CNBC: US military has launched more than 50 missiles aimed at Syria: NBC News

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Because we have by far more military power than anyone else?

We have navy ships floating around everywhere. We have airbases everywhere. We have troops everywhere.

We are equipped to be the world police and d trump wants to fucking INCREASE the defense budget.

We are the de facto world police because we are the only fucking country in that world that has the means to be.

If we want to be fucking chicken shits then we might as well sell off all our naval fleets, planes, fire 3/4 of our military, and call it a day.

This is a unipolar world. Honestly you don't want it to not to be because inherently there will be tension (see the Cold War on the brink of nuclear holocaust). Eventually there is going to be a major clash with China because it's unavoidable.

Europe doesn't seem to give a fuck so what the fuck should happen? Genocidal chemical weapon wielding regimes should just be able to do whatever the fuck they want unchecked?
 
Actually, the traditional response to other belligerent countries existing is indeed to build up large military forces. Then you can tell those other countries to fuck off.

If the European Union, for example, wanted America to stop messing around in other countries they could afford to build an army and move it wherever the Americans are threatening to cause trouble. They don't, and that's intentional.

Yeah, because whats the point in getting involved in conflicts with which you dont really have something to do? Like I said, I am not fundamentally opposed to interventions, but thats a strange argument.

Because we have by far more military power than anyone else?

We have navy ships floating around everywhere. We have airbases everywhere. We have troops everywhere.

We are equipped to be the world police and d trump wants to fucking INCREASE the defense budget.

We are the de facto world police because we are the only fucking country in that world that has the means to be.

If we want to be fucking chicken shits then we might as well sell off all our naval fleets, planes, fire 3/4 of our military, and call it a day.

This is a unipolar world. Honestly you don't want it to not. E because inherently there will be tension. Eventually there is going to be a major clash with China because it's unavoidable.

Europe doesn't seem to give a fuck so what the fuck should happen? Genocidal chemical weapon wielding regimes should just be able to do whatever the fuck they want unchecked?

Then go to the UN and get a mandate and then do the world police thing.
 
Actually, the traditional response to other belligerent countries existing is indeed to build up large military forces. Then you can tell those other countries to fuck off.

If the European Union, for example, wanted America to stop messing around in other countries they could afford to build an army and move it wherever the Americans are threatening to cause trouble. They don't, and that's intentional.
Its not other countries responsibility to tell US what to do or not do it's US's responsibility to realise that not everyone wants their ideologies forced upon them.
 
Because we have by far more military power than anyone else?

We have navy ships floating around everywhere. We have airbases everywhere. We have troops everywhere.

We are equipped to be the world police and d trump wants to fucking INCREASE the defense budget.

We are the de facto world police because we are the only fucking country in that world that has the means to be.

If we want to be fucking chicken shits then we might as well sell off all our naval fleets, planes, fire 3/4 of our military, and call it a day.

This is a unipolar world. Honestly you don't want it to not to be because inherently there will be tension (see the Cold War on the brink of nuclear holocaust). Eventually there is going to be a major clash with China because it's unavoidable.

Europe doesn't seem to give a fuck so what the fuck should happen? Genocidal chemical weapon wielding regimes should just be able to do whatever the fuck they want unchecked?

I'm starting to believe universal healthcare and the worlds largest military are mutually exclusive. If European nations boosted their military to the size of the US's (per capita of course) then they probably wouldn't be able to take care of their citizens with healthcare. USA is the selfless country taking one for the team to protect other sovereign nations from evil regimes like Assad. Ur fuckin welcome 🌎

Its not other countries responsibility to tell US what to do or not do it's US's responsibility to realise that not everyone wants their ideologies forced upon them.
Unfortunately the USA has a conscience and feels guilt watching idly as Assad commits atrocities among his people. We have the means to do something about it, so if we let it continue then we are complicit as well.
 
If Assad gets outed the new guy is going to have to kill people to maintain control.

It's the only way to keep control of the population over there. Too many factions, religious or otherwise with opposing views.

Those opposing views can't be appeased with a democratic vote every few years as they all want to win at any cost. The only thing that differs slightly is what they class as winning but for the most part part each faction wants the total anhilalation of the others.
 
