I have been working in the arena of international relations for many many years and I have watched the policies of the US go down the toilet since 1975…..and they just keep getting worse and since GW onward it has been a complete disaster.
These ten lessons are what many of us have watched take shape since those days…sad to say our policies in the Middle East have been the most f*cked up….
Enough Already by Scott Horton is a must-read for anyone who wants to know the truth about US foreign policy in the Middle East for the last 35 years. Horton starts his exposé with the 9/11 tragedy, and then details all the terror wars up until today. Among all the facts and figures, Horton teaches ten important lessons. Each chapter focuses on a specific country, but these lessons are woven throughout each.
Lesson 1—The US is Not Loyal to Its Allies
“If you want to know who America’s next enemy is, look at who we are funding right now.”—Dave Smith
I used to think this statement was an oversimplification, but it is deadly accurate. Our government routinely makes allies only to turn around and attack them years later. One clear example is what would become al Qaeda. In the 1980s, the US armed Afghan resistance fighters to oppose Russia in Afghanistan. After 9/11, al Qaeda became the archenemy of the US. Then, about ten years later, they started arming them again to fight in Iraq and in Syria.
In Afghanistan, the US supported the Taliban during the Clinton administration. Then multiple presidents fought a 20-year war against them only to give full control of Afghanistan back to the Taliban in 2021.
The US followed the same pattern with Iraq. The US armed them against Iran during the 1980s. They supported Hussein all the way to Iraq War I in 1990. Then they bombed and sanctioned the country until they captured him in 2003 and had him executed.
Lesson 2—The US Prolongs Wars
Without US involvement in the Middle East, both sides in a conflict would be similar in strength and have less resources to continue. In the Yemen War, the US sends arms to Saudi Arabia, who then sends them to their allies in Yemen to fight the Houthis, even though the Houthis “won” years ago. Take the US out of the equation and the Saudi’s allies wouldn’t be able to continue the war.
The same thing happened in Somalia when the US armed Ethiopian forces to invade. Continued US support incentivized the Ethiopian groups to continue fighting after it started. Outside the Middle East, this lesson played out the exact same way in the Ukraine-Russia war. Plus, the US stopped peace negotiations between Zelensky and Putin through their proxy Boris Johnson.
(there are 8 more lessons)
https://mises.org/mises-wire/ten-lessons-us-foreign-policy-enough-already
The US needs to turn over a new leaf and go back to being the voice of reason in the world…..we started losing our way in 1992 and the decline has never slowed down.
I Read, I Write, You Know
“lego ergo scribo”
I concur with your observations and your conclusions about the decline of American International relations but I ascribe it to a bunch of more or less inexperienced dreamers and schemers that have come into the government in the last decade or so…and I worry that it will only get worse once Trump and company get their hands on the wheel of state. In fact, I know it will and it will begin with the dissolution of our NATO alliance and degrade from that point on as Trump envisions international relationships to be a game of “Pay and Play” with not a hint of moral consideration attached to the game.
No matter who wins the thing nothing will change. chuq
Things will change big time if Trump wins —and 24 hours after the coronation (swearing in) even his staunchest supporters will start having severe voter remorse… but by that time they will have been caught and there will be no getting out…alive that is.
You paint a bleak existence….but well founded…..chuq
I read the linked article and completely agree about the 10 lessons. Especially the one about not defending America. As far as I can tell, no war the US has been in since 1945 served any defensive purpose whatsoever.
Best wishes, Pete.
I can understand the attacks in Afghanistan but that is about it…..and it was not worth 20 years of agony. chuq