Not really, Europe's great military mindset was always based on wars fought over stuff. Land, titles, power. Not morals, and certainly not defense of people or justice.
This is just idealistic bullshit. There has hardly ever been a war fought over "morals", in the defense of a people (except the nations own), and certainly not justice.
It's always been about power.
That depends on one's definition of good. To bring myself up again, I'm a horrible, violent person. Certainly not "good," that doesn't mean that I can't do good things with my life. In a just war, one side is justified, making them the "good" guys.
Justifications does not make something as evil and horrible as war good. No matter the reasons to fight, even under the honourable intentions, war is always evil to combat evil. Hence why there is no good side in a war. If you want to be on the good side, you put down your gun and go join the nonviolence movement. A war being just does not make it good in itself. Being the lesser of two evils does not make you good, being the lighter of two grays does not make you white.
This is just obvious nonsense. Even if it was true, which it is not, it should be equally clear that every war was preceded by a "let's be warful!! movement".
Furthermore, you do realise that the only reason western Europe has not broken down into another war is that these last 70 years has been framed by such a movement of peace, co-operation and mutual benefit? I'm not saying that's going to last forever - nothing does - but that is pretty much the record for the region. Had not France, Germany and Britain and all the minor players been willing to put aside centuries worth of hate, aggression and conflict and work together, no such lasting peace could ever have been built.
Peaceful? Really? Why did France, Germany, and Britain all work together after WWII? I'd, without a doubt, argue that it's because they were smart enough to see that repeating the mistakes of Versailles would be a very bad thing (see Marshal Plan instead), but most importantly a really big red star. Europe was reforged on the basis of worrying about Communism and the USSR. If that's peaceful, then I'll start referring to my brigade as "3rd Advise and Assist Brigade" instead of "Heavy Brigade Combat Team Grey Wolf"
[/quote]
The European Union and it's predecessors are not military movements. They were founded to avoid further wars in Europe by creating economical incent not to be hostile towards each other, and promote association, unison and good will between countries and beyond nationalities. And yes, it all comes down to money. As frightening as the Red Scare might have been, it was economical gain that fused our many warring little tribes together.
[/quote]
I'd also contend that "Let's be warful" is usually more of "Shit. War's abrewing and we've disarmed ourselves in the meantime (as it's a near-universal truth, whenever you win a war, slash the army down, then hurriedly build it up on the old plans once the next one is apparent)"
[/quote]
You missed the point. You're original comment was nonsensical. Wars are not always preceded by peaceful sentiments. If you look at European history, you'll see that warring or preparing yourself for war has been the top priorities through all times. If you were not at war with once country, you were with another. Were there ever peace, those years were a race of arms and re-equipping your country for the next war. If a country ever stopped this frenzied pattern of behavior, it was only because the constant and pro-longed battling had driven their economy to it's limit, or beyond them. If there was a fragile peace achieved, you had to get back on your feet faster than your enemy so you could strike him down again, because you "knew" he would do the same to you.
Peace were never an option in Europe. That is, obviously, the reason there were so many wars.
And that's great for Scandinavia. But where's the use of force to control something? There's nothing wrong with a nation-state not being a wartime power (heck if I don't love Sweden and Lichtenstein), but only as far as someone else is there to protect them (or that they are able to protect themselves) from outside aggressors. However, if everyone was neutral like that, who'd correct abuses in the darker corners of the world? Make no mistake, evil happens, and damn little usually happens before it becomes a full war.
Yes, that is the downside. Yet it is the sentiment that we should strive to spread.
However, nobody fights wars to "correct abuses in the darker corners of the world". Nobody ever has. Don't fool yourself with such obvious propaganda.
Come on. That's not even a good use of slippery slope argument. We didn't, they did. What more do you want? If America had slipped down the path of that sort of insanity, it'd be the responsibility of the rest of the world to stop us.
It's not a good slippery slope argument because it was never meant to argue any such thing. My point was that nobody cared about Germany's evil, because all other nations were busy doing the same thing to their own population. As hard to believe as it may be from our perspective, such things where the norm and it only became evil and undesireable when we needed something of our enemy's to point at and say "Look! Look how immoral they are! That makes us the good guys! Let's fight!"
I agree, just on the basis that there exist just wars. If a war is just, then it doesn't matter who fires first, in fact, if the "good" side (talking in terms of a lighter shade of grey in a black vs grey world) is going to gain an advantage (thereby saving lives in the long run) it's immoral for them *not* to take it. See also preventive war and preemptive war. Preemptive war (NATO is going to launching a full scale attack in 72 hours, therefore we'll have our tanks through the Fulda Gap in 48, to use my ever required Red Storm Rising example) is certainly justified, while Preventive war often is (Operation Opera, for example, or operations undertook to prevent a crazy-type regime from getting nukes).
There are wars that might be called just, I won't argue with that. The most "just" of all wars, though, are the one fought to defend oneself from an active attacker. It very much matters who makes the first move. By attacking first, even if it's possible it might save lives in the end, your "good" side makes it "just" for the defenders to fight you. With all that entails.
That is the main problem with preemptive warfare. Not much of a way around it, other than the fact that hopefully one side is obviously anti-humanitarian. Else, there gets to be a point where the issue is grey enough that the attackers shouldn't be attacking.
Thank you for agreeing.
Strife skips lunch and spends what little free time he has to debate on the Internets!
You shouldn't, man. It's not fair to make us argue with you and worry about you at the same time. It makes my conscience all funny.
If it helps, the event that came right after said debating made me throw up anyway, so no real harm was done by my skipping lunch.
[/quote]
...No, it doesn't. Not at all