5/2/2007 2:32:10 PM
Then don't hehehe.I'm sorry I didn't make a more generic title for the thread...
5/2/2007 2:34:27 PM
5/2/2007 2:55:09 PM
japan did not attack us because we were aiding allied forces in europe. they attacked us because we stopped exporting scrap metal and other resources to them.
5/2/2007 4:33:07 PM
Agreed. The Japanese probably didn't give a real flip about the greater European conflict. They were pissed because we started implimenting economic sanctions because of their invasion of China and supplying the Chinese with weapons. I suppose they assumed that the European nations would be distracted by Germany so they could make a quick grab for those colonies. As for the Americans, they probably figured that the United States would interfere with those efforts and thought it would be more efficient to simply hit them quick and hard.The Japanese brought us into it. We may have joined the war later anyways, but as the events had played out, we were clearly hit first.As for overseas entanglements, I think we can certainly scale back our involvements. I would favor less American riflemen overseas but increased training and logistics support for other nations that are participating in peacekeeping efforts. Arming and providing logistics support for African Union and perhaps in the future, United Nations troops in Darfur for example.Unless the UN grants us a mandate first (next to impossible with Russia and China). Then we should go all out.
5/2/2007 5:53:10 PM
Of course it wasn't necessary.It's all a question of what language you'd prefer to speak.
5/2/2007 6:55:46 PM
All that needs be said about this issue is that if we hadn't taken out the goddamn fascists, the Communists would have, and they would have been even less pleasant to do war with later on. To my mind, a fair portion of the benefit from fighting the war as we did was that it prevented us from having to fight a much bigger one later.
5/2/2007 11:21:06 PM
I think TulipLovr is saying that if our actions had been more noble from since pre-WWI, then the conditions might not have been ripe enough to cause WWII. It's kind of like chaos theory. There's probably something that could have been done to stop it from the beginning at some point (like maybe if Hitler was hit by a car as a kid or something), it's self-evident. But, it would probably be difficult to pin down a precise American political ideology of the time that caused the whole thing to start.We did have our fingers in trading and such, which determined our alliances, but it seems the brunt of the conflict were internal European stuff that we didn't have direct control over.
5/2/2007 11:32:17 PM
5/3/2007 1:00:36 AM