Sometimes There Are No Other Options

In the appropriate circumstance the military option may not only be the best option, but the only reasonable course of action to save a people from its’ government… it is time, in my opinion, to exercise that option in Myanmar/Burma.

I know that will come as a bit of a shock to some of the Bunkers more right leaning brethren who operate on the misguided assumption that we are hard core leftie surrender monkey pacifists, especially if they weren’t around to see us not voice opposition to the invasion of Afghanistan – the illegal, self-centered, egotistic, poorly planned and executed, invasion of Iraq, for which we think Bush and his administration should be tried for war crimes and publicly flogged before being sent into solitary confinement until their deaths, tends to over shadow that… but that’s another story.

The death toll in Myanmar/Burma is staggering, and with the military junta getting in the way of an international effort to help the people by holding aid workers and aid at airports, refusing planes full of aid permission to land, and forcing shiploads of aid to remain floating around in the ocean, that military junta should be over run by an international force, and Myanmar/Burma turned into an international protectorate until the mess gets sorted out, the country put back on it’s feet, and a real government determined by the people.

The chances of that happening are slim to none, not (we’re sure) because the international community hasn’t thought about it, but in all likelihood because that community is full of ego driven leaders who can’t decide among themselves how to go about it, how the protectorate would be run, and who would be making the decisions.

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This entry was posted by stageleft on Sunday, May 11th, 2008 and is filed under International. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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6 Responses to “Sometimes There Are No Other Options”

  1. JimBobby on May 12th, 2008 at 9:39 am

    Whooee! I think yer right, SL. In Burma, we have a military obstacle to humanitarian relief. That military obstacle threatens to unleash a wave of post-catastrophe complications that will kill far more people than the direct effects of the cyclone. Some are saying the final death count after starvation, cholera and other illnesses take their toll could reach 1.5 million.

    When the lives of this many people are put at risk by a power-obsessed military, a military response is probably the only way to prevent mass annihilation.

    JB

  2. throbbin on May 12th, 2008 at 9:46 am

    I thought I was the only one! Jesseofthennorth and I have been talking about that lately, but I never saw it discussed anywhere else.

    Thats an invasion I could get behind!

  3. stageleft on May 12th, 2008 at 10:59 am

    It’s always a toss up isn’t it? Afghanistan was necessary, Iraq was not, Zimbabwe may be able to be orchestrated if Mugabe absolutely refuses to let go and if the military allowed the current opposition to rule without the danger of another Iraq being created after the deposing, and Myanmar/Burma looks necessary to prevent a preventable human catastrophe….. if the international community could get its’ collective act together enough not to screw it up in its’ usual phenomenal way.

    Ya see, this is why the bunker works so tirelessly towards benevolent world domination through so very many sleepless nights and statutory holidays while others are sleeping or BBQ’ing and drinking beer – we have the answers.

    Speaking of …….. – you got the summer trailer open yet? :-)

  4. throbbin on May 12th, 2008 at 11:24 am

    Yup, open and running. Haven’t been up much, but I think I will head up there next weekend (this weekend I’m heading north for something).

    You coming by for a burger and a beer?

  5. Saskboy on May 12th, 2008 at 2:13 pm

    Plus there’s the added complication of doing something like this, would be like taking a steaming dump on China’s back porch. That could make for some worse disasters than poor souls in Burma dying of water diseases. Still, if we don’t do something, people are sure to die when they wouldn’t have to. Yet they didn’t win last year when they rose up against the government, and that was obviously their chance. It’s a terrible catch 22.

  6. stageleft on May 12th, 2008 at 8:08 pm

    Am leaving next Sat morning (weather permitting) for a trip up the Bonnechere River for the long week-end, back sometime Monday. The week-end after is the Motorcycle Ride For Dad (an annual bunker event but depending on what time we get home from that a Sat evening ride to your place if you’re gonna be there isn’t outside the realm of possibility :-)

    Saskboy: China is part of that international community that can’t get it’s collective sh*te together for this effort.

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