Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:That's a nice sentiment, but that's just not reality in any meaningful sense when it come to human nature. No matter how many norms one creates they begin to collapse once a standard is created. The strong and/or clever will always find a workaround to ensure they get theirs. Utopia and, really, fairness just isn't going to happen.
Bingo.
honorentheos wrote:Dog, you know that the treaties with Ukraine aren't an equivalent to the NATO charter. I know you know that. So you also know this is just attempting to muddy water that doesn't need muddying....So long as the counter to Russian aggression is full scale war with the west, he lacks that escalation advantage.
Nope, just the opposite, and the Ukraine is a perfect comparison. For the simple reason that we weren't and aren't actually willing to go to full scale war. We aren't willing, and for damn certain the rest of the west isn't willing. Then, now, or in the foreseeable future. This is what I'm getting at.
The basic tension in foreign policy is between moralism and realism. You all, just like the establishments on both the left and right, are preaching moralism without any regard to reality. You view things through an almost purely moral lens, as if it's dirty and grubby to even consider pesky little questions like, "what realistically can be done to vindicate this moral right?" And I would argue that this devotion to a risibly moralistic concept of foreign policy results in immoral and perverse outcomes. It's immoral and dishonest to enter into a treaty, or contract, pretending that we're willing to abide by the terms when in truth we aren't at all.
Just like the Ukraine. Or Vietnam. Or Iraq. Or Afghanistan. Etc. It's a rather long list. We have a habit of over-promising in the moment, while on a kind of spiritual, moralistic high, but then after reality sets in and we're looking down the barrel of choosing between our children and Montenegro, well, that choice was made a long time ago but we weren't honest enough to admit it.
NATO article 5 is like a provision in a contract that's against the interest of the party signing. In this case that party being the American people. We then cajole them into signing the contract by telling them that the provision will never be enforced, and merely exists to satisfy shareholders and make them feel comfortable. The clause thereby becomes unenforceable, because those who refuse to abide are wholly and morally justified in doing so.