"Before we can figure out how much we should spend on the military, we need
to ask ourselves what we want a military for. Is it to defend our nation? Or
is it to impose our will upon others?" - The U.S. military budget is 329
billion $. With this amount of money on its disposal imperialists can do
ANYTHING, including annihilate the Earth many times or enslave all nations
(Russia's budget is 8 billion $!). The worst thing about it is that American
electorate support such a state of affirms. In elections last year they had
a common sense alternative - Buchanan, but they flatly rejected him and
embraced imperialist bullies Bush and Gore!

http://www.post-gazette.com/forum/20010826edkelly26p7.asp

THE PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE, Sunday, August 26, 2001

Jack Kelly: Imperialism redux

NATO moves into Macedonia because it can

Before we can figure out how much we should spend on the military, we need
to ask ourselves what we want a military for. Is it to defend our nation? Or
is it to impose our will upon others?

With the dispatch of 3,500 NATO troops to Macedonia, the United States has
begun a peacekeeping mission in yet another Balkan country. Only about 500
of these troops are Americans, and NATO's military commander, U.S. Air Force
Gen. Joseph Ralston, expects NATO's role in Macedonia to be short and
uneventful.

But it might not work out that way. When he sent U.S. troops to Bosnia in
1995, President Clinton said they'd be there only a year.

There are more than 3,000 U.S. troops in Bosnia today, and they won't be
coming home anytime soon. Nor, says President Bush, will the 5,400 U.S.
troops in Kosovo.

Macedonia, the poorest of the former Yugoslav republics, is about the size
of Vermont, with a population of a bit more than 2 million. About 70 percent
are Slavs, about 23 percent ethnic Albanians.

The mission of the NATO troops is to disarm Albanian rebels pursuant to a
peace agreement imposed upon the warring factions by NATO and the European
Union.

This could be tricky. The rebels have been receiving arms from their ethnic
co-religionists in Albania and Kosovo. In the two months they've been
attempting to interdict the flow of weapons from Kosovo, U.S. troops have
confiscated 600 rifles, 45 machine guns, 658 mortar shells and more than
1,000 anti-tank weapons.

A U.S. official told Los Angeles Times reporter Alissa Rubin that he thinks
this amounts to no more than 15 percent of the arms being sent to the
rebels.

The new peacekeeping mission has attracted remarkably little attention from
a press and public that couldn't care less about foreign policy. A few
sceptics have expressed doubts about its practicality. But maybe the
question we should ask first is about its morality.

Macedonia is a democracy, with a (for that region) pretty good record on
human rights. Macedonia sided with us in the Kosovo war. The Macedonian
government did not seek, and Slavic Macedonians do not like, the peace
agreement, which effectively dismembers their country. Macedonia is not a
member of either NATO or the European Union. By what right do these
outsiders meddle in Macedonia's internal affairs?

To advance the cause of peace, say supporters of intervention.

"Peace is important in Macedonia because the country is a linchpin to the
stability of the entire region," said the Dallas Morning News in an
editorial. "If the civil war were to continue, a wider war might erupt."

"Only the United States has the diplomatic power to lead what everyone
recognizes will be a long and difficult effort to build peace in the
Balkans," said the Louisville Courier-Journal.

We should intervene because we are the big dog on the block. Only we can
bring civilization to the barbarians, can show the heathen the path to
salvation. In earlier times, this was called "imperialism."

"Imperialism" and "isolationism" are emotionally laden terms which opponents
in this debate hurl at each other like stones. This is unfortunate, because
imperialism is by no means all bad. It could be argued that British
imperialism -- we are a product of it, as are the Canadians and the
Australians -- is the best thing that ever happened to the world.

Though a few of us believe the United States should lead by example rather
than by force, we're a minority. President Clinton intervened militarily in
more countries than any other president in peacetime.

President Bush has largely continued those policies. The chief difference
between Democratic imperialism and Republican imperialism seems to be that
Democrats favor intervention only when it has no clear connection to U.S.
national interests, and Republicans favor it only when it does.

Before we pick up the contemporary version of the White Man's Burden, we
should recall that it was heavier in the past than its advocates imagined it
would be.

If we're going to intervene in other people's quarrels, we'll need a larger
military, and we'll use it more often, because we'll be making more enemies
than friends.


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