This
is GREAT!!! Please feel free to copy
and distribute this – hopefully to those so-called Americans who sit around and
worry about us not being liked! Deb V
Provided
by Joe Galloway, author of We Were Soldiers and is posted as an item of
possible interest. This one is definitely NOT tongue in cheek.
Sig, the author, was a teen-aged Marine who marched and
fought as a rifleman to and from the Chosin reservoir in Korea in 1950. He
switched to the Army, and served as a Special Forces officer in Vietnam. After
Vietnam he joined the CIA, and went back to Korea.
He's been there, done it, and has some specific thoughts on countries that
don't "like" us.
**
If you aren't interested in the ramblings of an old man, please delete
now. If you're still there, pull up a
chair and listen.
Is there anyone else out there who's sick and tired of all the polls being
taken in foreign countries as to whether or not they "like" us? The last time I looked, the word
"like" had nothing to do with foreign policy. I prefer 'respect' or
'fear'. They worked for Rome, which civilized and kept the peace in the known
world a hell of a lot longer than our
puny two centuries-plus.
I see a left-wing German got elected to office recently by campaigning against
the foreign policy of the United States. Yeah, that's what I want, to be
lectured about war and being a "good neighbor" by a German. Their
head honcho said they wouldn't take part in a war against Iraq. Kind of nice, to see them taking a pass on a
war once in while.
Perhaps we needed to have the word "World" in front of War. I think
it's time to bring our boys home from Germany. Outside of the money we'd save,
we'd make the Germans "like" us a lot more, after they started paying
the bills for their own defense.
Last time I checked, France isn't too fond of us either. They sort of liked us
back on June 6th, 1944, though, didn't they? If you don't think so, see how
nicely they take care of the enormous American cemeteries up above the Normandy
beaches. For those of you who've studied history, we also have a few cemeteries
in places like Belleau Woods and Chateau Thierry also. For those of you who
haven't studied it, that was from World War
One, the first time Europe screwed up and we bailed out the French. That's where the US Marines got the title
'Devil Dogs' or, if you still care about what the Germans think,
"Teufelhunde". I hope I spelled that right; sure wouldn't want to
offend anyone, least of all a German.
Come to think of it, when Europe couldn't take care of their Bosnian problem
recently, guess who had to help out there also. Last time I checked, our kids
are still there. I sort of remember they said they would be out in a year. Gee,
how time flies when you're having fun.
Now we hear that the South Koreans aren't too happy with us either. They
"liked" us a lot better, of course, in June, 1950. It took more than
50,000 Americans killed in Korea to help give them the lifestyle they currently
enjoy, but then who's counting? I think it's also time to bring the boys home
from there. There are about 37,000 young Americans on the
DMZ separating the South Koreans from their "brothers" up North. Maybe if we leave, they can begin to
participate in the "good life" that North Korea currently enjoys.
Uh huh. Sure.
I also understand that a good portion of the Arab/Moslem world now doesn't
"like" us either. Did anyone ever sit down and determine what we
would have to do to get them to like us? Ask them what they would like us to
do. Die? Commit ritual suicide? Bend
over?
Maybe we should follow the advice of our dimwitted, dullest knife in the
drawer, Senator Patty Murray, and build more roads, hospitals, day care
centers, and orphanages like Osama bin Laden does. What with all the orphans
Osama has created, the least he can do is build some places to put them.
Senator Stupid says if we would only "emulate" Osama, the Arab world
would love us. Sorry Patty; in addition to the fact that we already do all
of those things around the world and have been doing them for over sixty years,
I don't take public transportation, and I certainly wouldn't take it with a
bomb strapped to the guy next to me.
Don't get me wrong: I'm not in favor of going to war. Been there, done that.
Several times, in fact. But I think we ought to have some polls in this country
about other countries, and see if we "like" THEM.
Problem
is, if you listed the countries, not only wouldn't the average American know if
he liked them or not, he wouldn't be able to find them. If we're supposed to
worry about them, how about them worrying about us?
We were nice to the North Koreans in 1994, as we followed the policies of
Neville Clinton. And it seemed to work; they didn't re-start nuclear weapons
program for a whole year or so. In the meantime, we fed them when they were
starving, and put oil in their stoves when they were freezing.
In a recent visit to Norway, I engaged in a really fun debate with my cousin's
son, a student at a Norwegian University. I was lectured to by this thankless
squirt about the American "Empire", and scolded about dropping the
atomic bomb on the Japanese. I reminded him that empires usually keep the stuff
they take; we don't, and back in 1945
most Norwegians thought dropping ANY kind of bomb on Germany or Japan was a
good idea. I also reminded him that my uncle, his grandfather, and others in
our family
spent a significant time in Sachsenhausen concentration camp, courtesy of the
Germans, and they didn't all survive. I further reminded him that if it wasn't
for the "American Empire" he would probably be speaking German or
Russian.
Sorry about the rambling, but I just took an unofficial poll here at our house,
and we don't seem to like anyone.