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Originally posted by donwhite
Welcome! Good points. Good questions. Last first. It is true the US has farmed out - outsourced - many of its critical component manufacturing requirements. Look at the argument over autos. The sticker law required the “country of origin” to be shown. The auto makers got that changed to “country of final assembly.” Almost every part in a modern car is made “abroad” regardless what brand you speak about or what country it originally came from. England’s Land Rover was bought by Germany’s BMW, completely redesigned, then sold to America’s Ford, and is now made in Canada for sale in the US of A with many parts made in China, Mexico and Brazil. I submit “country of origin” or “country of final assembly” is no longer relevant information. 25 years ago, Thomson, a French company, bought the name only of RCA and GE and assembles tvs in Mexico from parts made in the Orient that bear those famous brand names when sold in the US. 20 years ago, we learned Toshiba (Japan) sold its technology to grind “silent” submarine propellers to the Soviets. Toshiba was the supplier for US nuclear powered sub propellers.
Projection. It’s called “projection” as in the case of the 2 carrier battle groups just now in the Persian Gulf off the Iranian coast. On January 10, 2007, Bush43 threatened to “kill” any Iranian in Iraq who threatened the life of a US soldier or marine. Now that has always been our policy, and is any nation’s policy, but it is not considered good diplomatic technique for the Maximum Leader to voice that policy. That would be more appropriate for Sec Def Gates or the Army Chief of Staff. Expendable if necessary. The Prez is supposed to remain aloof from the dirt and grim of the real world, as in staying deniable. But what the hey, he’s from Texas! Shoot first, ask questions later. If at all. Shock and awe. He’s the decider!
Asymmetric warfare. David and Goliath. Jack and the Beanstalk. From the first day after the Nine Eleven Event, I asked “Why” and “why now?” ti seemed obvious to me that the State of Israel is either #1 or #2. Long-time US support for autocrats in the Middle East is next. Lack of attention of the abject poverty endemic in the Middle East which sits atop 70% of the world’s proven oil reserves is last.
It must be more apparent to any thoughtful person we - the US primarily - cannot afford to address those issues with super carriers. Our policy is bankrupt. And if we - the US - follow it much further, the US will be, bankrupt too. The other side spends a few million, and we must spend many billions. It’s called whipsawing. It is public record we have spent $367 b. in Iraq since March 18, 2003. In a war that we told would “pay for itself.” there is a bill in Congress to allot $87 b. more. That’s for this year, not next years, which is estimated to cost $130 b. by the end of 2008, if this holds, we will have spent $584 b. And will end doing a Saigon Embassy stunt out of Baghdad.
Crime in America is bad. Public education is strapped for funds. Health care is non-existent for 10s of millions of Americans and other cannot afford what they have. Streets, roads, sewers, and other infrastructure needs updating or replacing. The St. Johns River in Florida where I live is about to DIE. 80% of the pollutants are agricultural runoff. Florida’s biggest money crops, oranges and lemons, are killing the river. So what doe we do, shut down the orange groves? We need money at home but our Maximum Leader has chosen to spend it in Iraq and Afghan. Along with 3,400 dead GIs and 10,000 who have been maimed for life. Thanks, Mr Bush, but No Thanks.
posted by sweatmonicaIdo
posted by donwhite It is true the US has outsourced many critical manufacturing requirements. 20 years ago Toshiba sold its technology to grind “silent” submarine propellers to the Soviets. Toshiba supplied US nuclear powered submarine propellers.
It is clear we are past the age of industrial warfare and any attempt to continue to fight wars exhibiting any part of this era will undoubtedly result in disaster for the country at hand. Even after World War II, the only country truly capable of large-scale industrial warfare was the colossal Soviet Union. Hopefully, our leaders see that we have been in new times for a while and that we need to start living like its 2007.
DW: Projection as in the 2 carrier battle groups now in the Persian Gulf off the Iranian coast. On January 10, 2007, Bush43 threatened . .
Projection is all we've got now. With the U.S. being an even bigger target for terrorist attack, projection is all that's keeping the enemy form sneaking by, but it also makes us even more vulnerable, because terrorism is that 4th dimensional threat.
DW: Asymmetric warfare . . after the Nine Eleven Event, I asked “Why” and . . Lack of [the West’s] attention of the abject poverty endemic in the Middle East which sits atop 70% of the world’s proven oil reserves . .
Most Americans don't realize this, but from 1815 - 1991 was very much an anomaly in military history or history as a whole. Many of us are troubled by what we see in Iraq, but much of human history is made up of [many] Iraqs . . very few wars reach the scale that defines our popular perception of what war is (the two world wars . . ). Therefore, our return to pre-modern and asymmetric warfare is us snapping out of our dream and returning to the real world. I think it can be said that we have spent all this money [to fight] things that simply don't exist. The F-22? Do our leaders truly believe al Qaeda will field an advanced air force by the next decade? On the environment, the SF Bay Area is overdue for a catastrophic earthquake. All it takes is one [8.0] quake and the U.S. national security policy and strategy will turn upside down. We saw that with Hurricane Katrina. Everything is connected. From the top songs on the Billboard's Top 40 to the International Space Station, everything affects and is affected by the military and war. [Edited by Don W]