U.S. Military Power & Its Uses Do Essay

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U.S. Military Power & Its Uses Do you think our military needs to be so large and powerful? Do you think it is ever possible for the U.S. To use force against another nation? Do you agree with President Obama's decision to end the war in Iraq? Do you believe President Obama deserved to receive the Nobel Peace Prize? Explain why or why not in answering all the questions.

The world is a dangerous place where sometimes sovereign nations go to war against each other, or oppress their own people, or are unable to solve their domestic problems. In those cases, it becomes imperative for the United Nations to act. The United Nations, however, is constrained by a set of rules and regulations, not to mention its large bureaucracy and occasional corruption. That was certainly the case when the Rwandan genocide took place in 1994. Given this incompetence and inability of the United Nations to act in such urgent cases, some people argue that the United States needs to take responsibility as a world policeman to make sure that such massacres do not take place -- or at least are stopped before they take a huge death toll. There is a potential problem with this suggestion,...

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Moreover, the concentration of so much power at the hands of one nation, even of a democratic one, may lead to a situation when this nation may violate the norms of international law. According to many American and international observers, this is what happened when the U.S. decided to invade Iraq. Moreover, when the military becomes so large and powerful as it is in the United States, the military may wield too much power and undermine the supremacy of the civilian rule. After all, it was a former general who, upon delivering his farewell speech as a U.S. President, warned against the dangers of "military industrial complex" (Eisenhower).
In the wake of September 11, many people around the world proclaimed "We Are All America Now," to show their solidarity with the U.S. But that solidarity soon waned after the United States rushed to war against Taliban in Afghanistan, and especially against the regime of Saddam Hussein although there was no conclusive evidence showing that Hussein was involved in September 11…

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Military-Industrial Complex Speech, Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1961 http://www.h-net.org/~hst306/documents/indust.html

"The Nobel Peace Prize 2009 - Press Release." Nobelprize.org. 15 Dec 2010 http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/2009/press.html


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