Who will the USA invade/liberate next?

Which country next for US might?

  • Algeria

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Antarctica (free those penguins!)

    Votes: 6 5.8%
  • Brazil (crack those nuts!)

    Votes: 1 1.0%
  • Canada

    Votes: 9 8.7%
  • England

    Votes: 4 3.9%
  • Home for a beer

    Votes: 13 12.6%
  • Indonesia

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Iran

    Votes: 6 5.8%
  • Libya

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Mars

    Votes: 5 4.9%
  • Mexico

    Votes: 1 1.0%
  • North Korea

    Votes: 17 16.5%
  • Poland

    Votes: 1 1.0%
  • Russia

    Votes: 3 2.9%
  • Saudi Arabia

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Syria

    Votes: 33 32.0%
  • Viet Nam

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Yemen

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Somewhere else?

    Votes: 4 3.9%

  • Total voters
    103
I voted Syria because it would look* great to for us, erm I mean the arabs, to own from the mediterrainian to the persian gulf.

North Korea may actually be threatening and dangerous, however they are not going to be invaded by this administration. Bush couldn't care less about North Korea. If he was serious about his reasons for invading Iraq N. Korea would have been first anyway.

*On the map of course
 
Canada's looking like a good target to me:
- Most Canadians speak almost the same language so the army wouldn't need as many translators as they would in say, North Korea.
- The food's similar.
- Canada already has teams in the NBA, MLB, sorta football, and nearly own the NHL. Travel to road games much easier than Damascus or Pyongyang.
- Canadians have many high taxes for our Republican congress to cut. Think of it as liberation of the pocketbook.
- No more law saying Canadian radio stations have to play Anne Murray and Bachman-Turner Overdrive every other song.
- Canada has a national anthem that people can actually sing. We could adopt it.
- We already tried in 1778 and 1812. Third time's charm.
 
Plus Canada has oil, too.

Hmmm..... yes... :groucho: :mischief:

Indeed, perhaps it IS time for Canada to join the Reic... erm, U.S.A. - No fighting is even needed. Bush will ride in triumph into Ottawa... it could merely be a "practice full-scale invasion". Then, after that, we could demand the Sudetenla.... I mean... Cancun, and the Yucatan peninsula, from Mexico... "or else!" :scan:

Not to mention, our land is over-crowded, yes. We need... ahem, yes... anyway. ;)
 
And as for you, D' Artagnan - I suggest your country build large radar towers all along the coast. Or no, wait... don't.

Nevermind!
 
My poll question was intended to be moderately serious, rather than a spoof or troll. But it is not a lottery and there is no prize.

The world is watching the USA wondering what will happen next, and frankly I don't pretend to know. The only thing that is almost certain is that the future will not be the same as the past and that the next military intervention will most likely not be much the same in its nature as the last one was. In my opinion there are simply too many variables involved, in terms of how concerned countries or nervous dictators and third parties may react, for anyone (outside the heart of the US government shortly beforehand) to know which will be the next country.

I'm very pleased to see plenty of good humour shown and pleasantly surprised by the unexpected absence of flame.

I could only put 20 counties in the poll; and thought it important to include a few null options too; for those who think that Afghanistan and Iraq are each unique one offs.

If I've left your own country out of the intervention list (~ should I apologise? ~) or the country you think that may be next; then please state that.

By the way; my favourite USA invasion was, supported by german engineering, of the moon in 1969; and I'd prefer Mars which I think is well overdue, but that is a separate topic.
 
Iraq--if we take on our responsibilities in the postwar period seriously and diligently (which we had better!)--will be enough of a handful for awhile, I think. Right now we have to tackle the task of restoring order and safety for the average Iraqi--the looting may be a good way of allowing the people to blow off steam, but if we let lawlessness continue indefinitely then what have we accomplished? We need to restore the basic infrastructure, the running water, electricity, hospitals, etc.--running water especially, the last thing we want is a plague to spread on the country we just liberated.... We need to work fast for the most urgent necessities, but in the long term we need to not just restore the country infrastructure-wise to what it was before the war, but improve upon it. In short, we need to finish what we started in Iraq, before we shift focus to some other adventure. And I would say that would mean a couple years at least. If we do this RIGHT, we may not have need to go after Syria, as the regime there would feel pressure to reform due to democratization WORKING in Iraq, for those across the border to see.

And as for Iran, the people had a revolution there not all that long ago without outside help--the 1979 revolution was THEIRS, and how I'm seeing it now, it is theirs for them to analyze, learn things from, revise, and fine-tune. And the youth on the streets there now are doing that--and unlike in Saddam's Iraq, the "system" in Iran seems more capable of receptivity to critical voices from its people, albeit that it may be moving toward the center more slowly than we perhaps would like. Democracy actually has a chance to develop out of homegrown efforts there--which I think is the best way it can develop, just like Americans "made it happen" in 1776, in that the people know they did it themselves, and thus what they themselves build is truly a government "by the people, for the people" in a way an outside-induced democracy can never be. Not saying outside-induced democracies are a bad thing necessarily, but if it can be done from the inside (i.e. without a dictator that will nip absolutely every effort he sees in the bud, like Saddam) then so much the better, because the people will fight that much harder to defend it, because it will be a product of their labors, blood, sweat, and tears.