Yeah, because whats the point in getting involved in conflicts with which you dont really have something to do? Like I said, I am not fundamentally opposed to interventions, but thats a strange argument.



Then go to the UN and get a mandate and then do the world police thing.

Do you know how many times Russia has vetoed any attempt to end this conflict? This may come as a shock to you, but the UN does not agree on everything.
 
Yeah, because whats the point in getting involved in conflicts with which you dont really have something to do? Like I said, I am not fundamentally opposed to interventions, but thats a strange argument.



Then go to the UN and get a mandate and then do the world police thing.

You're never going to get that mandate for Syria as long as Russia is on the Security Council.
 
Great news to wake up to...
Not sure what to think about this. Who told the orange to pull through with this? Certainly not Russia unless they're trying to cover up Trump-Russia on the surface by faking some bad standing of their relationship.
 
Then go to the UN and get a mandate and then do the world police thing.

When have that ever managed to solve anything. And besides, Russia is a permanent member of the UN's Security Council, do you really think bringing this to the UN would actually result in anything?

It seems to me like people in this thread agree that something needed to be done but they just didn't want to see the USA do it because they always do it. And that just perpetuates the whole USA is the world police mentality that supposedly is a very bad thing

So because they "don't want the US to do it" then the US should stay silent about this then. Man, what kind of message would that kind of thing to the rest of the world and more importantly, to Assad himself.
 
Then go to the UN and get a mandate and then do the world police thing.

UN has been fundamentally broken since the 90s. It really isn't a viable means to resolve conflict anymore. It benefited with a bi-polar world because the two major powers needed the UN to mediate conflict. Now there is only the US, which doesn't need the UN to mediate when they are so much larger than the rest of the world.
 
I understand, however the war has been raging and the post I responded to insinuated that President Trump was somehow responsible for the dead children from the most recent chemical attack.

I've been following this conflict since the initial protests in 2011 in Aleppo and the whole country.

I hope for the best for the Syrian people but this has been such a long, bloody, drawn out war that I hope peace finds the country, and soon.

I didn't mean to insinuate that. My emotions are running high... I'm sorry.

I feel we could have done something more for refugees instead of what we did where we banned them outright. I just don't trust Trump and I don't believe he has ever done anything for the greater good. I don't trust his administration either.
 
Seeing the alt-right partially abandon Trump over what I saw as the first actual good thing he's done since the inauguration is the weirdest fucking kind of schadenfreude ever.

Like, whatever it takes for him to have more bad days I guess, right?
 
Also, I think you dont have understood what I meant with people beeing sick of the us playing world police. This feeling didnt started suddenly last night. This is something many people on many continents had now for decades.

And again the disclaimer, I am not fundamentally opposed to interventions. Also, when I am saying that many people have a feeling, I dont have to 100% agree with these people.
 
Yeah, because whats the point in getting involved in conflicts with which you dont really have something to do? Like I said, I am not fundamentally opposed to interventions, but thats a strange argument.



Then go to the UN and get a mandate and then do the world police thing.

Lol. Yeah that makes a ton of sense with Russia and China having veto power.
 
Unfortunately the USA has a conscience and feels guilt watching idly as Assad commits atrocities among his people. We have the means to do something about it, so if we let it continue then we are complicit as well.

Where does this line of argument end? Does the US have a duty to intervene everywhere there are atrocities being committed? Is it even wise given how often said intervention ends up making things worse?
 
Great news to wake up to...
Not sure what to think about this. Who told the orange to pull through with this? Certainly not Russia unless they're trying to cover up Trump-Russia on the surface by faking some bad standing of their relationship.

Maybe Mattis? I wonder if opposing this operation is what got Bannon removed from the NSC.

Pure speculation, of course.
 
I'm starting to believe universal healthcare and the worlds largest military are mutually exclusive. If European nations boosted their military to the size of the US's (per capita of course) then they probably wouldn't be able to take care of their citizens with healthcare. USA is the selfless country taking one for the team to protect other sovereign nations from evil regimes like Assad. Ur fuckin welcome 🌎


Unfortunately the USA has a conscience and feels guilt watching idly as Assad commits atrocities among his people. We have the means to do something about it, so if we let it continue then we are complicit as well.

