Redbrickbear said:
sombear said:
Redbrickbear said:
sombear said:
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ATL Bear said:
Redbrickbear said:
ATL Bear said:
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KaiBear said:
whiterock said:
KaiBear said:
whiterock said:
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whiterock said:
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Redbrickbear said:
whiterock said:
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The_barBEARian said:
sombear said:
Realitybites said:
Link to Interview
It is a given that most people haven't heard of the USS Liberty. It's something that is generally glossed over in history classes, if it is taught at all. Or at least it used to be that way.
The official explanation is it was a case of mistaken identity that led to the death of 34 American servicemen in an attack that lasted far longer - and with multiple waves - than a case of mistaken identity would allow for.
Friendly fire happens. Pat Tillman was the most recent well known case of this. The USS Liberty attack was absolutely not a case of friendly fire.
Go watch the video, and remember the casualties on that ship next time someone starts advocating for war in Ukraine, Syria, Iran, or elsewhere.
Most people haven't heard of it? It was covered in my rural Indiana high school and again in college.
It remains unclear exactly what happened and why.
But let's say the absolute worst is true. Why should that affect foreign policy 57 years later? We are strong allies with a number of former enemies.
When is Israel going to pay back the trillion dollars the American tax payer has given them? We sure could use the money with our historic debt-to-GDP.
Allies pay back their debts.
Enemies do not.
Israel just utterly destroyed two Iranian proxies which have killed thousands of Amcits and currently hold several hostage. That campaign also denied the Syrian regime of an ally it depended upon to defend the line of advance into Damascus, causing the fall of the Assad regime, an Iranian ally who has been on the State Sponsor of Terrorism...
Sure...100% correct
But don't act like they did it for America
Israel acts to the benefit of Israel only.....
Pre-1980 Iran was a very reliable proxy like Israel, too. A Shiite country surrounded by antagonistic Sunni countries, as well as a contiguous border with the USSR. Made them a very motivated ally. That is why Obama and Biden courted them so hard, foolishly hard. They wanted to flip them over to our side. And it was profoundly stupid, as the current regime is ideologically rooted in hatred of the West in general and USA in particular. As we have seen, no amount of inducements moved them an inch toward us and a lot more than that in the wrong direction.
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I can certainly see why having Iran as pro-American ally would be very beneficial (big country, lots of oil, strategic location)
Still not sure what Israel it's us in the region that we already do not have.
But that is an interesting point about Obama-Biden still trying to pull Iran into the American orbit….though that seems like a lost cause given Irans current rulers
if you can't see what Israel has done for us in the last 12 months, I can't help you. Biggest bang for the buck, ever.
Interesting perspective.
Honestly think it's the other way around.
Without US financial support and military assets in the region……it's highly unlikely the rest of the Muslin world world have sat back while Israel invaded Gaza, Lebanon and Syria.
Killing thousands in the process.
......in the process killing millions of Jews and empowering Hizballah & Hamas which of course have killed thousands of Americans over the decades and still hold US hostages, leaving a pro-Russian/pro-Iranian regime in place to threaten a Nato ally (Turkey).
How exactly is that preferrable to US interests than what has happened?
-total destruction of Hamas
-near total destruction of Hizballah
-fall of a major terror-sponsor regime in Damascus
-total collapse of decades of Iranian policy aimed at undermining US power around the world
-effective collapse of decades of Palestinian destabilization of the region.
Preferable to US intersects is to let Israel fight their own wars and finance their own issues.
which is another way of saying "let the islamic world destroy Israel."
That is a policy option which has not one keystroke of benefit to the USA.
How many Israeli migrants would you be willing to host? All 10m of them?
70 years of US involvement is more than enough.
It's been highly effective, arguably more so dollar for dollar, than any other ally relationship.
Focus on the needs of Americans right here at home.
Israel is important to Americans here at home, a strong majority of which support the existence of the Jewish state.
70 years is enough period.
And you and I both know it's only gone on this long due to intense lobbying of our government officials.
For no more than we spend, we should do it forever. Biggest bang for the buck out of any ally.
And no, it is quite silly to suggest that our alliance with Israel is solely due to Jewish lobby money. The needs/benefits are quite obvious, no matter how hard you try not to see them.
Aid to Israel is less than 1% of the budget deficit, buddy...... And for that expense we got total destruction of Hamas & Hizballah, without a single drop of American soldier sweat.
I do believe you'd hack off your foot to save 50% on the cost trimming your toenails.
Stupid post.
We have spent billions of dollars on Israel annually for decades.
