn what American seems to be forgetting. Not only do minorities have rights and majorities obligations, but the reverse is also true.
I think it is wonderful that the opposition in this country is free to revile Bush, but do they also have an obligation to support him. I took great heart today when I heard a leading Democrat announce that Mr. Bush was his President and he didn't want to hear trash talk from someone like Chavez.
Pure said:from your postings i thought you had a problem with dictators. from that and you posting about freedom i thought you might object to funding them and arming their militaries. i cant seem to get an answer from you.
as to my opinion, i'd say the US was closer to a sensible approach when it, in 1998, banned transferring highlevel military stuff to Pakistan, because of its nuclear armed belligerance with India,
so, again my question is Do you support the change in treating this dictator, from squeezing him, to filling his pockets with some 200 million a year, and as many F 16s as *our aid* can buy for him?
We made a pact with Stalin to defeat Hitler. I suppose that a more consistent approach would have been to oppose both, but then,
do you support freedom and oppose dicators, or do you say, "It depends." Do you favor, like Bush, picking one dictator to lavish money on and another to excoriate, depending on your concept of 'greater good'?
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some background info from the same source:
http://www.worldpolicy.org/projects/arms/reports/wawjune2005.html
INDIA AND PAKISTAN
Nuclear Neighbors
The United States imposed sanctions on rivals India and Pakistan after their 1998 "tit for tat" nuclear tests, prohibiting the export of goods listed on the U.S. Munitions List, military financing and the transfer of certain military technologies.
But the sanctions were lifted in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks in September 2001 when Washington sought allies for the war on terrorism. In the years since the attacks, Pakistan and India have benefited from billions of dollars in new military aid, training and weaponry.
While adopting the rhetoric of Washington's anti-terrorism agenda, both countries continue to pursue their nuclear aspirations, bicker across the Line of Control in Kashmir, repress domestic opposition movements and violate human rights. It remains to be seen whether recent peace talks over Kashmir can change this long term dynamic of tension between India and Pakistan.
PAKISTAN
General Musharraf is the right man in the right place at the right time.
Secretary of State Colin Powell[71]
Despite the sheen of democracy, Pakistan remains a military dictatorship in all but name. General Musharraf's seizure of power was legitimized by a controversial nationwide referendum in April 2002, but many observers questioned the free and fair nature of this "exercise in democracy."[72]
Soon after September 11th, President Bush judged that the sanctions imposed on Pakistan "would not be in the national security interests of the United States."[73] Thus, in early November 2001, the U.S. agreed to provide Pakistan with $73 million in "border security" military hardware, including Huey helicopters and spare parts for F-16 fighter planes.[74]
Pure said:from your postings i thought you had a problem with dictators. from that and you posting about freedom i thought you might object to funding them and arming their militaries. i cant seem to get an answer from you.
as to my opinion, i'd say the US was closer to a sensible approach when it, in 1998, banned transferring highlevel military stuff to Pakistan, because of its nuclear armed belligerance with India,
so, again my question is Do you support the change in treating this dictator, from squeezing him, to filling his pockets with some 200 million a year, and as many F 16s as *our aid* can buy for him?
do you support freedom and oppose dicators, or do you say, "It depends." Do you favor, like Bush, picking one dictator to lavish money on and another to excoriate, depending on your concept of 'greater good'?
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I don't call myself an isolationist, or any kind of "-ist" on foreign policy, really. Henry the K's realpolitik gets a lot of bad press, as does Jimmy Carter's human rights-ism, but I am sympathetic to both, and others also. Maybe I don't accept that there is any silver bullet on foreign policy; nation-states still live in the Hobbesian world of all against all, and in that environment no one ever has certainty, and no single "-ism" applies in every case. You know whose formulation I liked best recently? GWB's - in the Al Gore debate, when he spoke against "nation-building" and said we need to be "humble" in our estimation of our capabilities on such things. He's come a long way, baby.
I'm really just kind of thinking out loud there about what I "am" in terms of a foreign policy philosophy. I'm essentially pragmatic, in the plain english sense, not necessarily the philosophical sense, but pragmatism broadly interpreted, so sometimes the effective stance is a Jimmy Carter human rights campaign, because that plays to an opponents weakness. At other times Kissengerian realism makes more sense.
Does Chavez have bad manners too? Nobody told me he has bad manners. Now I'm really mad.Pure said:ok, so the US is to make deals and line the pockets of dictators, when they might make useful allies. little things like raped women being punished go by the board for the 'greater good.'
it's a plausible utilitarian argument.
BTW. IT follows from your last post that you do not really object to Chavez dictatorial means, being pres. for life, etc. You object to his manners. Were an equally bad dictator, like Nazarbayev, willing to suck GWBs cock and allow air bases, you'd be all for it. Just wanted to clarify your complaint.
ure is arguing for an absolutist black and white position,Before you go all goo-goo eyed over Europe, recall how cynical they can be when it comes to doing business with bloody handed dictators. Food for Oil, anyone?cantdog said:In reply to the turn Pure has taken in this discussion, why not mention Musharraf?
We flirted briefly, under Mr. Carter, with the notion that the human-rights record of a government ought to have some bearing on whether or not we support it. Since then, the subject is referred to only in the most cynical or hypocritical terms. It is brought out to smear some regime which we already have decided on other grounds is an enemy, even though no one in charge would dream or considering it while the decision was being taken, and without regard to the truth or falsity of the various smears. Or it is held up during jingoistic rally speeches like a hollow mask on a stick, worn as if it were a proud characteristic of our policy, to make the crowd feel good about themselves and their oh-so-humane government.
