日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

The real lesson of Benghazi

By Martin Sieff (China Daily) Updated: 2012-09-24 08:07

The real lesson of Benghazi

The tragic, horrific death of US Ambassador to Libya J. Christopher Stevens at the hands of an extremist mob is a sad case of chickens coming home to roost for US and Western policymakers.

The US government led by President Barack Obama strongly supported the toppling of longtime Libyan leader Muammar Gadhafi at the hands of a popular movement in October 2011. The revolution could not have succeeded if Britain and France, backed by Washington, had not flown months of air support missions for the rebels. These proved decisive in turning the tide.

Since then, Obama, to his credit, has resisted calls from both neo-conservative and militant liberal, often called neo-liberal, pundits in the US media to intervene on the side of the Syrian rebels currently fighting against President Bashar al-Assad.

In general, Obama has continued the policy of active ideological support for so-called democratic movements and protests across the Middle East that he inherited from his predecessor, Republican president George W. Bush, who dispatched US armed forces to Afghanistan and Iraq on modernizing, democratizing and even-nation-building (especially in the case of Afghanistan) missions. Bush in his second inaugural address in January 2005 pledged as a major US strategic priority the spreading and establishment of democratic regimes across the Middle East. Two of the leading neo-conservative pundits, Charles Krauthammer and William Kristol, were widely reported to have played major roles in drafting that speech.

This policy of spreading democracy at accelerated speed across Middle East societies has, therefore, become bipartisan policy orthodoxy in Washington. Politicians and pundits on both the conservative-Republican and liberal-Democrat sides of the ideological divide enthusiastically, repeatedly and indeed mindlessly continue to express it on every possible occasion.

Ironically, this policy puts the US on the "left" or revolutionary side of the global political spectrum, using the terms and definitions that have been universally employed for more than 220 years since the French Revolution. As the superpower promoting continued revolution in the name of democracy around the world, especially in the Middle East, the US has become the power promoting revolutionary change and destabilization of governments in the name of its own ideological values and standards around the world.

In contrast, Russia and China have become the 21st century's powers of the "historic right", that is to say, on the global scene they support stability and follow values of pragmatic realism in their foreign policy and global diplomacy. China in particular favors peace and stability across the Middle East because it imports so much of its oil from the region.

The toppling of established governments in countries such as Egypt and Libya, of course, did not lead to the magical emergence of a stable, free market, pro-American democracies, any more than it had done in Iraq and Afghanistan. Nor will that happen in Syria if Bashar al-Assad is toppled, which I think is increasingly unlikely.

Instead it led to the establishment of mob rule in Egypt and Libya with a weakened new central government and the freedom for terrorist forces to establish themselves and carry out atrocities in a way that would not have been possible under the previous, long-lasting and stable central governments.

In other words, the terror attack and mob violence that killed Christopher Stevens in Benghazi would not have been at all possible while Gadhafi, ironically a sponsor of terrorism on a global scale decades before, was still in power. Nor can we define the increasing chaos and violence in Syria simply as a struggle for freedom by long-oppressed and suffering innocents.

Instead, as the noted American military analyst William S. Lind wrote in The American Conservative recently, the Syrian chaos shows the characteristics of an ultra-violent teenage, super-gang culture of the kind that has enveloped large areas of many mega-cities around the world, including even in the US. Such explosions of super-gang violence and aggression generate a disproportionately high number of gratuitous murders and rapes.

Stevens' gruesome death should therefore be a wake-up call to US policymakers to act more cautiously on the world scene and in cooperation with other major powers such as China and Russia, and not regard explosions of popular protests in countries as reasons or excuses to intervene on their behalf.

The author is chief global analyst of The Globalist, a political columnist for the Baltimore Post-Examiner, and former chief foreign correspondent for The Washington Times.

(China Daily 09/24/2012 page9)

Most Viewed Today's Top News
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: av一区二区三区 | 粉嫩在线观看 | 一区二区三区四区视频在线 | 亚州视频在线 | 欧美激情一区二区三级高清视频 | 开心激情网五月天 | 色在线播放 | 国产精品美女久久久久av爽 | 天天干天天爽天天操 | 亚洲午夜视频在线观看 | 免费一级黄色 | 精品美女久久 | 麻豆久久久 | av2014天堂网| 日韩精品在线免费观看 | 看成人片 | 亚洲性视频网站 | 午夜在线看片 | 国产激情精品 | 亚洲福利视频在线 | 日本国产在线视频 | 免费成人国产 | 麻豆传媒mv| a在线观看视频 | 精品福利在线 | 日本不卡高字幕在线2019 | 成人精品影院 | 17c国产精品一区二区 | 围产精品久久久久久久 | 国产成人精品一区二区三区网站观看 | 久久亚洲天堂 | 四虎影院入口 | 亚洲午夜在线播放 | 国内精品视频一区 | 亚洲成人精品在线观看 | 国产高清免费视频 | 国产精品区一 | 亚洲视频免费看 | 久久av一区二区 | 成人手机在线视频 | 久久国产露脸精品国产 |