Absolutely we could have universal healthcare if our defense budget wasn't so insane.
 
Also, I think you dont have understood what I meant with people beeing sick of the us playing world police. This feeling didnt started suddenly last night. This is something many people on many continents have now for decades.

I don't think you understand that the US plays "world police" with the tacit or explicit support of a large coalition of Western countries, including basically every country in Europe, and so the people in those countries are presumably not sick of it or they would organize to stop it in some way.
 
Also, I think you dont have understood what I meant with people beeing sick of the us playing world police. This feeling didnt started suddenly last night. This is something many people on many continents have now for decades.

Again, what should the US do then? Even you have admitted yourself that bringing this matter to the UN would never solve anything.
 
I am just extremely reluctant about use of force against targets that aren't posing a direct threat to the United States or its allies, given how many history lessons we should have learned by now about toppling abhorrent dictators without any coherent or workable strategy to deal with the power and political vacuum in the aftermath. Using chemical weapons against civilians is fucking horrendously disgusting, but does that mean we must repeat the mistakes of Iraq yet again? And under the direction of a president who makes George W Bush look like Otto von Bismarck?
I think the problem is that the US really has no plan other than -
  1. Bomb shit up
  2. ?????
  3. Freedom on the march
I think deterring or preventing the use of chemical weapons is a worthy cause, worthy enough in my mind to warrant the use of force, which not something I support lightly. The issue is that I don't think the US usage of force in it current form (which btw, is not unique to the Trump administration, that's pretty much par for the course for the US for decades now) is able to achieve that goal.
 
No Russian casualties (Russian media)

Strange I thought they were helping Al Assad especially given this is one of the major military airbase 🤔
 
"Challenge accepted." - François Georges-Picot and Mark Sykes, November 1915.

Sykes-Picot didn't invent Syria, it just delineated what areas would be under French, Russian or British "influence" without specifying whether those regions would be controlled in a strict sense (colonial rule) or a loose sense (exclusive rights to do things in those areas). It wasn't an agreement that ever went into effect, the final borders were quite different than those of that agreement.

Mandatory Syria was subdivided along sectarian lines, but the only group interested in actually separating from Syria was Lebanon. Syria has a complex relationship with nationalism, but as of the 20's and 30's, the various divisions of Mandatory Syria chose to stay together rather than split apart. Indeed, the response to French rule was a series of revolts with the intention of forcing the french out and keeping Syria together. The revolts obviously failed, but the outcome was that the French abandoned the "five state solution" and started merging the other states into a "Greater Syria".

If you took slices of time in the first half of the 20th century and asked "what do the people of Syria want?" they were more likely to want a larger, more diverse state rather than smaller, more homogeneous ones. The Pan-Arab movements sought to create even larger states that encompassed all Arab peoples, culminating in the extremely temporary union of Egypt, Syria and North Yemen into a single state in the late 50's / early 60's. This general trend runs very counter to modern conventional wisdom, which usually suggests that the Ottoman territories should have been divided up into smaller territorial units that respected confessional, ethnic and sectarian differences. In reality though, that's not what the people at that time actually wanted. Only Iraq was created with a deliberate crossing of confessional lines to make its being ruled by Faisal I more palatable to its constituents.
 
What would many of you have preferred Trump to do in response of Assad's actions?

Yes Obama and Hillary would have likely done the same thing and yes people may have not panicked as much because they would most probably handle it with more measured tact and sense.

But they are not President, Trump is, and what would have been a preferred response from him to Assad's attacks, considering from what I have read in this thread many seem to condemn him doing this?
Personally, I'd prefer that Trump and his administration didn't essentially go from a "What's an Aleppo?" attitude towards Syria to suddenly unilateral military action in under 48 hrs. "Assad's actions" didn't just start this past week, they've been an ongoing crime against humanity for years now and little children have been the targets of his crimes countless times before.

From the sound of this attack, its mostly military theater. Everyone was warned beforehand (so much for Trump and his surprise attacks), it was a non-civilian target, and so it amounts to little more than sabre-rattling which won't amount to anything if it isn't followed by skilled diplomacy of which I have little faith of seeing from the Trump administration.

