BearGoggles said:When I was in poli sci classes at Cal (late 80s), there was much discussion and study of the failures/lessons of the Vietnam war.tequila4kapp said:Biden is beyond idiocy. If Mexico launched thousands of rockets across the border and US citizens had been displaced from homes for months he'd…ask for a peace deal? Actually, given his stupidity he possibly would.Peanuts said:Biden told confidants in New York this week that he was livid at Netanyahu and did not believe the Israeli leader wanted to reach peace
— Jonathan Lemire (@JonLemire) September 27, 2024
He was frustrated about how often Netanyahu had humiliated Blinken and the president himself https://t.co/XHuevBOVNXBREAKING: White House aides say Biden is "incandescent with rage" over Netanyahu's strike on Beirut, and that the president vows "ironclad support for Israel with absolutely no red lines"
— ☀️ Jon Schwarz ☀️ (@schwarz) September 27, 2024This analysis by Hassan Nasrallah is far superior to that of Western leftists who constantly tell us that Western governments are controlled by the entity https://t.co/wTGeqUQFQh
— Zaid 🇭🇹 (@Zaid_ISN) September 28, 2024
The chief takeaway was that you fight wars to win and bring overwhelming force. No political half measures. Or don't fight the wars at all. That was the doctrine that Colin Powell and his ilk brought to the wars in the 1990s which were successful (on the battlefield, if not politically). But the lesson was forgotten.
The US policy in the middle east and Ukraine is muddled and absurd. If we're going to be involved (directly or by proxy), fight to win. Don't hand cuff the Israel/Ukrainians with rules of engagement that the other side does not employ and other political concerns.
Israel is winning. It is insane that Biden (really Obama and his minions) want to save Iran and Hezbollah, primarily so the war will be resolved before the election. Fortunately, I don't think Israel will be stopped this time. They understand they need to win decisively and when they listened to the US in gaza, it completely backfired (again).
When I was in poly sci classes at Cal (late 70s, very early 80s), they talked about that (^) and also...
+ not to confuse a civil war with dominoes falling
+ risking possible nuclear war is the gravest risk of all
Not to say I disagree with you, because I don't (at least not to a great extent). Just that the lessons of history are extremely complicated and nuanced. Just as an example, you say "Israel is winning." You mean they are winning militarily, in the short-term, right? (not that this is bad, compared to the alternative)