By Patrick J. Buchanan 0720/07 "WorldNetDaily" -- -- -Responding to the call of Pope Urban II at Claremont in 1095, the Christian knights of the First Crusade set out for the Holy Land. In 1099, Jerusalem was captured. As their port in Palestine, the Crusaders settled on Acre on the Mediterranean. There they built the great castle that was overrun by Saladin in 1187, but retaken by Richard the Lion-Hearted in 1191. Acre became the capital of the Kingdom of Jerusalem and the stronghold of the Crusader state, which fell to the Mameluks in a bloody siege in 1291. The Christians left behind were massacred. The ruins of Acre are now a tourist attraction. Any who have visited this last outpost of Christendom in the Holy Land before Gen. Allenby marched into Jerusalem in 1917 cannot – on reading of the massive U.S. embassy rising in Baghdad – but think of Acre. At a cost of $600 million, with walls able to withstand mortar and rocket fire and space to accommodate 1,000 Americans, this mammoth embassy, largest on earth, will squat on the banks of the Tigris inside the Green Zone. But, a decade hence, will the U.S. ambassador be occupying this imperial compound? Or will it be like the ruins of Acre? What raises the question is a sense the United States, this time, is truly about to write off Iraq as a lost cause. The Republican lines on Capitol Hill are crumbling. Starting with Richard Lugar, one GOP senator after another has risen to urge a drawdown of U.S. forces and a diplomatic solution to the war. But this is non-credible. How can U.S. diplomats win at a conference table what 150,000 U.S. troops cannot secure on a battlefield? Though Henry Kissinger was an advocate of this unnecessary war, he is not necessarily wrong when he warns of "geopolitical calamity." Nor is Ryan Crocker, U.S. envoy in Iraq, necessarily wrong when he says a U.S. withdrawal may be the end of the America war, but it will be the start of bloodier wars in Iraq and across the region. Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari also warns of the perils of a rapid withdrawal: "The dangers vary from civil war to dividing the country to regional wars ... the danger is huge. Until the Iraqi forces and institutions complete their readiness, there is a responsibility on the U.S. and other countries to stand by the Iraqi government and the Iraqi people to help build up their capabilities." In urging a redeployment of U.S. forces out of Iraq and a new focus on diplomacy, Lugar listed four strategic goals. Prevent creation of a safe haven for terrorists. Prevent sectarian war from spilling out into the broader Middle East. Prevent Iran's domination of the region. Limit the loss of U.S. credibility through the region and world as a result of a failed mission in Iraq. But how does shrinking the U.S. military power and presence in Iraq advance any of these goals? Longtime critics of the war like Gen. William Odom say it is already lost, and fighting on will only further bleed the country and make the ultimate price even higher. The general may be right in saying it is time to cut our losses. But we should take a hard look at what those losses may be. It is a near certainty the U.S.-backed government will fall and those we leave behind will suffer the fate of our Vietnamese and Cambodian friends in 1975. As U.S. combat brigades move out, contractors, aid workers and diplomats left behind will be more vulnerable to assassination and kidnapping. There could be a stampede for the exit and a Saigon ending in the Green Zone. The civil and sectarian war will surely escalate when we go, with Iran aiding its Shia allies and Sunni nations aiding the Sunnis. A breakup of the country seems certain. Al-Qaida will claim it has run the U.S. superpower out of Iraq and take the lessons it has learned to Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states. The Turks, with an army already on the border, will go in to secure their interests in not having the Kurdish PKK operating from Iraq and in guaranteeing there is no independent Kurdistan. What will America do then? As for this country, the argument over who is responsible for the worst strategic debacle in American history will be poisonous. With a U.S. defeat in Iraq, U.S. prestige would plummet across the region. Who will rely on a U.S. commitment for its security? Like the British and French before us, we will be heading home from the Middle East. What we are about to witness is how empires end. Copyright 1997-2007 - All Rights Reserved. WorldNetDaily.com Inc. |
Friday, July 20, 2007
What Comes After The U.S. Empire?
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2 comments:
Empires end in an INFINITE amount of ways. What WE are about the witness is how THIS PARTICULAR EMPIRE ends!!!
And Patrick, please do NOT forgot that this EMPIRE is unique amongst any other empire which has gone before it. And this uniqueness is probably NOT what an American can think of...you wanna know what it is?
It's the STARK NAKED FACT, that THIS PARTICULAR empire, is the first ever to have NUCLEAR WEAPONS, the ultimate WMD!!!
No other empire in history has had that before.
So, the question really should be: will this AMERICAN EMPIRE be so stupid, arrogant, and selfish, as to DESTROY the entire planet to sustain it's current unsustainable position on every major issue facing the planet?
The Iraq chapter of the GWOT script, like Afghanistan before it, is one of hundreds or even thousands of covert & overt actions the US has done over the past 150 years. Do YOU not think that globally, people are NOT aware of this? And what do you think the consequences for everyone on the planet will be, for all those actions?