I'm thinking the 70-80 million dollar bill for firing this many missiles probably could have been better spent on fastracking vetting for Syrian refugees or other forms of humanitarian aid, assuming we had the kind of empathy and compassion for that sort of thing.
 
I think the problem is that the US really has no plan other than -
  1. Bomb shit up
  2. ?????
  3. Freedom on the march
I think deterring or preventing the use of chemical weapons is a worthy cause, worthy enough in my mind to warrant the use of force, which not something I support lightly. The issue is that I don't think the US usage of force in it current form (which btw, is not unique to the Trump administration, that's pretty much par for the course for the US for decades now) is able to achieve that goal.

What is your plan?

It's nearly impossible to replace a regime without resistance. Replacing a regime in the Middle East is essentially a guaranteed quagmire. Happened to the Russians in Afghanistan too.

You become the target of the extremist resistance instead of the the despot you removed.

No one else even gives enough of a shit to do anything in such situations going back decades.
 
I thought about what the past few of you said, as funny as it may seem, yes, we have traded our diplomatic chances with military ones. And It terrifies me. State dept removed. Military nationalists and military budget strengthened. What's most frightening right now, gaffers? There is a large number of Americans going around tonight, and I've met my share, bragging about this attack tonight. Bragging about aggression. Bragging that we are on our way to making America great again one backwards raghead, non Christian Country at a time. Bragging about killing. This is the first they say proudly.

I'm terrified. I hope the rest of you ends us from existence, God's honest truth, because I fear this planet's survival with these people in charge.
 
Do you prefer not doing anything and see Assad continue to kill with chemical weapons?
I fail to see what my generel view on the world police topic has to do with this specific situation.

I don't think you understand that the US plays "world police" with the tacit or explicit support of a large coalition of Western countries, including basically every country in Europe, and so the people in those countries are presumably not sick of it or they would organize to stop it in some way.

Yeah, the left organizing. Good joke. Just look at the Bernie Sanders/Clinton/DNC Threads, everyone who should now organizne and unite to fight against Trump is busy fighting against themself. And this is not exclusiv in the US, the left is fighting everywhere against themself.
And the right is already fucking with Putin and I think thats a sign that they dont support the US.
 
I think the problem is that the US really has no plan other than -
  1. Bomb shit up
  2. ?????
  3. Freedom on the march
I think deterring or preventing the use of chemical weapons is a worthy cause, worthy enough in my mind to warrant the use of force, which not something I support lightly. The issue is that I don't think the US usage of force in it current form (which btw, is not unique to the Trump administration, that's pretty much par for the course for the US for decades now) is able to achieve that goal.

I'm sympathetic to the argument that chemical weapons are a line in the sand that can't be tolerated, but I can't muster the will to celebrate what seems to be only step one in the same old recipe for disaster. These same arguments applied to Saddam Hussein and Iraq, and we fucked that up to such an absurd fashion that it boggles the mind. I have no faith whatsoever in the Trump administration to handle it even halfway competently or compassionately.

It's nearly impossible to replace a regime without resistance. Replacing a regime in the Middle East is essentially a guaranteed quagmire. Happened to the Russians in Afghanistan too.

You become the target of the extremist resistance instead of the the despot you removed.

No one else even gives enough of a shit to do anything in such situations going back decades.

And when the US becomes the target of extremist resistance, and the areas in which it intervenes become further destablized and larger hotbeds for said extremism, the drum beats for further military aggression get louder and louder, on and on in what seems to be an endless feedback loop.
 
Yeah, the left organizing. Good joke. Just look at the Bernie Sanders/Clinton/DNC Threads, everyone who should now organizne and unite to fight against Trump is busy fighting against themself. And this is not exclusiv in the US, the left is fighting everywhere against themself.
And the right is already fucking with Putin and I think thats a sign that they dont support the US.