It's only done at this point due to millions of dollars given to our political operatives by Israeli lobbyists.
70 years worth…..take a moment and really let that sink in.
Time to focus on our own problems ; our own people.
We spend Trillions every year on our own people and our own problems. You feeling the impact? You think another couple Billion would help?
Yes....to the people who would be effected positively by that billion its very important
That's what every politician who has ever argued for an increase in entitlement spending, or new welfare program, or jobs bill has said. Then the reality of government mismanagement takes hold. It's truly remarkable you'd even make that argument.
Its far more remarkable that you are making the argument that a few billion dollars of tax payer money is no big deal. (when it is)
And that it should be handed off to foreigners in another country. (insulting)
Have you personally sent money to Israel? Try doing that first before you advocate sending billions of tax payer money to them
I'm willing to pay for the defense of this country and have the understanding that jobs are actually created within the military and supporting industries, all be it hamstrung with similar inefficiencies.
You pretend to be a fiscal hawk.....but now you are ok with large amounts of government defense spending?
Fair enough....so your concerns about government spending are very hypocritical
(not to mention you can spend money on US defense without giving money to Israel....that is a logical fallacy)
I literally said in the post you responded to, if you want to save the money, that's a legitimate argument. You just failed to either read or include that in your reply. I'm fine with cutting. Not this emotional appeal argument over "why are we spending in Israel and not Americans?".
Its more a rational political question...its interesting you think the question of why should American politicians spend money on Americans vs on foreigners is a "emotional question"
Its very reasonable to ask why its being done....what benefits it has for the American people....and given our debts levels if its unstainable (even if you think a few billion is no big deal)
In fact I suspect your attachment to sending billions in tax payer money to Israel is based more on emotion than it is on rational cost vs benefit analysis....or any concerns for actual American defense
Suspect all you want and twist what I said all you want. Reality is we aren't arguing about aid to South Korea or Egypt, it's Israel, as it always seems to be. That's not by coincidence.
I am happy to have those arguments and talk about which relationships are really necessary for our real security needs
(Speaking of Egypt you do realize a big reason we give them billions of dollars is so they keep the peace with Israel right?)
Hardly
That is a factual statement
Part of the reason Egypt gets $2 billion plus a from us is to keep the peace treaty with Israel
For work purposes, I'm very familiar with U.S/Egypt relations. Israel is near or at the bottom on the list of reasons these days. Egypt wants peace with Israel and has since more moderate voices took over. Egypt is the power player in the ME/Africa. We've mostly paid them for economic and trade reasons and to keep them out of bed with Russia and China. It is also important for anti-terror purposes..
I literally said from the get go it was not the only reason we pay Egypt
But yes…keeping the peace with Israel was and is one of the reasons we bribe them with American tax payer money
I mean, if it's a reason at all
Well historically it was the main reason at the beginning
[In the case of Egypt, US aid granted since the signing of the 1978 Camp David Accords was "untouchable compensation" for maintaining peace with Israel. This deal is considered a cornerstone of US-Egyptian relations.
Robert Springborg, a Middle East expert and non-resident fellow at the Italian Institute of International Affairs, told…that US economic support was intended to stabilize Anwar Sadat's (former Egyptian president) government and succeeding ones.
How does the US benefit?
The primary benefit is the "cessation of hostilities against Israel" by Egypt and "other Arab states that could not wage war against Israel in the absence of Egyptian participation", Springborg said.]
On this issue, you definitely have more studying to do.
I don't know where you got this, but if the conclusion was that buying Egypt's acceptance of Israel was the main reason for our support of Egypt in 1978, it is very much a distorted and narrow view of the thawing of U.S. - Egypt relations in the 1970s.
We had on and off strong relations with Egypt since its independence and that included providing them military and economic support back to the early 20th Century. Ironically, we limited support more based on Egypt's strengthening ties with Russia/China more than on Egypt's invasions of Israel.
As for the 1970s, there was so much going on at the time economically, politically, and militarily. And Sadat was a moderate unlike his predecessor. Again, he wanted peace with Israel and stronger ties with the U.S. its fledgling economy and political instability made it a necessity.
To say our support at the time was bribing him to make peace with Israel is absurd. We had just reestablished relations with Egypt. Our support resulted in the reopening of the canal and Egypt kicking the Soviets to the curb.
Would I be shocked if at some point in the Camp David talks Sadat asked us to sweeten the pot? No. But no objective person who understands the history can say Israel in a vacuum is why we supported Egypt in 1978. We had already supported Egypt, and our support in the late 20th Century got us so much more.