This is what we are about to witness!!!
kojacq | 07.20.07 - 6:29 pm | #
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I just commented over at Stephen Lendman's article "The Militarization and Annexation of North America". But all prior comments are from past dates and are pertaining to another article. Very strange.
Cat | 07.20.07 - 7:13 pm | #
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As long as they have contractors like Blackwater to do the work you can be sure it is not safe for them to be there after the army moves out. Righ now any one haveing any thing to do with the USA over there better move out. I think it is up to the comander in chief to go over there and lead the soldiers out but knowing his record in the time of Vietnam I do not think you could drag him over there.
Wilf | 07.20.07 - 7:24 pm | #
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Everyone should read Spengler's "Decline of The West, written nearly 100 years ago which spells out in detail (too much) what has happened,what is happening and what will happen regarding the Western Culture. An abridged edition is more favorable for most persons. See Amazon.com.
dave the rave1 | 07.20.07 - 7:30 pm | #
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Why does everone assume that there will be a bloodbath after the US leaves? Is there not a bloodbath occurring now, despite (some will say, because of) the US presence? The notion that Al Quaeda (if it exists) will remain as a problem is guilty of the usual developed word contempt for those who live in the so-called 3rd world. It is much more likely that the Iraqis will eject anyone foreign who threatens their safety. It is a convenient cover to argue that the opposition is made up of foreign jihadists rather than awning up to the fact that they are local forces who oppose an occupier. I suspect that the tiny number foreign jihadists will be either killed or forced to flee days after a US departure.
george archer | 07.20.07 - 7:39 pm | #
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i think the remaining neocons will still get their wish of bombing iran before the cheney/bush administration leaves office.
so the disaster will be bigger than buchanan talks about
nina sakun | 07.20.07 - 7:55 pm | #
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LIL Bush Boy has already ended the
US empire the day he unjustly attacked Iraq. Over 1 million Iraqies murdered since POP Bush started the genocide for israel and OIL.
LIL boy Bush will probably murder many more arab's before he is finished. BUT he will drown for all eternity in the blood he caused to be spilled.
The Idiot was never sucessful in anything he did in his warpd life.
He will go down in world history as the worst "pResident in US history.
No matter what neocons will keep saying that he did that was "good"
The truth will out shine the lies.
Never trust a coward that loves war no matter how many die unjustly for the cowards ego.
Dan Ciaramella | 07.20.07 - 8:08 pm | #
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All that Iraq is today, is our own doing. Somehow Buchanan has failed to mention this.
Our real enemies are those who are working to enrich themselves, degrading the most of US in the process.
I do not mean to slight the fact that our enemies also destroy other nations.
I put a few bucks in Ron Paul's campaign today. Others may wish to join in.
Indiana John | 07.20.07 - 8:08 pm | #
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Cat 07.20.07 - 7:13 pm
ICH suffers from comment cross-treading from other articles at times Cat, nothing to worry about really.
°
T.P.Seale | 07.20.07 - 8:17 pm | #
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kojacq:
USSR had WMD and nukes but they lost at the hands of the Afghanis and other circumstances. Iraq will bleed the US bit by bit. Actually the dead Iraqis are sacrificing their lives for all humanity. The sooner the US go back to their borders the sooner every EMPIRE wanna be will think twice about invading and subjugating people against their will.
Adel | 07.20.07 - 8:26 pm | #
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Indeed the American Empire has been the only one to use nuclear weapons on Nagasaki and Hiroshima.
It is simply incredible that Cheney would like to go to war with Iran.
It is foolhardy and idiotic.
What ought to happen?
There are two options:
1. a financial meltdown
2. a nuclear option
It would be better to go with the first option as the second one would be the end of world history as we know it.
Peace.
Derek | 07.20.07 - 8:30 pm | #
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kojacq
Having nukes does not make an empire last forever. Everything is possible in life. Even if you think you are the most powerful ever, it does not mean you never fall one day. As long as you are still human you can never guaranty anything. Things can change in seconds.
AK | 07.20.07 - 8:30 pm | #
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A scenario: Zionist-Anglo-American empire is courting al-Qaeda in Iraq and the Sunni countries of the region to mount an alliance with them (Bush & company) against Iran and the whole Shiah-kingdom. Another proxy war in the making (remember Afghanistan of the 80's).
abu zaid | 07.20.07 - 8:37 pm | #
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@ Kojacq;you wrote
"It's the STARK NAKED FACT that THIS PARTICULAR empire,is the first ever to have NUCLEAR WEAPONS,the ultimate WMD !!!"
Maybe not. see http://s8int.com/atomic1.html
I gotta warn those with quasi-religious hang-ups with short-circuit problems,not to upset yourselves.
Malachi4 | 07.20.07 - 8:37 pm | #
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The moment the US leaves, two new caliphates will be born. They will be busying themselves with attacking each other and spreading the (s)word elsewhere.
I should know: I am a muslim as a result of precisely this situation.
The only good thing coming out of it is that finally the enemy will be in uniform.
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