anti-DHMO-activist t1_ixyxiu2 wrote
Reply to comment by h3ron in Returning to normal relations with Russia would be a mistake, says Lithuanian president by hieronymusanonymous
> "We got bored with this war, so we'll pull the plug. I guess all you will just die. Goodbye and good luck".
Please don't act as if "the west" was a single bloc. Letting the kurds die was primarily a US-thing, heavily criticized by everybody else.
"The west" is something that only seems to be seen as a real thing by americans (who think everybody is culturally just like them) and those trying to build a "counter-west".
aig_ma t1_ixzb9pk wrote
>Letting the kurds die was primarily a US-thing, heavily criticized by everybody else.
It was a Trump thing, not a US thing. He made the order on a Sunday night after all his advisors had gone home. Previously when he had tried to do it, he was blocked, because anyone who saw what he was doing knew it would undermine US interests. After he did it, even his Republican "allies" were shocked.
As far as I can tell, no one in the US supported this decision.
[deleted] t1_iy18ywr wrote
[deleted]
PubliusDeLaMancha t1_ixzf24i wrote
It's an everybody thing.
Do you actually believe "the world" would have accepted the US forcibly decreasing Iraqs borders to establish an independent Kurdistan? The entire cause of the enmity between Saddam and the West was his desire to conquer Kuwait.. Changing Iraqs borders even in favor of Kurds would have undermined the Western intervention entirely.
If you want to blame someone historically, blame the British for not guaranteeing a Kurdistan out of the former Ottoman Empire (Arabs got like 12 states remember)
Turkey, Syria, Iraq, and Iran all presently administer territory with Kurdish majorities.. They are free to establish a Kurdistan at any point in time.. Why haven't they?
If anything, supporting an independent Kurdistan is primarily a US-only thing (not of their government but popular support of their people)
anti-DHMO-activist t1_ixzfnbp wrote
I meant that more narrowly.
To my knowledge, the situation was that a massive amount of kurds helped cut down ISIS. Then, after the deed was done, they got abandoned.
I think the minimum here would have been to make sure the active fighters and their families are safe. That doesn't neccessarily include an own country, even offering refuge would have been at least something.
The overall politics in that area regarding statehood of minorities are completely fucked up, it's far too complicated and nuanced for me to understand even half of it. So not commenting on that.
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