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tree_and_leaf ([personal profile] tree_and_leaf) wrote2006-01-13 04:00 pm
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Scary conversations with my flatmate

A strange geo-political discussion with two Americans

Yesterday two of my flatemates (both Americans) and I somehow got on the subject of What Should We Do about Iran and their bombmaking facilities. We agreed: we're not sure, but a full on invasion would be a very bad idea, on military grounds if nothing else... The Kerry Voting Republican and I have a mutual friend who is half Iranian and goes over there fairly regularly; his theory is that the population is more pro-western than any other in the Middle East except for Israel, and that the regime is likely to break down under its own weight/ the burden of popular dislike relatively soon. The question is, how would the Iranians getting the bomb change things? The Neo-Con flatmate thinks targeted raids on bombmaking facilities are the way to go; I don't think that's practical (the CIA network in Iraq is shot, if you can believe that story in the Guardian last week, and 'precision bombing' is more difficult than people seem to think. It could turn into a great way to alienate a basically friendly population.)

Then we got on to China.

I said I thought that, economically, China was likely to be the biggest threat in the next half century; if it does end up dominating world trade, we could be in for interesting times (in the sense of the Discworld curse...) and it wasn't clear how the west would deal with that.

Neo Con flatmate: well, it'll be OK if the Republicans get elected again next time.

Tree and Leaf, slightly baffled: Why?

Kerry-Voting-Republican: Hey, I was reading in one of the Catholic newsletters that the Chinese are talking about letting the National Catholic Church resume it's links with the Vatican...

NCF, ignoring this: Well, they'll keep increasing military spending.

T&L: I'm not sure how that will help the balance of trade. Anyway, I don't think the US could fight China and win.

NCF: Sure, not conventionally. We'd have to nuke them (said in an utterly matter-of-fact tone of voice).

T&L, once she had got her breath back: But... China has the bomb too. They'd have time to retaliate.

NCF: Oh, but we have ABMs.

At this point, for some reason, KVR started whistling the Soviet National Anthem, and then decided that he should read NCF the lyrics, and then played it. NCF insisted that he could not 'appreciate the musical qualities of it' because of its bad associations. But he went off to bed whistling it.

You know, I got a surprising kick out of hearing a Neo-Con do that? I'm not a Communist, but the incongruity greatly appealed to me.

[identity profile] sophysduckling.livejournal.com 2006-01-13 07:45 pm (UTC)(link)
If the United States has economic problems, it's the fault of the American people, not China. In any event, the US is not guaranteed to lose against China. They have more people, but the United States (now, at any rate) has better technology. As for the ABMs, the US really doesn't have them (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-ballistic_missile#The_George_W._Bush_administration_and_ABM). Israel has some...As for Iran, if nobody does anything, Israel will. A lot of people believe--and, in the case of Iran, may very well be right--its existence depends on Muslim countries not having a nuclear weapon.