Holler at me Paging our favorite grumpie
4/2/2023 11:35:48 PM
Charlies Wilsons War +1 credibility
4/3/2023 12:05:59 AM
Proxy wars? I don't have an exact record, but a quick recollection shows a pretty high success rate for defending proxies and the country supporting them. U.S. proxies defeat Russia in Afghanistan, Russian proxies defeat U.S. in Vietnam, those are big ones that fit the classic understanding of a proxy war with the proxy as defender. Hezbollah served as proxies for Iran and Syria, and effectively held off Israel during the 2006 Lebanon war."Offensive" proxy wars are, I suspect, less reliably successful. The example that leaps to mind is the Iran-Iraq War, which saw Iraq as the proxy for the U.S., UK, and others, and which ended in a stalemate.Then you get civil wars where both sides are a proxy, like Angola, where obviously the successes and failures balance out.If the question is what is the U.S. W/L record, I'm not sure off the top of my head. It's been a mixed bag for sure, though our biggest victory - Afghanistan - was so shattering in its effect on our number one adversary that it carries quite a bit of weight. Of course, our follow-up to that victory was inexcusably shoddy and led to massive problems down the road, but I don't think those can really be pinned on the proxy war itself.Ukraine will almost certainly be viewed as a strategic victory for the proxy-backing side, even if Kiev ultimately has to make concessions.
4/3/2023 1:09:41 PM
how many wars are not proxy wars?[Edited on April 4, 2023 at 1:42 AM. Reason : ]
4/4/2023 1:41:52 AM
I'm gonna file that under "technically valid but totally unhelpful."Like, yeah, all wars are "proxy wars," if only in the sense that soldiers are being proxies for politicians. And very few wars happen totally in a vacuum, involving just the belligerents. But those aren't what anybody means by "proxy wars."
4/4/2023 8:20:42 AM
I meant the latter. My point is, where do you draw the line?Just about every war has proxies involved besides the belligerents. Some more than others, but how much proxy makes it a proxy war?Like...Ukraine? Of course, that's as proxy war as it gets. Afghanistan? Proxy war of USSR and US. Would our recent go in Afghanistan count as a proxy war between US and Pakistan? Does it change anything that we weren't even fighting Afghanistan, but a non-state actor? Or that Pakistan played both sides of it? What about Iraq? I'd argue that it was a proxy war against Iran in some ways...but is that really a proxy war? Vietnam and Korea, I suppose would both count.Both WWII and WWI were proxy wars (from our perspective) right up until we got directly involved.Hell, is the American Revolution a proxy war between the Brits and French? We never think of it that way, but then again, I suppose people getting their asses bombed off in Ukraine right now don't primarily think of that conflict as a proxy war between the Russians and the US/West in general.There are a few that, to my knowledge, had little outside involvement--Falklands, for example.[Edited on April 5, 2023 at 1:52 AM. Reason : ]
4/4/2023 8:23:33 PM
When you say Ukraine is a proxy war, do you mean through the West's perspective?Cause I don't see how it is on the other side since Russia is directly invading themselves. Sure, you can have 'proxy elements', but that isn't the main thing here.And even from the West's perspective-- while of course everyone has underlying motives, the primary objective in arming Ukraine is to help it defend itself. If it were a proxy, they would've been arming little militias in Ukraine to antagonize Russia long ago. We can get into how some people talk about how NATO expansion and whatever pushed Putin into this, but I think that is too much of a stretch to be called proxy warfare, even if true.
4/4/2023 11:41:52 PM
I think it(Ukraine) is a proxy war fwiw
4/5/2023 12:26:06 AM
4/5/2023 10:00:55 AM
4/5/2023 10:13:25 AM
4/6/2023 2:20:16 AM
4/6/2023 2:21:49 AM
I think the state distinction is important because anything less opens you to some weird stuff, and to a view so expansive as to make the term "proxy war" meaningless.I, as a private citizen, pay taxes. I am "providing material support" to the U.S. military. If Canada goes nuts and sends armored mounties across the border to seize Buffalo, the U.S. military becomes a belligerent. I'm not a belligerent. I'm 38 years old, the military doesn't want me and I'd be bad at it anyway. But I am pissed off that the Beaver Brigade is stationed on the U.S. side of Niagara Falls, so I very much want to weaken Canada.Taking all that into account, the U.S.-Canada War is a "proxy war" in which I am supporting my proxies, the U.S. Armed Forces. Technically that's true, they are fighting on my behalf. But clearly that's not what anybody means when they say "proxy war."If that's too far out, then we can look at the real-world example of Irish-American organizations sending money to the IRA, or individuals in Gulf States funding Al-Qaeda. Neither, to me, passes the sniff test for "proxy war." Just to keep hammering the point home, all wars are technically fought by proxies for people with money. If that's sufficient, then the term is meaningless.Now having said all that, I could possibly grant you this...
4/6/2023 9:26:47 AM
4/6/2023 3:52:59 PM