"The Republic had no clear foreign policy or strategy."
From 200-179 BC, the crucial period of expansion in my opinion, as articulated by T. Quinctius Flamininus and M. Q. Flamininus, and Marcus Porcius Cato, and the various Scipios. They talk about it repeatedly in various speeches in the Senate.
Particularly, T.Q. Flams speech about why the Republic should attack Phillip NOW, when he hasn't made any attacks on them and can't really threaten them (Phil was attacking tiny old Athens in an attempt to restore Macedonian despotic hegemony over Greece).
"Recall the past war with Hannibal, and ask yourselves: Is it better that we should wait until we must fight Phillip here in Italy?" (he goes on at length to discuss why this is bad, because of rebellious 'allies' in Italy and outright Greek sympathizers in Sicily). (he then goes on to list Philips atrocities and broken treaties, how he won't be content with Greece alone, very reminiscent of Bush talking about Saddam) (then he says that it is better that they defeat Phil now, and let the enemy do the suffering. This is later applied to Alexander III.)
The other Flaminuses, the Scipios, and Cato, and all the other Censors and Consuls supported this policy in word and deed during the crucial period. This saw Spain, Liguria, Greece, Thracia, Asia Minor, etc fall to Rome and took the wind out of Alexanders successors.
I claim that this period, when Rome gradually went to defending foreign Allies to embarking on permanent foreign conquests in order to eliminate threats, was the real beginning of imperialism.
The American parallel depends on how they decide to hold down the regions that threaten them, in this modern age I credit them with more subtlety than military occupation, but I'm sure they will put in place an American puppet regime backed by overwhelming firepower which will amount to the same thing. Or maybe everything will be fine and the Iraqis will joyfully be praising Bush as a liberator 10 years from now....yeah, right...
From 200-179 BC, the crucial period of expansion in my opinion, as articulated by T. Quinctius Flamininus and M. Q. Flamininus, and Marcus Porcius Cato, and the various Scipios. They talk about it repeatedly in various speeches in the Senate.
Particularly, T.Q. Flams speech about why the Republic should attack Phillip NOW, when he hasn't made any attacks on them and can't really threaten them (Phil was attacking tiny old Athens in an attempt to restore Macedonian despotic hegemony over Greece).
"Recall the past war with Hannibal, and ask yourselves: Is it better that we should wait until we must fight Phillip here in Italy?" (he goes on at length to discuss why this is bad, because of rebellious 'allies' in Italy and outright Greek sympathizers in Sicily). (he then goes on to list Philips atrocities and broken treaties, how he won't be content with Greece alone, very reminiscent of Bush talking about Saddam) (then he says that it is better that they defeat Phil now, and let the enemy do the suffering. This is later applied to Alexander III.)
The other Flaminuses, the Scipios, and Cato, and all the other Censors and Consuls supported this policy in word and deed during the crucial period. This saw Spain, Liguria, Greece, Thracia, Asia Minor, etc fall to Rome and took the wind out of Alexanders successors.
I claim that this period, when Rome gradually went to defending foreign Allies to embarking on permanent foreign conquests in order to eliminate threats, was the real beginning of imperialism.
The American parallel depends on how they decide to hold down the regions that threaten them, in this modern age I credit them with more subtlety than military occupation, but I'm sure they will put in place an American puppet regime backed by overwhelming firepower which will amount to the same thing. Or maybe everything will be fine and the Iraqis will joyfully be praising Bush as a liberator 10 years from now....yeah, right...
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