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Technology has always found its greatest consumer in a
nation's war and defense efforts. Since the last attempts at a
"Star Wars" defense system, has technology changed
considerably enough to make the latest Missile Defense
initiatives more successful? Can such an application of
science be successful? Is a militarized space inevitable,
necessary or impossible?
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(4277 previous messages)
rshow55
- 03:03pm Sep 12, 2002 EST (#
4278 of 4279)
Can we do a better job of finding truth? YES. Click
"rshow55" for some things Lchic and I have done and worked for
on this thread.
President Bush gave a fine speech to the United Nations. http://www.nytimes.com/2002/09/12/politics/12AP-PTEX.html
If all the points and implications of this speech were clearly
discussed - so that all the nation states in the UN were
clear about what intended meanings were - now and in
ways that would be clear in the future - that would be great
progress.
Not only points and standards with respect to Iraq, but
with respect to the United States and other nations as well.
Not only promises made by Iraq, but promises and statements
made over the years by the United States, as well. (For
instance, statements made, and agreements signed, about
nuclear weapons reductions.)
If these questions were asked and answered, very many of
the concerns almarst and lchic have raised on
this thread would become much clearer.
The power of the United States (not only Iraq) would be
clear - but also clearly limited. And we'd live in a safer
world.
We're a long way from that clarity, but the president's
speech took steps toward it, if the United States is willing
to stand up to questions about American national
behavior. Perfection isn't possible and wouldn't be necessary.
Adults need secrets, lies and fictions
To live within their contradictions
Chidren and nations need to tolerate some logical tensions,
too. But when consequences matter enough - clarity is
important enough to insist on. Not just from Iraq. From
ourselves, as well.
If we lied less -- if truth broke out -- peace might
break out, too.
At the level of technique - - the sorts of
procedures discussed in MD1076-77 rshow55
4/4/02 1:20pm with respect to missile defense might be
useful. It describes a pattern of fighting to a finish - a
pattern for settling things. Nobody has to be killed or, with
honorable conduct, even much embarrassed.
- - - - - - -
If some key things were taken to clarity, there would have
to be some changes in policy.
One thing that would clarify is that there are times
when interdiction has to be an option. Under clear, carefully
justified, limited and stable circumstances.
There are no circumstances where weapons of mass
destruction can reasonably be used. We should get rid of them.
Not only in the hands of the Iraqis - but in our own hands, as
well.
rshow55
- 03:36pm Sep 12, 2002 EST (#
4279 of 4279)
Can we do a better job of finding truth? YES. Click
"rshow55" for some things Lchic and I have done and worked for
on this thread.
Posted September 5 - http://talk.guardian.co.uk/WebX?14@@.ee7a163/332
The Bush administration is right that
interdiction has to be an option - and it is a major point.
It is a point that I've been arguing, in detail (but also in
context) since September 25, 2000 rshow55
4/21/02 3:14pm - . But interdiction has to be a last
resort -- and it has to be justified (preferably before the
fact, at least after the fact) in credible ways - lest the
world get far worse than it is. For stability, interdictions
that can be justified , and that make sense in terms of
balance, may have to be an option for many or all nation
states. The United States can't ask for a right to interdict
for itself and long deny this.
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