| | The Islamicists in Iran seized the U.S. embassy because they knew they could. In the 1970s, the USA was militarily in withdrawal and ideologically in retreat. The hostages appeared to have been released because the Reagan administration could be counted on to take a harder line than had the Carter presidency. So, I, too, thought at the time. However, as it turned out, the hostages were released because the United States government sold the government of Iran anti-tank missiles and other weapons for its war against Iraq. Part of the motivation for that was (a) to keep Iran and Iraq at war and (2) to befriend Iran in its war against Iraq. Of course, the USA government also did what it could to help Iraq, but the Ba'th Party, being secular and unashamedly socialist was better aligned with the USSR, especially after the Islamist revolution in Iran. All of that and more is fairly byzantine. The point is that there is nothing in that which speaks to "American" interests.
In fact, whatever "American" interests might be is not well articulated. The interests of every person (real or articifial) is not congruent with the interests of the "government." That word is in quotation marks because the elected Presidency is not the Congress and neither of them are the careerists in the State Department. State is in an uneviable positiion as one administration leads to the next, now Republican, now Democrat ... now, again and so on. State attempts to steer a course for what "it" imagines "America's" interests (long-term and short) to be. But "the State Department" is not an entity. It is a collection of persons with differing and conflicting and shifting interests that may have nothing to do with the external world. These are just people with jobs, most of them, we can hope, honestly attempting to do the best they can. However, as Dr. Newt Gingrich has famously said about the government, "They have the wrong information system." Their measures are powers and controls and influences, not markets and profits. What profit could there be in supporting Iran or Iraq in their pointless war over some potential oil reserves?
It is one thing to have a clearly defined interest in free trade and open markets. It is another thing to see the world as a chessboard where you get "white" or "black" by choosing a fist with a pawn inside.
Where is the advantage in seizing the Swiss embassy, or flying a jetliner into a Swiss skyscraper?
There was a John Stossel video on YouTube -- gone now, I believe -- from his 20/20 about the difference between capitalism and democracy. Hong Kong was not a democracy and is not so now, but it is still a rich and thriving place for entrepreneurship, even drawing people who find the USA no longer so friendly to capitalism and innovation. India is the largest democracy in the world, and one of the poorest nations, with very many and very complicated laws against business and therefore with huge gaps between the rich and poor. Democracy -- choosing your politicians -- is not so important, if there is freedom of commerce. That is not so much a matter of a written constitution, but of a social tradition. However, such cultural trends are hard to define and quantify.
In both business management and sociology courses, I have been presented with charts that show Nigeria as more "individualist" than the USA. I am not packing my bags. Similarly, for individualism in a western industrialized secular setting, the former East Germany is often touted. Again, I am not attracted. The fault may be mine, but I cite those cases to show that what make a "free" society is putative. Where you shop is up to you. So, if, by some odd happenstance, Hungary (high on individualism) were to go to war against Austria (low), I'd have to take a non-interventionist position on that.
That was my viewpoint 15 years ago when Saddam Hussein impudently sought to seize back Iraq's missing province of Kuwait. That action scared the bemohammed out of the Saudi royal family. (Lacking any popular support within their own -- and I mean "own" -- nation.) So, they paid the big bucks for the best army in the world and got Saddam Hussein off their doorstep. If the USA government in Washington DC made a lot of money from that, then that is fine, but I am not sure that the numbers appeared in the annual report. I know that as a stockholder (taxpayer), I was not given a Gulf War dividend.
The attacks of 9/11 were not carried out by Saddam Hussein's government. The surgical strikes in Afghanistan against the Taliban camps were tolerable, given the context. The war in Iraq was a different matter entirely. Perhaps, the USA government in Washington DC wanted to mend the fences with Iran again. Perhaps those weapons of mass destruction still worried the Saudi royal family. Perhaps there were other factors. Except for one contract security firm, and one other general management company, I do not see a lot of money being made on this. To me, if what you are doing makes sense, then it should be profitable. If what you are doing runs a loss, then maybe you need to think of something else -- unless, as happens, you have a clear vision and a workable idea, but just a tough road, like the first Xerox or the Apple Computer.
It is pretty easy to shoot at Dr. Ron Paul's "ideas" (if that's what his opinions are), but I have yet to read an Objectivist foreign policy paper that identifiies a problem, provides a solution, and shows a benefit.
(Edited by Michael E. Marotta on 11/29, 2:20pm)
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