Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Let Syria Kill Their Own

Should America go into Syria? We already have destabilized the rest of the Middle East, save Israel with whom efforts are on-going. Why not let another domino fall?  American leadership believes that we need to be the world's  policeman. The only problem is that when we get troops into the country, we don't leave. For example we still have troops in Korea from 1953, in Kosovo from 1999, in Afghanistan since 2001 and Iraq since 2003. (Yes there still are troops there!!) Why can't we just leave when the work is done?

We seem to believe that we can do only good by being there. The problem with that philosophy is that we have spread ourselves so far.  In addition to the countries mentioned previously, we have troops in over 80 countries, Why?

Rome also spread itself so thin that when it came to defend itself, it could not. Additionally, the amount of money needed to keep troops and supplies in distant lands is expensive.  It could not be done 2000 years ago and it cannot be done today.

Also, many of the countries in which we have troops, do not have their own military as they have Americans to protect them. It is time we let them do their part in their own protection. It is time to pull back to only vital areas where the countries need our support and bring the rest of the troops home to defend the homeland. Maybe then we could patrol the southern border? Yes, we understand that is a bit drastic, however, America can no longer police the world.

So we are definitely against any military involvement in Syria, regardless of whether they use gas on their own people. It should not be our fight and we should not get involved.

That is our opinion. What is yours?

Conservative Tom




Not Worth The Effort

December 11, 2012 by  
Not Worth The Effort
PHOTOS.COM
Last week, word filtered back from the Mideast: Syria, normally a veritable Shangri-La, loaded chemical weapons into warheads for deployment against rebels in the civil war which has torn the land asunder and absorbed billions of dollars and tens of thousands of lives. While initial reactions focused on details such as the source of the weapons of mass destruction and/or how feisty Israel might respond to the news, the bigger question loomed: whither the United States?
Outgoing Secretary of State Hillary Clinton warned the regime of Bashar Assad against doing an impression of Saddam Hussein circa 1988, cautioning him against crossing what she called a “red line.” Assad should be careful. After the “red line” comes the yellow line. Beyond that lies the dreaded fuchsia line… I think. Actually, Clinton’s warning on behalf of President Barack Obama is no laughing matter. If I were Assad, I’d be quaking in my keffiyeh.
Obama’s once-lauded stance against war has, ahem, evolved. And the installation of the Islamofascist Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and absolute chaos in Libya prove that Obama’s evolutionary progression is taking him farther from the Nobel Peace Prize he didn’t earn. He seems to have developed an enjoyment of war without any sense of responsibility for the outcome. Hell, he and his cronies are behind the deaths of no fewer than five Americans, including a U.S. Ambassador. And rather than admit that he and his accomplices hit the guardrail, he led an effort to leave the scene of the accident.
Should Syria — one of the world’s top supporters of terrorism — engage in chemical weapons attacks on its own people, the eyes of the world will turn toward the United States. Like Presidents George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush before him, Obama has made it clear he won’t tolerate such tactics — hence Clinton’s “red line” remark.  But what form would the U.S. response take? As Libya taught everyone outside Obama’s coterie of cretins, aerial strikes and material support serve only to destabilize an already wobbly situation. Giving guns and ammo to the slightly less bad guys is the diplomatic version of kicking out a table leg. In a worst-case scenario (as Obama should have learned from Benghazi), covering up the murders of Americans at the hands of Islamofascists armed by America is a real hassle.
Eliminating half-assed regime change efforts — and we should — seemingly leaves only two options: do nothing or roll heavy into Damascus like we’re Notre Dame and they’re the Crimson Tide’s cheerleaders. However, dropping the proverbial house on Assad and his goons requires justification. We can’t really say it’s about human rights (ask George W. Bush how well that blarney flies). We can’t even really say it’s about securing oil; Syria is hardly a spigot — and the country’s intramural squabble has severely dented what little petroleum it does manage to squeeze from the bedrock. Heck, if we wanted oil that badly, we could invade Mexico.  Considering the success of the Democrats’ votes-for-amnesty-for-votes plan, invading our Southern neighbor would take considerably less effort; most of their population is seemingly on our side of the border already.
What about a third option? Perhaps we could give our boys and girls in uniform a break.  Instead of committing them to fighting in their third hellhole inside a decade, we could task them with securing a reasonable defensive perimeter around Syria (we could use some of those troops we’re pretending we don’t still have in Iraq). Then we can sit back and let the Islamofascists kill the other Islamofascists. That’s a win-win for the whole world.
Syria is a dump. Its leaders have wrecked their own economy, and the place is a mess. Think: Detroit with sand. Sure, there’s some cool old stuff; Jordan, Israel and Egypt have cooler old stuff. With a resurgent Russia, a still-sinister China and a host of other issues facing us here and abroad, let’s allow Syria to shake itself out… or apart.
–Ben Crysta

1 comment:

  1. I agree with you 100%.

    You are starting to sound like a non-interventionist. Yeah!

    --David

    ReplyDelete

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