Whatever the case, let's just hope it brings Libya and the world as a whole closer to peace.
Adam,
I think that people my age (60s) will look back and think we have lived through a golden age.
I recall in the 60s/early 70s that people could travel in VW campers from Beirut to India across countries now so strife torn and unstable as now to be effectively no-go areas.
A period of cheap air fares is sliding away and travel will become more difficult.
I see no easy resolution to the issue of Islamic fundamentalism and there is a potential rift of fire from the borders of China, through the "Stans" in what was southern USSR, north south through the Levant, and then across the Mahgreb. Along the whole length of that line Muslim countries rub against western countries, and if fanaticism should spread...
Factor in failed or failing states (Pakistan, Iraq, Afghanistan) and the influence of a nuclear Iran..
And then what of israel - increasingly questioned in regard to her policies, and with unrest all around her - Syria, Egypt, Yemen... Saudi?
Add to that climate change and the potential for huge population moves (akin to those around the time of the fall of the Roman Empire (Huns, Visigoths, Vandals etc) motivated by a search for water, rising oceans reducing available land, poor harvests, aridity etc and you have a recipe for chaos and war.
The Cold War (for all its implicit tensions) actually produced a very stable political climate globally - I cannot see that returning.
If the Eurozone collapses and the world recession continues what will be the effects on the liberal democracies? The US can turn inwards (isolationism) but what would that do to Russia's reawakening interests internationally, and what of China stretching its limbs. What would the effects be on the Pacific rim?
While I hope for peace, as a student of international politics, my expectations are of a much bleaker, nastier future... I just hope that some conflict does not lead to a nuclear exchange (India/Pakistan; Israel/Iran) or that terrorists never get their hands on and explode a dirty bomb - I think that would change everything.
I suppose I actually believe that what is going on in the Mahgreb and among other Arab states is not something to be hopeful of, but to be regretted. What sign did the US send in abandoning its ally Mubarak (who was also useful to israel - to support uncertainty? Gaddafi and his fellow dictators may not have been nice but at least they brought an element of stability and you knew what and who you were dealing with... no, I just don't know.
Sorry to be so depressive...
Phil
Adam,
I think that people my age (60s) will look back and think we have lived through a golden age.
I recall in the 60s/early 70s that people could travel in VW campers from Beirut to India across countries now so strife torn and unstable as now to be effectively no-go areas.
A period of cheap air fares is sliding away and travel will become more difficult.
I see no easy resolution to the issue of Islamic fundamentalism and there is a potential rift of fire from the borders of China, through the "Stans" in what was southern USSR, north south through the Levant, and then across the Mahgreb. Along the whole length of that line Muslim countries rub against western countries, and if fanaticism should spread...
Factor in failed or failing states (Pakistan, Iraq, Afghanistan) and the influence of a nuclear Iran..
And then what of israel - increasingly questioned in regard to her policies, and with unrest all around her - Syria, Egypt, Yemen... Saudi?
Add to that climate change and the potential for huge population moves (akin to those around the time of the fall of the Roman Empire (Huns, Visigoths, Vandals etc) motivated by a search for water, rising oceans reducing available land, poor harvests, aridity etc and you have a recipe for chaos and war.
The Cold War (for all its implicit tensions) actually produced a very stable political climate globally - I cannot see that returning.
If the Eurozone collapses and the world recession continues what will be the effects on the liberal democracies? The US can turn inwards (isolationism) but what would that do to Russia's reawakening interests internationally, and what of China stretching its limbs. What would the effects be on the Pacific rim?
While I hope for peace, as a student of international politics, my expectations are of a much bleaker, nastier future... I just hope that some conflict does not lead to a nuclear exchange (India/Pakistan; Israel/Iran) or that terrorists never get their hands on and explode a dirty bomb - I think that would change everything.
I suppose I actually believe that what is going on in the Mahgreb and among other Arab states is not something to be hopeful of, but to be regretted. What sign did the US send in abandoning its ally Mubarak (who was also useful to israel - to support uncertainty? Gaddafi and his fellow dictators may not have been nice but at least they brought an element of stability and you knew what and who you were dealing with... no, I just don't know.
Sorry to be so depressive...
Phil
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