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You claim that it's hypocritical for the US to let India in on Nuclear info, when the actual information we're giving them doesn't aid them in the proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. "Under the accord, India gets access to US civil nuclear technology and opens its nuclear facilities to inspection." Unless all potential nuclear facilities in Iran would be open for inspection, the Iranians would never receive the tech or the information on how to increase their nuclear energy program. Then again, the Israelis are already experts on hiding reactors from Atomic Energy investigators. So either it is hypocritical that the US refuses to share energy secrets with an uncooperative power, or it isn't. You are right, though, in that Minion's analogy was terrible. How ya doing, buddy? |
Brady I understand why and even support the steps the US has taken on this one particular issue. India needs nuclear energy to prevent it from doubling the worlds fossil fuel emissions and the world's leader in nuclear technology should do all it can to help them develop. I can see why you guys might not want to help out Iran in the same way.
I'm just arguing that US foreign policy as a whole is riddled with double standards. See; my examples about democracy earlier in the thread. It suffers from this hypocracy because the US claims to base it's decisions around a set of values it holds dear when it clearly doesn't.
This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it. |
oh boy you got me there
I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
It's not hypocritical to support your friends and not your enemies. I don't see how I failed to convey that, but that's basically what I'm trying to say. It's the most obvious bit of common sense I can think of when dealing with foreign policy.
The imaginations of people who want to criticize the US never cease to amaze me. I was speaking idiomatically. |
So if the policy is fixed around matters of security/survival then it isn't really a double standard since our ideals have nothing to do with it. What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
Allright... sorry for the slow reply. Not that I'm running away coz I began such provocative, yet interesting topic to be debated of.
Anyway, I researched this topic for awhile and found some interesting, well-hidden fact: the real reason of US aggresive pressure toward Iran apparantly not because of WMD. It could be explained by one word: Petroeuro. Yup, Iran build a bourse that denominated Euro as the main currency, just like what Saddam did in 2000. What's the meaning of this? simply because it could shake the monopoly of US toward standard international currency. Oil-consuming countries will surely pick 37 euro of oil barrel instead the $57 one. Such condition will depress american economic. In this situation, US actually has very few options, the first is of course to openly press Iran's nuclear program for it's actually a good investment in context of long-term. Dont forget, the oil reserve in middle east is predicted will run out about 50 years from now on. A technology replacement toward oil-consuming technology is what needed most by Iran. Second, using invasion like what it did to Iraq. But this one has risky implication toward the oil price in the world. Iran has anti-ship missiles based in "Abu Mousa" island that controls the strait of Hermuz at the entrance of the Persian Gulf. Iran could easily close the strait thus blocking all naval traffic carrying gulf oil to the rest of the world causing a global oil crisis. Such condition will make a bad implications toward Iran as well, because Iran actually importing oil to fulfill the need of its national demand. Well, this is getting interesting. Time will be the answer whether Iran will become the next iraq or not. FELIPE NO |
We're not going "hey, you build a nuke like so," we're going "hey, you make sure that you don't blow yourselves to kingdom come like so." What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
It's ironic that Jimmy Carter, the president who wanted the most to lower our reliance on petrofuels ended up with the 3 Mile Island incident on his lap. Jam it back in, in the dark. |
Jimmy Carter was the worst thing to ever happen to the United States. Worse than Pearl Harbor. Worse than Three Mile Island. Worse than Abba.
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"You can't win, Pilate. If you strike me down, I shall become more powerful than you could possibly imagine."-Jesus
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These threads make you realise how PP is a basically a microcosm of US foreign policy. There's no sovereignty of argument but American Argument. /b/town This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it.
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Last edited by Cal; Mar 6, 2006 at 08:10 PM.
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The Europeans realize that any "petroeuro" benefits would be temporary at best, and don't appreciate having their new currency jerked around. What's good for the world at large, probably isn't good for the European Union.
Iran has probably already been decided though. So the real question is, are we gonna bomb Norway as well? Since the director of their bourse wants oil priced in Euros.
On a more positive note, it just became a lot easier for Americans to support Bush. After all, he's just continuing his predecessor(s) foreign policy.
I am a dolphin, do you want me on your body? |
I was speaking idiomatically. |
Because anything less then that is just being naive.
What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now? |
The debate herre should probably be over wethor or not the American people know the definition of a double standard.
<World in this thread> This is a double standard and heres why <US> Iran are bad guys <World> Yeah I know that doesn- <US> THEY'RE GOING TO BLOW UP ISRAEL! FELIPE NO |
This story just got a little more interesting.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4782930.stm
Either way, it just reinforces my point that all nations act in their own self interest. And/or that you don't understand the words; strategic competitors. What, you don't want my bikini-clad body? |
I for one actually believe Iran just wants nuclear energy powering her population. Does that make me a bad westerner? A man who can't see the readily apparent truth? Ahmadinejad's claiming he wants Israel off the map is likely mere talk--tantamount to election promises our politicians seldom honour. Probably, the US foreign ministry and the international community know this full well, but that won't stop America from engineering it into something useful, going in there and installing a democracy trust. This is a reactionary hunch, but I think it's sound. We should at the least all be thankful this dilemma hasn't arisen after China's full industrialisation. Jam it back in, in the dark.
LlooooydGEEEOOORGE
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How's that old saying go; the optimists are usually happier, but the pessimists may be right?
There's nowhere I can't reach. |