JihadJane
not a camel
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2008
- Messages
- 91,187
Its not as if Brezinski is some particularly important cog in the wheels of history. He's a policy guy who's had some high-level access to decision making in American foreign policy. Take him out of the picture and I'm sure things may have come out ever-so-slightly differently, but I can't believe that it would have changed all that much.
While I understand the disgust people have for the ways in which the Cold War relegated millions to misery and devastation (I share it), I think its misguided to pick out favourite villains when the real problems are not so much the individuals, but the development of worldviews that allow people to rationalize callous decisions as necessary and the perception of threat (sometimes grounded, sometimes not).
I think you are underplaying both Brzezinski's influence on US foreign policy at the time and US influence in Afghanistan:
* http://www.historycommons.org/context.jsp?item=a86fourbillion
The point of the OP isn't to pick out Brzezinski as a favorite villian but to point out that this callous man, happy to back murderous drug traffickers like Gulbuddin Hekmatyar, is now an important adviser to a President-elect who has sold himself as the candidate of Change. What change?