A sea of troubles
A Friend (IRL, an acquaintance) posted in his LJ:
Cold comfort to the Iraqis, of course, but worth keeping in mind as we focus minutely on one trouble spot on a troubled globe.
Well, I'm not an Iraqi mother trying to comfort her children right now. She must be the most sorrowful creature on the planet right now.I didn't want to respond there, because it would've sounded crass, but I don't agree. The most sorrowful creatures on the planet are suffering in countries where there are no reporters "embedded" in platoons or holed up in hotels in the capital waiting for footage of aerial bombardment. The EU is not meeting to discuss reconstruction of their devastated homelands and there isn't a raft of NGOs waiting to play watchdog during the occupation. The world has forgotten them, and they know it.
Cold comfort to the Iraqis, of course, but worth keeping in mind as we focus minutely on one trouble spot on a troubled globe.
Re: pitiful
I think that the reality here is that our foreign policy, is opportunistic.
If you have a strategic position like Turkey, or oil like Saudi Arabia, then you get lots of financial help, and it doesn’t matter if you rape and pillage, commit genocide, throw homosexuals out of helicopters, or sell
Christians as slaves. You have something we need and so we turn a blind eye. The rest of the world may know, see, hear, and vocally express its ire, but the good old US of A neither sees, nor hears nor cares about the screams of the tortured. Its ok if you let our military live on your soil, or you give us your natural resources.
One the strategic positioning of your country is gone, and the resources have dried up, your government become "oppressive" and it is necessary to "topple your government", "free" your people", and bring the "light of democracy" to your mud huts, and your illiterate peasants.
This system gets us what we need. Maybe that’s all that counts…gee, I hope not.
Re: pitiful
Another problem is that a lot of our foreign policy is hostage to special interest groups. The Anti-Castro Cubans are one of the most powerful examples of this, but hardly the only one; a strong Armenian lobby in the USA has hampered aid and involvement in Azerbaijan--with its tremendous underexploited reserves of oil--for instance. Domestic political considerations like these also help prevent foreign policy from being as consistent or as rights-based as we'd like it to be.