Cause, on 08 April 2015 - 08:39 AM, said:
Frankly I don't know enough about the particulars of the deal to comment on it directly.
I do know that Americans foreign policy is the poster child for walking the most politically expedient path in the short term. It seems to almost always backfire on them in the long run. They never stuck it out in Iraq twice (Hello dysfunctional Iraq and ISIS), their meddling in Afghanistan haunts them. They prop up friendly dictators today only to topple unfriendly dictators tomorrow (its normally the same guy). Time will have to tell in this case I just hope this is not another case of putting in no effort now but having to put twice as much in later.
Edit- I agree that the fewer nukes in the world the better. I think that nukes have actually past their day. Mutually assured destruction these days no longer requires nukes except as a direct deterrent to other nukes. As an example, If America went to war with Russia I feel confident America could win but the cost would be astronomical. Without nukes it only takes one GPS guided missile (1 million $) which practically can't be stopped to blow up power stations, bridges, skyscrapers etc etc that will cost billions to fix. Total war even without nukes would be an absolute disaster for every side in the game this days. With rarer and rarer exceptions I would say the risk of countries changing hands or borders changing is non existent. The battle space instead seems to be changing in fact to deal with the threats not of countries but of radical groups who again thanks to modern weapons are able to pose a threat far in excess that their numbers warranted.
In the Roman empire a thousand men picking up swords and promising to overthrow the emperor would mean little. These days a thousand people armed with explosives, rpgs and machine guns are shooting down commercial airliners or massacring schools. As has been pointed out what happens when a country like Pakistan maybe loses control of the nukes?
No Nukes is a safer world, short of that and end to nuclear proliferation is something I support. Even if it means the few countries with nukes have an edge. Though for gods sake a thousand nukes? I am looking at you USA and Russia! Some countries are more stable than others as well. I don't want a theocracy to have the bomb, I don't want north Korea to have the bomb.
As much as I would love to agree with you, and with BK, and with Andorion, and with all the other "no nukes" peace-loving fellows, i'm going to side firmly with EM on this one. Because my homeland WAS one of those "few exceptions" that were mentioned. When territory is grabbed.
And it happened because we gave up our nukes. Believing the word of other nuclear powers. We gave up our deterrent.
There's a ton of things I like about the West. I'd be a hypocrite to say otherwise, as I live in the West. I believe that in many ways it is the most progressive system of social organization.
But in the ideal world you propose, where only "stable" powers and people have access to such WMDs, this would mean a complete hegemony of the West. And in many senses I instinctively rebel against that.
West is great. Consumerism is great for the people living in it. But let's face the incredibly unpleasant truth: it only works for us, because the system is set up so that the privileged parts of the world exploit the lion's share of the finite global resources while the much larger minority exists in relative poverty. If evryone in China was to enjoy the North American standard of living, we'd strip the Earth bare.
As such, I can't in good conscience, begrudge other parts of the world an attempt to better their lot. Inevitably, this will lead to conflict. Inevitably, this means opposition, arms race, etc. If I was to subscribe to the "no nukes for anyone we don't like", we'd be instituting a global inequality of have and have nots. This way, though fraught with risks and a myriad of issues, is still the more "fair" way, as far as I'm concerned.