Strategic Manure
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
DIGG THIS
Sen. John
McCain is already spreading the old "strategic interests"
fertilizer along the presidential campaign trail while pretending
to be an expert.
Let's hope
he really can explain what interests require us to maintain troops
in Germany and Japan 63 years after the end of the war. What exactly
is the purpose of those troops? Are we expecting the Mongols to
descend on Japan? Does he expect the Cossacks will ride across the
plains to attack Europe? Does he think that two of the greatest
economic powers on Earth Japan and Europe are too
poor to defend themselves? The old boy is living in the past.
When American
politicians talk about strategic interests, they are talking about
just what I called it, manure. We have no strategic interests in
the Middle East whatsoever. We wish to buy oil there. Last time
I checked, those countries that produce oil were selling it to any
country willing to buy it, whether that country had troops in the
area or not. Since oil isn't edible, there's not a heck of a lot
you can do with it if you don't sell it.
What are all
those Navy ships in the Persian Gulf doing? Do McCain and George
Bush seriously believe that Iran would launch an invasion of Saudi
Arabia? That's ridiculous. There might be some aspects of Iran's
government we don't care for, and that's OK, because it is not our
government and we don't have to live under it. Nobody in his right
mind, however, has ever accused Iran of being an expansionist nation.
All McCain has to do is read up on his history and ask the CIA to
explain to him Iran's order of battle. Their forces are not equipped
for invasions.
As for the
nuclear nonsense, both Iran and our own intelligence agencies say
that the Iranians are not interested in developing nuclear weapons.
But suppose they were. Who cares? I'm much more concerned about
the nuclear weapons in Russia, China, India, Pakistan, France, Great
Britain, the U.S. and Israel.
Iran is one
of the oldest civilizations on Earth, and its people are smart.
They are not crazy. They know that one day their oil will run out,
and they want to develop nuclear power. They signed the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty. They have called repeatedly for a nuclear-free
Middle East. To compete with the nuclear powers, they'd have to
produce so many nuclear weapons and delivery systems, it would bankrupt
them. They've decided that option would be foolish. Now if they
can only convince our foolish politicians.
I sometimes
think our older politicians fell in love with the British Empire.
I think many of them secretly long to sit on a veranda somewhere
and be served drinks by humble servants. They love the idea of empire.
The admirals and generals like to fly around to our 702 overseas
bases, play a little golf, have a few drinks and fly home again.
The reality
is that we can no longer afford our overseas empire, no matter what
strategic interests McCain and Bush like to fantasize about. We're
about to go busted. It's pretty hard to maintain an empire on credit
when you have borrowed money from the people you claim to be lording
it over. The Philippines kicked us out of our bases there. I predict
the Japanese will eventually do the same. Get a stable government
in North Korea and the South Koreans will be showing us the door.
We should leave on our own and devote those billions of dollars
to domestic priorities.
Bush
is mad to push the expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
It should be disbanded, not expanded. It has no enemy. By expanding
it, however, Bush seems to be trying to convince Russia that NATO
is its enemy. That's not a smart thing to do. It's dumb. Talk about
something that is not in our strategic interests, it's restarting
the Cold War with Russia.
April
5, 2008
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2008 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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