I would; I don't distinguish between attacking a country and providing safe haven and operating grounds for those who do. So, no, I do not and have never objected to the United States's war in Afghanistan -- though I add that I believe that the U.S. needs to develop a clearer sense of achievable objectives, a willingness to allow Afghanistan to have its own internal conflicts so long as they do not threaten the U.S. or our allies, or constitute genocide/chattel slavery-level human rights abuses, and a game plan to know how to leave when it becomes clear that al Qaeda and other terrorist organizations will simply no longer be able to use Afghanistan as a base of operations against the U.S. or its allies.
Also, out of curiosity, would you also accept that given what we know about safe havens for terrorists in Pakistan (both on its Eastern and Western borders), that the U.S., Europe and India have the right to root out these elements by force (even though they're choosing not to exercise that right for whatever reasons) ?
Yes? No? On the fence?![]()
Had a date with a pretty girl last night. 'Twas a bit more important than getting back to you.

Pakistan is an interesting situation. The Pakistani government is trying to help the U.S. root out al Qaeda and the Taliban, but at the same, the Pakistani government only has limited control over many of the tribal areas from where al Qaeda and the Taliban are operating. I do think that the United States has the right to engage in limited incursions into Pakistani territory -- bombing flights over the tribal areas and such that the Pakistani government doesn't control and where they think the enemy is located, though I think that this brings about a concomitant moral responsibility on the part of the U.S. to make sure we don't inadvertently kill innocent civilians.
In general, if the government of a state is cooperating with the U.S. in rooting out political actors that have attacked the United States, then that nullifies the right to invade that state in the name of self-defense. Similarly, I should, in retrospect, have modified the post you are responding to to read, "I don't distinguish between attacking a country and intentionally providing safe haven and operating grounds for those who do." After all, technically, the United States provided a safe haven and operating grounds for the 9/11 hijackers -- inadvertently. Similarly, Pakistan is doing the same for al Qaeda and the Taliban, again inadvertently.
I should probably also add that I think one mitigating factor to the whole thing is that at some point, it would be both prudent and necessary to recognize that if we have good reason to think that those factions comprising the Taliban can be turned against al Qaeda and persuaded not to harm the United States and its allies or to help those harming the U.S. and its allies, that would be preferential and would nullify the right of the U.S. to continue the war against the Taliban. However, the circumstances under which it can be assured that Taliban-aligned factions will not intentionally seek to harm the U.S. would probably be very difficult to recognize. This hasn't stopped the U.S. State Department under President Obama from looking for those opportunities, though -- which I think is a good thing, since if diplomacy can be used to achieve the same objectives that we are using war to achieve, then diplomacy is obviously preferable.
I really hate this term that the right-wing invented. It doesn't really make any sense.
Temper, temper, LutherSloan. There's a reason I put it in quotation marks....![]()
It's still a bad term. Calling the various unaligned Muslim groups that have been enemies of the United States "Islamo-fascists" makes about as much sense as calling the U.S. and Latin America "Christo-mercantalists" or as calling China, North Korea, and Vietnam "Buddho-monarchists."
Yeah, but didn't they not even know about them until they were already pissed?And the Dominion was pissed becuase the Federation was screwing around in their back yard ie the Gamma Quandrant.
Of course it didn't help that after finding out that the Dominion were pissed, why they were pissed, and the way of dealing with what pissed them off Dax has to go and say the Federation won't stop doing the things that is pissing the Dominion off even though their aware their pissing them off and what the Dominion will do to the Federation if they keep pissing them off, you'd think being an ambassador in her previous life would have lead her to annoying the pissed off militeristic empire that has thoroughly kicked their asses at this point.
Exactly. There is a very defensible argument that the Federation started the Dominion War. The Federation entered Dominion space and space in the Dominion sphere of influence without the Dominion's permission, the Federation refused to stop doing so after the Dominion told them to stop, the Federation allowed the Cardassian Obsidian Order and Romulan Tal Shiar to attempt to commit genocide against the Founders, a group of Federation-aligned operatives then tried themselves to commit genocide against the Founders, and then the Federation mined the Bajoran Wormhole -- which was Bajoran property, not Federation property, thereby committing an act of aggression against Bajor -- to prevent the free travel of persons between Dominion worlds in the Gamma Quadrant and Alpha Quadrant.
Getting caught up on this thread and stumbling onto the Benedict Arnold references, I was so tempted to bring up the idea that maybe - from the Canadian POV - we owe Benedict more than a few for helping make sure we could simply be Canadian. Probably wasn't anywhere near his intentions at the time, but he helped make it happen for us.
Oh, and one of those things the Americans-not-quite-yet were objecting to was the guarantee to the Quebecois-to-be that they could go on being Catholic after being handed over by France to the UK. And we've already covered the First Nations.
Right.
Anyway, back to your regularly scheduled Typhon Pact strategic/tactical/diplomatic/ethical response debate. Particularly the Romulan schism in progress...
One of the important things to remember about the Thirteen Colonies and their reasons for rebelling against the Crown was that, well, they were thirteen separate colonies. They did not all have the same objectives when they rebelled; the different regions of the Colonies each had unique grievances against the Kingdom of Great Britain; really, the only grievance that all of the Colonies/States held in common was that none of them wanted to be taxed without representation in Parliament and that they all felt the British government had betrayed its traditional practice of "salutary neglect" and was interfering in their internal affairs.
It was to the point where uniting the Thirteen States into a regional confederation called "the United States of America" was extremely difficult. Up until the adoption of the Constitution, in fact, the United States was not a state, it was thirteen different states -- and Vermont, which didn't join the U.S. until after the Constitution -- with their own agendas. When people said, "My country," they meant, Virginia or Massachusetts or what-have-you, not the United States.
In fact, if you read the Declaration of Independence, it is not a declaration of the existence of the single state called the United States of America today; it is the declaration of the independence of thirteen separate states (in the international sense of the term, not in the U.S. sense of the term), each of which should, the Declaration claims, be taken as unique, sovereign, and equal to any other state such as the Kingdom of Great Britain, the Kingdom of France, the Dutch Republic, etc.
So, just bear in mind that even the grievances of politically powerful states in the American confederation shouldn't necessarily be taken as universally-held. (Though I can't say I've researched the Quebec angle on this.)