WordInterrupted
Troll Kingdom Ambassador
I'm responding to 6's neo-colonialism post here because the original thread has degenerated into holocaust denial.
Even if we set aside ethical considerations, this plan is not feasible. The U.S. is neither willing nor able to commit the necessary resources. The cost of Iraq and Afghanistan have blown out huge deficiets, yet Bush still insists that we need to cut taxes (and you seem to agree with him.) If we're not able to pay for the takeover of just two countries, how are we going to pay for the massive commitments you describe? An ideology that demands both costly foriegn engagements and lower taxes is incoherent and untenable. You can't borrow from the Chinese forever.
Even if you could find funding, full-scale colonialism would require a much larger military. As it is, our armed forces are overextended and not meeting recruitment goals. If the military can't grow through voluntary recruitment, the only other option is a draft. Again, even if we set aside the ethical problems of forced military service, it's not politically possible. Very few people would support a draft for the purpose of worldwide nation building.
The problem of resources seems insurmountable, but an even more obvious obstacle is that nobody wants to be a colony. It's unrealistic to expect that any nation--much less a middle eastern nation--would give up its soveriegnty to the U.S. The only way the U.S. is going to gain control of other nations is by forcibly removing governments, as it did in Iraq. Even in the case of Iraq, the U.S. stated explicity that it would turn over full soveriegnty to the Iraqi people as soon as possible. If it had instead taken the position you advocate and tried to establish itself as a long-term colonial power, the entire country would have been in revolt. Starting long, bloody wars will not facilitate economic and political development.
Finally, this notion that colonialism facilitates economic development was championed by none other than Karl Marx (see "The British Rule in India") He argues that even if colonial rule is oppressive, it benefits the colonized nation by establishing economic infrastructure and expanding economic capacity. Like most of Marx's economics, his theories about colonialism are now considered wrong. Many of the most serious problems in the developing world--civil wars in Africa, facism in South America--are the historical consequences of inept, predatory colonial administration.
Honestly? Some form of neo-colonialism, with First World countries providing the resources these countries need to bring themselves to a standard of living on par with our own, but only in return for a shared-ruling scheme that would eventually be relinquished when a true democractic attitude has been instilled in the populace.
Even if we set aside ethical considerations, this plan is not feasible. The U.S. is neither willing nor able to commit the necessary resources. The cost of Iraq and Afghanistan have blown out huge deficiets, yet Bush still insists that we need to cut taxes (and you seem to agree with him.) If we're not able to pay for the takeover of just two countries, how are we going to pay for the massive commitments you describe? An ideology that demands both costly foriegn engagements and lower taxes is incoherent and untenable. You can't borrow from the Chinese forever.
Even if you could find funding, full-scale colonialism would require a much larger military. As it is, our armed forces are overextended and not meeting recruitment goals. If the military can't grow through voluntary recruitment, the only other option is a draft. Again, even if we set aside the ethical problems of forced military service, it's not politically possible. Very few people would support a draft for the purpose of worldwide nation building.
The problem of resources seems insurmountable, but an even more obvious obstacle is that nobody wants to be a colony. It's unrealistic to expect that any nation--much less a middle eastern nation--would give up its soveriegnty to the U.S. The only way the U.S. is going to gain control of other nations is by forcibly removing governments, as it did in Iraq. Even in the case of Iraq, the U.S. stated explicity that it would turn over full soveriegnty to the Iraqi people as soon as possible. If it had instead taken the position you advocate and tried to establish itself as a long-term colonial power, the entire country would have been in revolt. Starting long, bloody wars will not facilitate economic and political development.
Finally, this notion that colonialism facilitates economic development was championed by none other than Karl Marx (see "The British Rule in India") He argues that even if colonial rule is oppressive, it benefits the colonized nation by establishing economic infrastructure and expanding economic capacity. Like most of Marx's economics, his theories about colonialism are now considered wrong. Many of the most serious problems in the developing world--civil wars in Africa, facism in South America--are the historical consequences of inept, predatory colonial administration.