And I think as far as the whole WMD issue, democracies will likely be more responsible with them--due to them having more accountability by their very nature. Iran may be on that road already, we can help the seed spread if we do good by Iraq (and less desirable seeds will spread if we don't), but should let the Iranians grow into it themselves--and I think they will.

North Korea? THAT one scares me. I'm also very fond of Japan, and if I understand correctly they have the missile range to nuke Tokyo. Japan's already had two too many of those :( . A war may cost that great city as well as Seoul.... I think they may be past the stage where we can disarm them without getting our fingers nuked. Let's just hope we can interdict any illicit "exports", with the help of China....

But Iraq is THE project right now, and will be for some time. Let's not get all excited at what else we can do in the region, until we take care of the country we have, like it or not, taken under our wing. Actually following through on our promises will, I think, help greatly to reverse the hard feelings our NOT doing so in 1991 helped create amongst many people in the country.
 
Originally posted by wilbill
Canada's looking like a good target to me:
- Most Canadians speak almost the same language so the army wouldn't need as many translators as they would in say, North Korea.
- The food's similar.
- Canada already has teams in the NBA, MLB, sorta football, and nearly own the NHL. Travel to road games much easier than Damascus or Pyongyang.
- Canadians have many high taxes for our Republican congress to cut. Think of it as liberation of the pocketbook.
- No more law saying Canadian radio stations have to play Anne Murray and Bachman-Turner Overdrive every other song.
- Canada has a national anthem that people can actually sing. We could adopt it.
- We already tried in 1778 and 1812. Third time's charm.

You forgot *some* big things:
-Canadian population has a big anti-american feeling exept in Alberta.
-There is 8 million francophones in Canada, that are 78% against any form of "Americanisation", as was shown in a survey about adopting the american dollar.
-America has already threatened us of invading us a third time in 1867, thus forcing British Northern America to become a confederation.
-Our high taxes are used for the public health, education and "besoin social" (sorry, don't have the translation for this one) systems.
 
Everyone should be liberated. Ex pluribus unum, it's as simple as that. Give us peace and democracy, like in Bagdad!
 
Originally posted by D' Artagnan
Liberate Québec from its Canadian oppresors :p

Those who opress Québec is not the Federal Government, it's the Provincial Parti Québécois Government. We receive hundreds of million dollars each year from perequation.

The parti québécois made a voluntary retirement program for nurses, and now we're stuck with a penury of those.

If you count about 750 million dollars per referendum, the PQ used more than 2 billion dollars for nothing.

If you add the forced municipal mergers, the multiplication of the ministers and the unexplicated travels to that, you've got the real oppresor.

And yes, i'm Liberal and francophone, parce que je me souviens trop bien des actes du PQ.
 
There are three real possibilities - Iran, Syria and N Korea. However these are all targets much tougher than Iraq. I don't think there'll be another war for over a year, and by then it'll depend on the elections. The only way the US will go to war within less than 12-18 months is if there's either another sep11th/pearl harbor attack or the US will have information that one of the countries I mentioned is about to go nuclear.
If the US thinks N Korea doesn't yet have a nuke they'll probably go against them next. N Korea is less of a threat militarily and the poor condition of their people will allow the US to gain their support relatively easily.
Syria seems to be acting in a pretty stupid manner regarding the Iraq war. Assad must've had his TV on Al-Jazeera and he thought Saddam was winning... However going against will cause a dramatic lose of support from the arab world. The arabs main fear is that the US will take one arab country after another. Going to Syria will proove this claim right, in the eyes of the general population atleast. Also, Assad is more popular than Saddam in the arab world. Another problem is the risk Syria is towards Us allies in the region. Unlike Saddam with his few missiles and biochimical weapons he either didn't have or tried to save them from discovery for too long, Syria is known to have hundreds of SCUDs as well as biochimical weapons. It also controls, along with Iraq, the hizzbalah, which is said to have 10,000 rockets aimed at northern Israel.
Iran is also a difficult task. It's a larger country, with a stronger army and with the support of the relgion on their side. It's likely to be a very difficult target.
 
It seems a few have forgotten what Bush said after 9/11, ANY regime that supports terror is the enemy of the USA and will be taken out.

Syria is 100% in this catigory, through Hezbollah.

North Korea is a smoke screen, notice how quiet Kim has become since the USA began to dismantle Saddam?

Kim's army was trained and equiped the same way as Saddam's, I doubt this lesson is lost on North Korea.

Most likely a diplomatic solution will be found in NK ANF Syria, I doubt they care to face a belligerent USA.
 
I don't think there will be another invaision for a while unless there is a direct threat to our national security, and not in the Middle East. We don't want to be viewed as liberating the whole arab community or else we will be viewed as more imperialistic then we are. It will either be North Korea if they keep threatning the world or an african country that is in a period of anarchy and massive civil war. This will not be a war though, but mmore a rebuilding stage, but we won't tackle a arab nation until after Iraq cools down or after the elections.
 
Actually, I think they won't be US invasions for a long time. Attacking Iran or Syria would certainly trigger a US vs Arab war.
They had a lot of difficulties to start the war with Iraq. Imagine how it would be for much more "moderate" ( in terms of dictatorship) countries :rolleyes:
 
After things settle down in Iraq, Palestine needs liberated from Hamas and Islamic Jihad so the people there can get their state. The US is already at war with these groups in its war on terror so no further justification would be necessary.
 
INVADE CANADA NOW!

After all we know it's all their fault. Everything that is everything is their fault!

Damned Canadians!
 
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