In both cases we fought those wars because we believed that fighting them was in our own best interests. We weren't "dragged into" Vietnam or Korea, we entered both of our own accord. Neither were "someone else's war." They were fully ours.
Sure, you could argue we should have left Vietnam alone and let the insurgents take over South Vietnam. But having the option to intervene is strictly better strategically than not having that option. Korea was a UN engagement, but we got them to go along because we had the bulk of the fighting force and equipment ready to go. Again - we got to dictate the terms of engagement because we supplied the military might.
There is no connection whatsoever between military spending and health care and infrastructure spending. None. It's a false choice you're offering.
Yes I did. I think that making US allies spend more on their armed forces is likely to weaken the US by giving us less leverage over allies and making countries less likely to want to be allies in the first place.
I think that US allies are US allies in large part because being a US ally means not having to spend so much on your military.
None of those allies uses its military might to maintain an empire which allows its citizens consume five times their fair share of global production.
I would spend more on military, more on infrastructure, lower, raise, and shift taxes, encourage Germany to modernize and repair but keep small its military, invite France to keep its large military and Britain to maintain its as well.
By and large it’s better if we’re the ones with the guns and the ones deciding the wars even if our track record was pretty poor in recent years.
American hegemony has coincided with a peaceful age.
(And an age so prosperous we give the whitehouse to the kleptocrat party every second go around and still do ok).
Peaceful age? Well no wars in western Europe is unusual but elsewhere its been conflict as usual.
American hegemony has coincided with a peaceful age.
A few civil wars in a few places and every major power is desperate for admission.
So what has been different for about the span of a human life?
The internet?
Cheap calories?
An alliance of nations?
If it is an alliance, in whole or in part, how would we propose to extend the peace if conflict as usual is undesirable? How would we enforce it?
Also American economic/military might will eventually wain. It would be a good thing if we didn't desperately grasp in vain at the last vestiges of power in a futile attempt to keep the status quo.
Trump's single biggest trick is refusing to be bound by the principle of non-contradiction.He's taking credit as being tough on Russia citing sanctions while claiming he gets along better with Russia than other US presidents.
France was losing and asked for our help so we got stuck while they ran away from the mess they helped create. Oh but we had leverage over France, thank God for that. Read the link, what happened in Vietnam was disgusting. We were allied with those insurgents and then we threw them under the bus because of the French. Hell, the French even installed the same puppet dictator the Japanese used to terrorize the country.
So if we spent $100 bn less a year on the military that would have no effect at all on how much we can spend on health care? I thought many people were in favor of reducing the Pentagon's budget to support domestic programs.
The status quo for the West has been a lack of large scale conflict within the West's sphere of influence. There have been some violent eff ups, and violently stupid efforts to broaden that sphere. But I wouldn't anticipate violence to fall as that sphere erodes.
"A few Civil Wars in a few places...?"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Congo_War
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Congo_War
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran–Iraq_War
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet–Afghan_War
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algerian_War
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eritrean–Ethiopian_War
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambodian–Vietnamese_War
France was losing and asked for our help so we got stuck while they ran away from the mess they helped create. .
We didn't help the French.
July 1945 - Following the defeat of Nazi Germany, World War II Allies including the U.S., Britain, and Soviet Union, hold the Potsdam Conference in Germany to plan the post-war world. Vietnam is considered a minor item on the agenda.
In order to disarm the Japanese in Vietnam, the Allies divide the country in half at the 16th parallel. Chinese Nationalists will move in and disarm the Japanese north of the parallel while the British will move in and do the same in the south.
During the conference, representatives from France request the return of all French pre-war colonies in Southeast Asia (Indochina). Their request is granted. Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia will once again become French colonies following the removal of the Japanese.
Ho declares himself president of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam and pursues American recognition but is repeatedly ignored by President Harry Truman.
February 1950 - The United States and Britain recognize Bao Dai's French-controlled South Vietnam government.
July 26, 1950 - United States military involvement in Vietnam begins as President Harry Truman authorizes $15 million in military aid to the French.
American military advisors will accompany the flow of U.S. tanks, planes, artillery and other supplies to Vietnam. Over the next four years, the U.S. will spend $3 Billion on the French war and by 1954 will provide 80 percent of all war supplies used by the French.
September 27, 1950 - The U.S. establishes a Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) in Saigon to aid the French Army.
September 1951 - Gen. De Lattre travels to Washington seeking more aid from the Pentagon.
January 20, 1953 - Dwight D. Eisenhower, former five-star Army general and Allied commander in Europe during World War II, is inaugurated as the 34th U.S. President.
During his term, Eisenhower will greatly increase U.S. military aid to the French in Vietnam to prevent a Communist victory. U.S. military advisors will continue to accompany American supplies sent to Vietnam. To justify America's financial commitment, Eisenhower will cite a 'Domino Theory' in which a Communist victory in Vietnam would result in surrounding countries falling one after another like a "falling row of dominoes." The Domino Theory will be used by a succession of Presidents and their advisors to justify ever-deepening U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
So if we spent $100 bn less a year on the military that would have no effect at all on how much we can spend on health care?
France was losing and asked for our help so we got stuck while they ran away from the mess they helped create.
The (one) problem with American healthcare is that is a for profit industry. Hundreds of millions of dollars are spent every year on excessive executive salaries and shareholders that could go to reducing costs.The problem with American healthcare isn't that there isn't enough spending, it's that there are several million jobs that shouldn't exist.
They'd do better by cutting spending and moving all those administrative jobs over to the military.
A few civil wars in a few places and every major power is desperate for admission.