Clinton reverted to the usual bloody-handed cynicism on this score as much as anyone from the other side of the aisle.
In the meantime, Europe has made human rights, defined rather definitely, a prerequisite for participation in their system on any level. It figures in their criticisms of one another, it always has to be dealt with when a new policy is proposed. In short, it actually figures in their decisions.
Do we want to try this approach? Are we to begin, as a state department, to make it at least a part of the mix, at least one determinant of policies? Are we ready as a nation to actually act as though we believed that all men are endowed with certain rights?
I'm ready to advocate it. It has to beat robbing the world at the point of a gun.
That isn't the question, Roxanne. Do you think, now this IS the question, that we ought to bring human rights into the mix when we make state department decisions?Roxanne Appleby said:Before you go all goo-goo eyed over Europe, recall how cynical they can be when it comes to doing business with bloody handed dictators. Food for Oil, anyone?
Pure said:S: Yes, Pakistan has an abysmal human rights record. Yes, Pakistan helped the Taliban.
P: OK, let's get this straight, Sev, since I have you to dialogue with instead of GWB. Pakistan is a military dictatorship with nukes that's bellligerent with its neighbor, India, also with nukes. Women in pakistan are suffering from lack of rights; if they complain of rape, they get charged; if another family member pisses off an official, the woman may get raped in retaliation.
We're going after the Taliban becuase they're a thread to Western civilization and our values and rule of law; church state separation, etc.
SO: AS A MEANS of "fighting the war on terror," getting at the Taliban (a super evil, I suppose) we make a deal with the Dictator Mushareff ( a lesser evil). We arm his military and give him all manner of hightech goods.
The Al Queda are hiding in Pakistan. Radical clerics and 'talk' abounds. The madrasas are going full steam teaching hate. Pakistan is an Islamic state which brings to trial not just non Muslims, but Muslims NOT in the official listing (nonconformist muslims, so to say).
NOW: this course of supporting Pakistan is 1) bringing democracy there. Yes? and 2) its weakening the Taliban, (yes?) and 3) we have a good and valuable ally in Mr. Musharref. (yes?)
Yeah, I do, sometimes. And sometimes we should use hardnosed realpolitik. I think. I don't know what the right answer is, Cant, but I suspect the word "balance" will be part of it. See my post above about nation-states living in the Hobbesian state of nature.cantdog said:That isn't the question, Roxanne. Do you think, now this IS the question, that we ought to bring human rights into the mix when we make state department decisions?
Or not?
Well?
Well, no, I can't see it as a keystone. But right now, exploitation is a keystone, instead. Haiti bleeds. It goes to my heart. I am, of course, no nationalist. You must have noticed. I have no enemies. I want none. If, though, we ceased to arrange foreign policy simply to aid these corporations in their heartless acquisitory endeavors, we would require some other goal, some larger project. Why not human rights? When I was in school, they tried to tell me we thought human rights important, as a people. What America meant was a great experiment in democracy, a hope of people, ordinary people, for expression.Roxanne Appleby said:Yeah, I do, sometimes. And sometimes we should use hardnosed realpolitik. I think. I don't know what the right answer is, Cant, but I suspect the word "balance" will be part of it. See my post above about nation-states living in the Hobbesian state of nature.
Are you suggesting that we should just be lily pure and guide our entire policy on this one thing? Aren't you afraid that's simplistic? How far would you go with it - stop giving any stuff or money to Pakistan, that's fairly simple. Stop trading with them? Stop trading with others who trade with them? How about China - same thing?
I am very sympathetic to emphasizing human rights more in our foreign policy. But I'm suspicious that beating the human rights drum simplistically often is motivated by partisanship, not principle.
I'm not sure where you got this all from.Roxanne Appleby said:Good post, Cant.
Two minor observations, not disagreements really.
1. Haiti has bled since the first African was dragged onto that benighted island's shore. It's almost an existential reality that "Haiti bleeds." In many ways it's the victim of the same socio-political pathologies that afflict sub-Saharan Africa. Frankly, no one knows how to fix it. I can say this, though: The fix will come when there is a popular concensus among the Haitian people in support of the rule of law. How that comes about I have no idea. It's an educational project that might take generations even after it begins, which it has not. The ability of the U.S. government to help in this regard is nil. Certain civil society institutions might be able to do more.
Condemned by whom? We reward these people, here, and we support their endeavors with troops overseas. Capitalism itself doesn't seem to mind that this sort of subsidy at home and armed support abroad is not a part of the theory of a free market. On the contrary, capitalism seems instead to actively solicit this kind of thing. So who do you think, besides the doomed brown people abroad from time to time, is going to object, let alone condemn?Roxanne Appleby said:2. There's nothing wrong per se with "heartless acquisitory endeavors" of corporations or anyone else. Certain actions a person might take in such an endeavor is a different matter, of course. Like bribing a corrupt government to dispossess 2,000 indigenes to get their oil, to cite one example. Fraud and coercion are to be condemned wherever they are undertaken.
I was deliberately vague because I didn't want to get into one of those stupid discussions in which companies are condemned for not paying U.S. union scale wages in a nation where the annual per-capita income is like $1,000. (Exagerating to make the point.)cantdog said:Condemned by whom? We reward these people, here, and we support their endeavors with troops overseas. Capitalism itself doesn't seem to mind that this sort of subsidy at home and armed support abroad is not a part of the theory of a free market. On the contrary, capitalism seems instead to actively solicit this kind of thing. So who do you think, besides the doomed brown people abroad from time to time, is going to object, let alone condemn?