The US wan't obligated to intervene.
If you think people will be "grateful" when we invade, kill a few of them, leave a good portion of their infrastructure in shambles, and then leave, saying "hey, we paid for a lot of stuff we dropped on you, you should be grateful" then you'd better look to your security and disaster preparedness plans.
The US has certainly in many, many instances done quite well aiding and abetting corrupt leaders in return for nice, lucrative contracts for politically connected American companies. (United Fruit and M. A. Hanna being the two biggest in this hemisphere)
So yeah, if we choose to intervene by force in what we designate to be a problem to our security interests, we'd better either pay to clean up the mess, and maybe even improve it a bunch, or else accept that a lot of pissed off people with long memories will want to stick it to us in any way they can.
If you think people will be "grateful" when we invade, kill a few of them, leave a good portion of their infrastructure in shambles, and then leave, saying "hey, we paid for a lot of stuff we dropped on you, you should be grateful" then you'd better look to your security and disaster preparedness plans.
The US has certainly in many, many instances done quite well aiding and abetting corrupt leaders in return for nice, lucrative contracts for politically connected American companies. (United Fruit and M. A. Hanna being the two biggest in this hemisphere)
So yeah, if we choose to intervene by force in what we designate to be a problem to our security interests, we'd better either pay to clean up the mess, and maybe even improve it a bunch, or else accept that a lot of pissed off people with long memories will want to stick it to us in any way they can.
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