Wut
 
I'm starting to believe universal healthcare and the worlds largest military are mutually exclusive. If European nations boosted their military to the size of the US's (per capita of course) then they probably wouldn't be able to take care of their citizens with healthcare. USA is the selfless country taking one for the team to protect other sovereign nations from evil regimes like Assad. Ur fuckin welcome 🌎


Unfortunately the USA has a conscience and feels guilt watching idly as Assad commits atrocities among his people. We have the means to do something about it, so if we let it continue then we are complicit as well.
US health care spending dwarfs those other countries. It's not a money problem​. It's a policy problem.
 
I can't be entirely opposed to this as Assad was bombing civilians with chemical weaponry, but at the same time I imagine the aftermath of this will just lead to another power vacuum in the middle east that'll fuck things up even more for many years to come.
 
I'm starting to believe universal healthcare and the worlds largest military are mutually exclusive. If European nations boosted their military to the size of the US's (per capita of course) then they probably wouldn't be able to take care of their citizens with healthcare. USA is the selfless country taking one for the team to protect other sovereign nations from evil regimes like Assad. Ur fuckin welcome 🌎


Unfortunately the USA has a conscience and feels guilt watching idly as Assad commits atrocities among his people. We have the means to do something about it, so if we let it continue then we are complicit as well.
Do you have any idea how many countries around the world have arrocities committed that the us ignores. Do you have any idea how many the USA has committed? Try to find stats on the number of innocent civilians killed in Iraq during the Iraq war, I dare you. While I get people want to feel morally superior to the rest of the world, any country, but the USA in particular intervening in other countries internal conflicts, has always proven to be disaster. At best you kill a bad guy, but you always leave life worse for the people you're "helping". Always. The USa is fucking walking breathing proof of that. The idea that "this time it will be different" is absurd.
 
I fail to see what my generel view on the world police topic has to do with this specific situation.

Really? It's pretty much an example of the US playing world police here. And here you're given two options: do nothing and see Assad continue to kill (which your proposal for Un approval would lead to), or intervene. So you should have an opinion on the effects of what you're suggesting with your "general view".
 
Personally, I'd prefer that Trump and his administration didn't essentially go from a "What's an Aleppo?" attitude towards Syria to suddenly unilateral military action in under 48 hrs. "Assad's actions" didn't just start this past week, they've been an ongoing crime against humanity for years now and little children have been the targets of his crimes countless times before.

From the sound of this attack, its mostly military theater. Everyone was warned beforehand (so much for Trump and his surprise attacks), it was a non-civilian target, and so it amounts to little more than sabre-rattling which won't amount to anything if it isn't followed by skilled diplomacy of which I have little faith of seeing from the Trump administration.

I'm thinking the 70-80 million dollar bill for firing this many missiles probably could have been better spent on fastracking vetting for Syrian refugees or other forms of humanitarian aid, assuming we had the kind of empathy and compassion for that sort of thing.

Yeah.

I mean this civil war has had about half a million civilian casualties already.

This seems like a rush job for whatever reason. I find it impossible to trust in Trumps competence.
 
I'm sympathetic to the argument that chemical weapons are a line in the sand that can't be tolerated, but I can't muster the will to celebrate what seems to be only step one in the same old recipe for disaster. These same arguments applied to Saddam Hussein and Iraq, and we fucked that up to such an absurd fashion that it boggles the mind. I have no faith whatsoever in the Trump administration to handle it even halfway competently or compassionately.

Iraq was a stable country ruled by a Very Bad Man(tm) who possessed (fake) large stockpiles of chemical weapons. Syria is six years into a civil war and the Very Bad Man(tm) is now using (real) large stockpiles of chemical weapons on his own civilians.

It's easier to say that you should tolerate a dictator when removing them would cause a lot of issues. In this case, it's a fuzzier question, because the situation on the ground is already totally unstable and filled with bloodshed on a daily basis.

My argument against (major) intervention in Syria is more to do with wanting to avoid giving ISIS more ammunition in their ideological struggle than it is to do with avoiding a repeat of Iraq, because frankly the situations aren't similar at this point.
 
The poster was stating that if this is true, why is the western world not organizing.
-Because the left never stands united, which I underlined with examples.
-Because the new right wing movements are pro-russia.

Yeah, the post you are replying to actually makes sense. Your post, and this post, don't.
 
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