Honestly, Sci?
I agree, that one should never automatically assume that a new power will be hostile.
Nonetheless, one should never underestimate a foreign power either. You simply can not dismiss a country with "Oh, they're no threat. We'll be nice to them--and they won't ever be a threat."
And no one has said any such thing.
The rational thing to do is to welcome the new Union of South American Nations, emphasize ways with which we can work with them to our mutual benefit (trade and so forth), and always make sure you have a good enough military that they can't threaten you if things go sour. But it's a very bad thing when one's first reaction to a new power is to associate them with hostility and warfare.
That's what the UK thought about Hitler--hence, Neville Chamberlain and "peace in our time".
You're severely over-simplifying things. It wasn't a matter of, "We'll be nice to them and they'll never be a threat." It was a matter of, "If we give them what they want, they will be satisfied; if we betray our allies and consign their people to tyranny, Germany won't continue to expand." It was a deliberate, calculated betrayal on the part of Chamberlain made in the mistaken belief that if you simply give a bully what he wants without demanding that he give
you anything, he'll cease bullying you.
No one's advocating that.
No, don't assume the worst. Hope for the best--but prepare for the worst, just in case.
Sure. I've got no problem with that. But I've got a problem with jumping to the worst as the first thing one associates a new power with.
^They were apparently more powerful than we'd given them credit for....
To a point.
One of the things people tend to forget about 9/11 is that the death toll was as high as it was because of a huge fluke of luck on al Qaeda's part.
From what I understand, had American Airlines Flight 11 and United Airlines Flight 175 crashed into almost any other two skyscrapers in the United States, there's a good chance that attacks would not have been as successful. It was a unique feature of the Twin Towers' construction, with the supporting frame out towards the edges of the towers, that led to the floors all caving in on one-another.
The death toll would still, of course, have been horrific, but there's a good chance that it would have been lower, and the skyscrapers themselves surviving, had it been any other set of buildings than the Twin Towers.
[
And frankly, I do not have any reason to believe that sending gifts and saying nice words to dictators is going to change them.
Of course not. The goal is not to change the dictators; the goal is to create a peaceful relationship with them and to demonstrate that you are not a hostile foreigner to the populace, who might then see the superiority of your system and choose to overthrow the dictators themselves.
You know, sort of like how we won the Cold War.
All that happens is they take the gifts you give them and use them to your detriment. That can happen if we do it, and it can happen if other South American nations do it. Better not to give regimes like that any openings or legitimacy.
The United States tried that under the Bush Administration. It didn't work out too well for us -- or anyone. It led to international instability and a lot of unnecessary deaths.
The unfortunate fact of life is that we can't kill everyone who's bad, and so we have to live with them. We don't have the resources to go to war with everyone, nor do we have the ability to just cut them off -- especially since, frankly, we don't have the right to tell those countries how they ought to run themselves. We
have to use diplomacy in dealing with them, because no other instrument of national defense works as primary resort.