Is it impossible to believe a lot of the Western leaders object to Assad primarily on the basis he is a brutal dictator?
Let's see if I can do better with Ramsey Clark, former US attorney general, who wrote the forward to Travesty by John Laughland.
From the introduction:
Not impossible at all but unlikely given that the west lives comfortably enough with brutal dictators when it serves their/our interests.
When these brutal dictators are finally opposed by their own people Western governments are generally supportive though, aren't we? Libya?
When these brutal dictators are finally opposed by their own people Western governments are generally supportive though, aren't we? Libya?
We were led to believe the Serbs were killing Kosovan Albanians in their thousands in order to justify a bombing campaign whose object was to loosen Serbia's grip on another part of the former Yugoslavia.
Lets not have all this BS about caring for the human rights of some Syrian minority no one ever heard of a few months ago.
TBH we didn't like him much either and we've certainly not supported uprisings in Bahrain or Burma.
Yes. Who cares how many they bomb or kill? I certainly do not. But, if serious policy considerations dictate that we intervene then fine. Just cut the crap and the lies and tell it straight.I've seen this argument before, but I really don't understand it.
The Serbs were mobilizing large forces and sending them to Kosovo. They had already sent this guy down there, responsible for terrible crimes against humanity in Bosnia. We knew what was going to happen.
Were we supposed to wait and let them kill a couple hundred thousand like they did in Bosnia before we acted? You know, people criticized that as well.
What a weird statement.
First of all, speak for yourself. Just because you haven't heard of them doesn't mean that no one else has.
But even so, are we supposed to not care about people we haven't heard of? Can we not care about human rights violations and terrible treatment of people, whether we've heard of them or not?
Are you saying that you don't care? Can you accept that others do?
Yes. Who cares how many they bomb or kill? I certainly do not.
Yes, I am saying I don't care
I want to know what's in it for us and if there is nothing I don't want my money wasted.
I accept that others say they care. You will find these people sleeping peacefully most nights, getting on with life and only 'caring' when something awful comes on TV and only until the adverts come on a few minutes after. These are the folks the government counts on when lying about its foreign policy. Try not to be one of them.
Yes, I am saying I don't care and I am also saying you probably don't care either.
<snip>
However, your military service does not qualify you to assess the policy reasons lying behind the intervention nor the truth of the claims made on the NATO side.
No.
What I'm saying is, I'm not terribly concerned that you don't care. I take note of it but I see no need to go on about it at great length. A simple, 'I don't care' would seem to suffice.
Just state your lack of caring and then, as I believe they say on your side of the pond, "Carry on!"![]()
The same is true for you, but it obviously doesn't seem to stop you. Beams and splinters in eyes, and all that.
<snip>
That is what foreign policy looks like, in reality, whether you think so or not. It is also what it should be: an intelligent assessment of one's own interests and nothing more...
I fail to understand. If we had the real reasons why the US wishes to have an excuse to intervene against Assad I would be able to form an opinion about them, but we don't and I haven't.
Again, I get it. I just think you have a unnecessarily narrow definition of what one's "interests" are. A definition that is not totally supported by events.
Note Western nations normally do not intervene to maintain dictators faced with a serious challenge to their authority. (Mubarak in Egypt.) Even when, by your narrow definition of what our interests are, we would probably have been better served by the Mubarak regime remaining in power.