nige1, on 2017-September-21, 14:49, said:
This is what ticks me off. I wish our federal government would take a more proactive stance on explaining the context of our foreign policy toward Iraq, Iran, and North Korea. I almost get the feeling that our foreign policy gets lost in the news shuffle by more salacious news topics like a teenager found dead in a freezer.
Bush labeled Iraq an axis of evil and decimated Iraq for not surrendering weapons of mass destruction it no longer had. That was our pretext. We also eliminated Saddam Hussein under this threat and the world watched one of our biggest and costliest military intelligence failures.
Now we have another member of the axis of evil going rogue. After watching what happened to Iraq, we are asking North Korea to stop their nuclear program and be a good neighbor and feel safe while being labeled an axis of evil by the world's largest military?
Is that realistic?
Russia has basically said, "We condemn North Korea's provocative actions but given the United States' aggressive cowboy diplomacy in the Middle East, we UNDERSTAND why they won't give up their nuclear program".
Our cowboy diplomacy doesn't come for free. We have a federal government that spends trillions of dollars annually but refuses to put its foreign policy in a nice concise, transparent, historical context for public consumption. Where are the government officials "breaking down" our position and involvement on this matter to the masses?
You won't find them as they believe our foreign policy is too "complicated" for the average American to digest so we don't receive a full and fair "Reader's Digest" version of our approach. Instead, we hear a cacophony of war drums.