World Police, part duex.
David Colborne wrote a response to my last post regarding Hilary’s statements on Iran. While I don’t totally disagree with his take on the subject, I still stick by my opinion that the U.S. has no right to take the action of obliterating anyone.
Just for clarity’s sake, Dictionary.com defines obliterate as “to remove or destroy all traces of; do away with; destroy completely.”
I didn’t, as David says, miss the point that Hillary was referring to a nuclear attack on Israel. I still don’t think we have any right to “obliterate” a country, even if they nuke the living hell out of their neighbor. If Iran chooses to attack Israel with a nuclear weapon, they have proven that they are hostile and have nuclear power to back it up. At that point, it would be prudent for several countries to take an interest in disarming Iran. Because as David says, we don’t want to live in a world with nuclear war. I’m with him on that.
Here’s where I disagree:
1. Any disarming action against Iran or anyone else should not be obliteration, unless every other option has failed, and should not be taken solely by the United States. Other countries have an interest in preventing nuclear war too; we are not the world police.
2. Telling a country that we have the capacity to obliterate them if they use nuclear force is horrible foreign policy. Making it known that we’ll wipe someone off the face of the earth if they use a nuke may very well discourage them from using it. However, we can’t really assume North Korea or Iran or whoever would do what we think is logical; it may just as well encourage them to wipe us of the face of the earth first. Did we learn nothing from the cold war? Mutually Assured Destruction doesn’t do anyone good.




