• @[email protected]
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    348 months ago

    This is also where the US has/had the largest military drone base in the world.

    Seems like a pretty big deal, specially with Burkina Faso seeming like it’s going in a socialist direction again.

    Also Burkina Faso’s Ibrahim Traore: “Today, our relationship with Russia is primarily strategic. With Russia, there are no restrictions on the equipment we want to purchase. Others impose restrictions on us. They support us in terms of training, logistics, tactical training, and everything else. They provide support in these aspects."

  • @fluxion
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    338 months ago

    Why would anyone in a military conflict ally with the US anymore if all it takes is a couple corrupt dipshits in Congress to leave them all completely defenseless during their time of need.

      • @fluxion
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        148 months ago

        Same reasons as EU, Russia, and China. Global economic/military partners rather than global competition/enemies.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          8 months ago

          Lmao is that why the US’s entire existence is built on invasions, coups, sanctions and genocides in countries on completely different continents for not being subservient to its capitalist government?

          • @jumjummy
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            68 months ago

            Same can be said about most of Western Europe though.

            • @[email protected]
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              18 months ago

              Didn’t it just happen earlier in Asia too? This feels like a humanity problem that we could probably overcome if we had less sociopaths amongst us.

          • @[email protected]
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            18 months ago

            I think they were answering the ‘should’ not ‘does’.

            As in, those are the good reasons a major power should be involved in foreign nations. The US of course doesn’t do anything for good reasons

      • @[email protected]
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        148 months ago

        Let’s apply that question to the rest of the world. Why the Middle East? Why Eastern Europe? Why Asia? Why Latin America?

      • @[email protected]
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        28 months ago

        It needs a ‘base’, at every part of the world, which would become a hub for any kind of future deployment. Anyway, it’s not just the US, it can be any powerful countries. It just matter of how they do it, nice or not so nice way, direct or indirectly. China does it through business, e.g. silk road.

      • @fustigation769curtain
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        8 months ago

        Because we’re all human and protecting innocent lives shouldn’t end at one’s borders.

        Edit: Sorry. We’re not all human and protecting innocent lives should end at one’s borders.

        Thanks downvoters for making me see the light.

          • @fustigation769curtain
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            -108 months ago

            The US doesn’t care about Palestinians.

            I’m not sure what your point is.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              128 months ago

              What did your comment say was the US’s reason for involving itself in conflicts on different continents?

                • @Holyginz
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                  78 months ago

                  Lmao, the irony of this comment when you have literally said nothing to support your reasons and when mildly questioned and asked for further clarification you block them because you are incapable of comprehending other views. Enjoy your echo chamber little brainwashed one.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 months ago

        It’s more because Russia’s interests and economy are Global South-oriented already and against imperial core countries. This has become even more true since the current war started.

        Though not as much as USSR-times when they used to fund Vietnam, Bangladesh, Korea, Palestine, Cuba, etc without the profit motive that is necessary under capitalism.

        • @[email protected]
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          -28 months ago

          What do you mean imperialist core countries? Russia physically expanding their influence by invading seems pretty imperialist.

          And who do you mean by global south? Are you including Australia, New Zealand, India, etc? Or is it just shorthand for the countries who aren’t as close to the US?

          Are you saying that some countries want to play the superpowers off each other for maximum gain? If so, I agree with you. And more power to them to some extent, encourage both sides make you a good offer for their friendship.

          • @[email protected]
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            8 months ago

            I mean “Imperialism” in the materialist/marxist sense. Aka economic subjugation, unequal exchange or the import of raw materials from underdeveloped countries and “former” colonies and the export of capital via global monopolies and imperialist institutions like the IMF or World Bank. While not letting those countries be able to create their own advanced industries and use their countries’ resources for themselves by sanctioning, embargo’ing (Cuba, DPRK, etc), coup’ing (Chile, etc), and invading (Libya, etc) those that try (US imperialism).

            US has been the de facto leader of the Imperial core since WW2; it was mainly the UK before.

            Global South countries are those victims of imperialism, mostly former colonies and modern neocolonies. Naturally, Australia is not part of that since it’s now owned and run by those colonizers. It’s an economic/political term, not a geographical one.

            • @[email protected]
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              08 months ago

              Russia though the Soviet Union also had a trade network and sphere of influence, would that have a similar situation? China is currently building a sphere of influence to leverage as well. Are those categorically different from imperialism as you define it?

              I agree the US has had/still has unfair/unequal trade relationships. (I am against them) But I don’t think it’s uniquely or primarily the US and it’s friends problem. I think it’s what governments looking out for solely their own interest.

              • @[email protected]
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                8 months ago

                USSR did not practice imperialism in the Marxist/Leninist sense - ie. they did not export capital by keeping countries from industrializing, nor did they have a financial oligarchy like imperial core countries.

                China does not enforce harsh austerity policies that the US does via neocolonial institutions like the IMF or World Bank, and loans for the infrastructure they build in partner countries which are necessary for industrialization are often straight up forgiven for long-term cooperation.

                Even modern capitalist Russia does not have the global monopolies and complete control over the global financial system that the US does by its dollar hegemony.

                the US has had/still has unfair/unequal trade relationships

                This is… putting it very lightly. The US government literally coups, invades and destroys countries to keep them from industrializing and developing on their own.

                It has waged countless wars across the Middle East and Asia (Iraq, Vietnam, etc), coup’ing Africa’s and Latin America’s governments (Chile, Congo, etc), keeping them unstable and unable to unite and stand on their own so they have no choice but to rely on those exploitative institutions, and brutally sanctioning and embargo’ing those that do manage to escape their grasp (Cuba, DPRK, Iran etc)

                This isn’t an issue of the US government being more “evil” or just worse than others, it’s a systemic problem of capitalism and Europe and later Japan’s brutal colonization of the rest of the world for the last few hundred years which, contrary to what these governments want people to think, has not stopped but merely changed its form to neocolonialism.

                • @[email protected]
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                  -28 months ago

                  they did not export capital by keeping countries from industrializing, nor did they have a financial oligarchy like imperial core countries.

                  Disagree. They definitely did repress the Soviet block counties for their own good. And they definitely had an oligarchy, though it wasn’t as straightforwardly financial.

                  But it sounds like you’re using definitions that try to exclude countries that are nominally communist from terms like imperialist, so I can’t really do much to argue with your definitions. I’d just say that your definitions aren’t what I use or what are commonly used.