Friday, November 29, 2019
The Ethics Of World Domination Essays - Aftermath Of World War II
  The Ethics of World Domination    The Ethics  of World Domination    Throughout the past 70 years the U.S. has  been involved in hundreds of conflicts all around the globe. Every  time the United States troops are deployed to a foreign country, citizens  of the U.S. want to know why. People begin to ask questions like, "what  is the purpose of this?" or "what is the nature of our involvement?" Nobody  wants to see the strong youth of our nation shipped of to a foreign country  to get slaughtered without good cause. Millions of American men and  women have devoted their lives to the service and protection of the freedoms  that we as citizens of the United States hold dear. These people  deserve the utmost respect from all citizens of the United States.    When the government of our country see fit, our troops are sent to fight  often in places that they have never even heard of. When they return  they are heroes to be revered, or are they? All to often things go  wrong in these foreign countries and the soldiers often end up taking the  brunt of the nation's frustration. When the government makes mistakes  and things do go wrong it causes the citizen of the U.S. to closer analyze  the situation. The citizens of the United States want some answers  and the government often fails in its attempts to satisfy the publics'  need to know. Ever since the beginning of the U.S. the government  have come up with one reason or another to start or get involved in conflicts  that should have otherwise been left alone. One of the first and  most prominent examples of this is the almost total enialation of the Native    American population in this country. Is the destruction of a culture  and a society as vast as that of the Native Americans really morally and  ethically permissable? The United States government thought that  it was. According to them it was God's own destiny for them to conquer  the entire continent to bring it under the U.S. control. This just  shows that difference in ethical value strongly affects what a country  will accept as good cause for fighting. More recent conflicts like  the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the invasion of Grenada, and the Gulf  war have made people analyze the ethicality behind the fighting.    They look for the true reason behind the involvement of the U.S., in an  attempt to find justification for the use of U.S. troops in foreign affairs.    This paper is an attempt to look at the ethicality of some of the major  conflict that the U.S. has been involved since the end of WW II.    It will also attempt to analyze what has come to be known as the "World    Police" mentality and the actions that the United States has taken to display  this.    During the period of 1946-1950 a forty-year  period began called the Cold War. The Cold War was a period of aggression  in the name of democracy. During this time the United States did  some questionable activities under the guise that they were protecting  against the spread of communism.    On June 25, 1950 North Korea, using Chinese  training and Soviet military equipment, attacked South Korea. The    United States believed that Stalin and the USSR were ultimately behind  the invasion. The South Korean defenses crumbled and the United States  sent ground troops on June 30. The United Nations endorsed the deployment  of troops because the USSR was boycotting the United Nations. It  would seem a bit unfair that the United States would receive UN endorsement  based solely on the premises that the USSR had chosen not to be a part  of the UN. This become even more apparent when you take into account  that the United States was not even certain that the USSR was even involved  in the dispute.    On September 15, 1950, after a daring amphibious  attack 150 miles behind enemy line the US was able to push the North Koreans  back into North Korea. This is where the war should have stopped.    The North Koreans were in North Korea and the South Koreans had control  over South Korea. Furthermore, China was threatening that if the    US tried to unite Korea by force then they would enter the war on the side  of the North Koreans. Despite both of these facts, the United States  pushed further into North Korea. Knowing that it would cost thousands  of American lives and thousands more Korean lives to unite a country that  wanted to be separated, General Mc arthur and President Truman, with United    Nation's support, pushed on. A    
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