I read Friedman's book about America's secret War, following the Iraq and Afghanistan invasions. It's a pretty interesting take of why we got involved in Iraq. He thinks that W and the neocons were pretty much ting a brick, believing that Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern "allies" were ready to start cutting ties because we were bogged in Afghanistan. That we basically invaded Iraq to flex our muscles and tell the Middle East, "look mother ers, we can do this to you, don't forget who is the big kid on the block"
Which of course makes the Neocon Jack off Fest of 2000-2004 all the more disgustingly moronic.
I also find it noteworthy that the success story he gives in the above article for an ideal US foreign policy is the handling of the Iran-Iraqi war. We took a passive stande while Iraq and Iran used chemical weapons, mass murder, gigantic tank mobilizations, and even suffered American casualties at the hands of the Iraqis (It's almost like the version of Reagan being re-written is totally different than what actually happened lol). But the result was that they were both weakened, their people just wanted to go back to being poor and sad, and the two countries shared a visceral hatred for each other.
Success?
Personally I'd take it. What is a shame is that with the information age, it would be nearly impossible for us to alter reality and play dumb while a known dictator was using chemical weapons on his own people just because the city was occupied. Friedman doesn't exactly acknowledge that. I think in the age we live in, the dynamics and options of a more passive foreign policy have altered dramatically. Maybe it is possible to make it work, but the days of being able to sit back while faces are being melted and octopus babies born are probably over.

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