heydaralon wrote: Wed Apr 15, 2020 5:07 pm
Hanarchy Montanarchy wrote: Wed Apr 15, 2020 4:52 pm
heydaralon wrote: Wed Apr 15, 2020 4:46 pm
Well, I think in certain instances, the UN actually does more harm than good. I used the Somalia example earlier, if 2 guys are fighting, and you are giving them food between rounds, won't that make the fight last longer? Is it more moral to just let them slug it out as quickly as possible and get it over with or to prolong it? I honestly don't have the answer, but a case could be made that a quick conflict is more humane than a drawn out one.
Sanctions also rarely stop the offending regime from continuing its course of action, they just starve and deprive the population. In Iran for instance, some of the sanctions on stuff actually strengthens the regime, because a black market for getting goods in forms, and Sepah a group in the Iranian army controls this blackmarket, thus generating a revenue stream for the people we are trying to punish.
So in a lot of cases the cure has worse or equally bad side effects as the disease imo
I don't know the answer to the first question either, but you will get prolonged conflict from independent nations supporting their allies with or without the UN.
As for sanctions, I agree, they probably don't stop offending regimes. However, the threat of sanctions may stop a country from becoming a bad actor. Sort of like how threat of jail time doesn't stop someone dedicated to pursuing a life of crime.
Its kind of weird to me that they even decided to make a UN tbh. I'm not super well versed on the league of nations, but it seems like it didn't really prevent wars either. When the USSR invaded Finland, they kicked it out. I'm not even sure they kicked out Mussolini for invading Abyssinia. It didn't prevent WW2 from happening. Its crazy that they even went back to that model...
I think nuclear weapons have done more for world peace than the UN has. Which is really just another way of saying that for the most part, the Great powers fight proxy wars instead of direct ones. They ingeniously figured out how to export their conflicts to the third world (with a few notable exceptions like Vietnam, Korea, Afghanistan '79 but even those were proxy wars).
Slightly off topic but didn't Metternich try to set up some kind of League of Nations proto type in Europe after the Napoleonic Wars?
I am out of my depth here, but as I understand it, the failure of the League of Nations is tied to the failure of the Treaty of Versailles. They were too inextricably tied together, and so punitive that they all but ensured more conflict. I don't believe this invalidates the concept of a multi-lateral diplomatic organization.
I agree that the existence of nuclear weapons has been a major deterrent, but I don't know if you can exorcise international bodies like NATO or the UN that used sanction and diplomacy to halt nuclear proliferation. Perhaps everything would have proceeded exactly the same without them, but I doubt it.
Knowing basically nothing about post Napoleonic Wars European diplomacy, I can't say much. I will say that, as with everything, past failures inform future successes.
The saying isn't "if at first you don't succeed, meh, fuck it, it is too hard, and probably gay anyway."