Sun Jun 03, 2007 6:11 am
Please do but some thoughts, my opinion.
While I support ANY effort to end the suffering in Darfur I fear nothing will happen unless the UN, the G8, G20, etc, establishes a sort of rogue regime council that actually has some balls. We have a system to rehabilitate failed economies, the IMF. A country that cannot pay it's debts goes through the IMF rehabilitation process, maybe paying cents on the dollar of their debt, and comes out the other side back in the international system with hopefully new financial rule sets to keep the country integrated with the world financially. This keeps said country from 'failing' and falling under the influence of 'BAD PEOPLE or REGIMES.' What the world lacks is a the ability to act against 'failed' regimes,' which inevitably leads to someone, say a President, 'inventing a threat' to justify the taking out of a 'Bad Regime' that nobody really liked. Maybe cause a Big Splash in an area of 'Bad Regimes' and hopefully bringing about change in said area.
The UN is like your local Prosecutor, they can indite the bad regime, and pass resolution after resolution describing the bad behavior. But in the world we live in there are no cops, no one who can actually do something about it. UN Peacekeepers? A joke. The have no power to actually do anything, just observe and report. Unless Peacekeepers have full logistical and moral support, powers of arrest and detention, and the ability to shoot back if provoked, NOTHING can or will happen. Somalia and Rwanda showed the 'bad guys' that you only need to kill one or two peacekeepers, white ones preferably, and support for intervention drops among the industrial countries. We are seeing this repeated with the Darfur militia's recent killings of AU Peacekeepers. Until we have a system in place that not only can take down bad regimes, but rehabilitate them into functioning members of the Global Society, and yes that includes financially functioning as well, we get Iraq's and not The Balkan's.
The US could play the role of Global cop very well. So too NATO. 'You need that bad regime taken down? No problem. How's next Tuesday for you. And it will cost $4 Billion." It's the rebuilding we suck at. What's needed is the PEACE CORPS on Steroids; Civil Affairs, Engineers, Lawyers, 40 year-old beat cops (guys who know how to diffuse a situation without pulling their gun,) NOT inexperienced-in-life 18 year olds with trigger-fingers. Use the Marines or the French Foreign Legion, someone to cover these 'System Administrators,' and act against the bad guys who will kill because they see no future for them in the way the world is constantly progressing.
As much as I dislike Bush, he was right in saying that Bin Laden and his ilk hate us for our freedoms. They do. Their version of the world is not a positive one. Look at the role of women in 'Traditional' Islamic societies versus 'Secular' Islamic Societies, or against the US and Western Europe. The men lose their dominance; they lose their power. Bin Laden and his ilk want to make it so painful for the industrialized CORE of the world to engage in the Middle East and North Africa that we will turn away from them, walling them up behind closed & militarized borders, ala the Cold War, and consign 1/3 of Humanity to the total control of religious zealots. Want a sneak peak at his version of society? Look no further than Afghanistan under the Taliban, England under Cromwell, France under the Bourbons, Spain under the Inquisition, Russia under Lenin. Make no mistake, Bin Laden is this centuries Lenin. And after Lenin came Stalin. I'm not worried about Bin Laden, it's his replacement that keeps me up at night.
It will take one or a group of SELFLESS nations that can see the positive gain 10, 20, maybe 30 years down the road, and accept the price in Blood and Treasure that it will require to get there. We must not shy away from places like Darfur, Rwanda, the Middle East, Mexico, Venezuela, and those costs. Rather we need to engage them, financially, humanitarianly, and yes even militarily, however painful. It will take nations, nay societies, that accept that some things will have to change internally; in their economies, their laws, and their lifestyles, to let the rest of the world to just begin to enjoy the blessings and freedoms we in the West take for granted every-single-day.