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There are gaps in our individual knowlege of relationships with other countries, so be careful about assuming no support or close ties where you or I are unaware of relationship history. US relationships with some nations have run for longer time periods & what we are exposed to is heavily dependent on the languages we know & what shows up in our news media. Except for CNN, US media seems to have largely dropped having foreign correspondents & when they do, they are in "hot spots" as opposed to educating us about our friends. I was struck by a post on another list by a resident of Ireland who feared that WW III was imminent, after seeing the images of World Trade Center on TV. My employer does global business & we have e-mail from like Egypt expressing condolences. One thing that is amazing about the close ties today between US UK Canada is how we have been at war with these guys in our past, but are bosum buddies today. In the war of 1812, the American army torched Toronto, released gangsters from the jails & had them join with the American soldiers in looting private homes, then when the Canadian army under British leadership conquered Washington DC, they only torched government buildings. In the aftermath of the Revolutionary War, the Tories were brutally discriminated against & so many of them fled to Ontario, that it distorted Canadian politics ... for many generations, a large chunk of the Ontario population were descendants of refugees from what happened in America. History is written by the winners, and those texts often do not tell much about the losers or parts of history where our side not victorious. So perhaps just as US history books are largely silent on the War of 1812 between the USA and Canada, so are the British history books largely silent on the wars where colonies of USA & India gained independence from Britain. So perhaps new generations are able to grow up in ignorance of the hatreds of earlier generations. To understand why foreign policy that throws money & resources at a problem is sometimes not appreciated by the recipients, look at how the federal government throws money at local problems. To an extent there is the taxpayer annoyance that the mix of benefits might not match what they want, which would not be true for foreign recipients, but a shared annoyance is strings that come attached with aid. An annoyance for foreign countries that probably not happen with domestic, is that at least during the Cold War, the aid was for large scale actions that were extremely susceptible to dictators transferring a lot of the loot to their Swiss Bank accounts instead of serving their people. What is needed in the aftermath of the Cold War is for foreign aid to focus more on raising the middle class and rule of law in nations that are inexperienced in such things. It is amazing to me that I am managing to do my 40 hours a week at work & get new software completed, some of which I started on after Sep 11, and also carry on several threads in several discussion groups, although some aspects of my life still suffering & some threads left a bit open. > From: rbaird@esourceconsulting.com (Richard B Baird) > This has always a huge problem - We've always tried to curry favor from > various regemes or rebels by throwing money and/or assistance at them and > the recievers never appreciate it. > > We helped the 1980 rebels in afghanistan (including bin Laden) to push out the > USSR, and they turned on us. Now we will probably help the "current rebels" > in afghanistan to overthrow the Taliban and they will eventually turn on us > too. > > No one has ever appreciated U.S. help - except the UK and Canada. They are > really the only countries in the world that have stood by us thick and thin. > > rick > > -----midrange-nontech-admin@midrange.com wrote: ----- > Subject: US involvement with the Taliban > > I haven't had a chance to read more than 40% of Al Mac's posts and links, > soplease forgive me if this is redundant:http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/ > n922/a09.html[1]_______________________________________________ MacWheel99@aol.com (Alister Wm Macintyre) (Al Mac) Sep 11 Links: http://www.semitrue.com/thankyou/ Great discussion archives http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TYR http://lists.midrange.com/cgi-bin/listinfo/midrange-nontech Newspapers World Wide http://www.wheretodoresearch.com/news/foreign_newspapers.htm http://www.wheretodoresearch.com/news/US_Newspapers.htm Intelligence Briefings by country http://www.cnn.com/2001/WORLD/asiapcf/central/09/17/asia.support/ http://www.odci.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/af.html http://www.economist.com/countries http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/world/search/list/index.html http://www.debka.com/ http://www.stratfor.com
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