mozzaok wrote on Apr 29
th, 2010 at 11:45am:
The Taliban are pure scum, and the world would be a vastly better place if all traces of their existence were wiped from the planet, there is not a single reason you could give that would ever make me retreat from that position.
...
So, while I agree the US has made many bad calls, when you are facing the toughest decisions on the planet, that will happen sometimes.
Mozzaok, the Taliban exist largely because of the policies of two empires: the Soviet Union and the US.
The Khmer Rouge were also evil scum (created by the US carpet-bombing of Cambodia), but the US did nothing about them. It was left up to Vietnam to rid the world of Pol Pot.
What has changed, I guess, is information technology. These local regimes are now able to recruit - and act - globally. I've got no problem with the US intervening against the Taliban.
How it does so is a different matter. Backing the Northern Alliance didn't do much good. I understand these are very tough decisions to make.
But Iran is a different story. The US have a beef with Iran because they deposed the US's puppet, the Shah, and then created the Iran hostage crisis. It's very tempting to view Iran through Western eyes. Sure, the religious police are tyrants, but no worse than many other US-backed states, such as Saudi Arabia. The US fear Iran becoming a regional power, and this is actually happening before their eyes - this, if you remember, is why they backed Saddam: to keep Iran in check.
Iran has been open to US diplomacy, but the US hasn't wanted to play. Obama signalled an end to this freeze, and it'll be interesting to see if this bears fruit. There is a big middle-class in Iran, and the oil dollars have ushered in a consumer economy. Persians in the cities are generally well-educated. It's a huge mistake to see Iran as some backward, militantly Islamic country.
What the US fears is Iran's traditional trading ties with Russia, and its new relationship with China. Iran could also capitalise on its proximity to ex-Soviet states, rich in gas and minerals, such as Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, which separate Iran from China. Look at a map: Iran sits right between the Arab peninsular and the East.
This is the concern for Iran, not it's "evilness," but the relationships it could form to cut the US out of its trade hegemony in the middle east.
The US tried the nuclear ruse with Saddam and the nuclear fuel-rod truck that could have been anything. No one knows if Iran is developing nuclear weapons, or if they would represent a credible threat.
The US has no interest in the Iranian people. They don't want democracy (even if the recent demonstrations showed that democracy is Iran is now a real issue, and even a possibility). What the US want is a quiet and compliant buffer between China and the Middle East.
Once again, it's pure geopolitics, not any attempt to create democracy or "stability".
Stability means US hegemony, and nothing else.