What are Biden's foreign policies?

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
To be fair, collusion was between Trump and Russia, but it's not as if they found nothing about influence from Russia.
Being a Trumptard or Putin shill is getting harder these days. As time goes by, more and more evidence becomes available that shows how corrupt and oppressive they are. (or were)
 

Choco8

Well-Known Member
Gaslighting was over-used by Trump. It doesn't work any more.
Oh, so they DID find collusion?



I suppose you deny that Navalny was poisoned by Putin's agents too.
Yes, that along with the "Skripal Poisoning". 100% bullshit for gullible liberals who are obsessed with Putin and watch Rachel Maddow.

BTW. Have fun when the Republicans sweep the midterms after Biden's continuing failure to deliver the goods and backtrack on his promises. Maybe he'll finally achieve his dream of cutting Social Security where Obama failed.

Also: Did you get your "$2000 check" yet?

 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Can Biden Finally Put the Middle East in Check and Pivot Already?
The new administration, like previous ones, has a Middle East quagmire. But it’s trying some nuanced moves to break free.

The first test came in mid-February, when Iranian-backed Shiite militias fired rockets at a U.S. air base in northern Iraq, killing a Filipino contractor and injuring a U.S. service member. Since Biden’s inauguration, Iran has targeted not only U.S. forces in Iraq, as it has for years, but also launched attacks against Saudi oil fields, airports, and other facilities.

Biden took time to respond, but there were no unenforced red lines, angry tweets, or saber-rattling rhetoric—just a carefully targeted strike on a Syrian crossing used by Iranian-backed militias to launch attacks across the border on U.S. forces and a muted U.S. Defense Department statement saying, “President Biden will act to protect American and Coalition personnel.”

If Obama was all carrot and Trump was all stick, then Biden seems to favor a healthier mix of engagement and dialogue.


It was a deliberate pawn advance in the administration’s chess game, not a reckless charge. The attack was a warning that the United States was not to be trifled with but was not so severe that it closed the door to diplomacy. Indeed, Biden launched the strikes at the same time that his administration offered to relaunch talks with Iran over salvaging the 2015 nuclear deal, sending a clear message to Tehran that attacks on U.S. personnel or its allies would not be tolerated but that dialogue remained the endgame.



In an earlier post, I transcribed the eight top policy objectives listed by the head of the US State department. The middle east did not make this list. Confronting China was number eight.

But it's not as if the US isn't still in the mix of things. Biden's recent actions (Gabbard called it "unconstitutional", lol) were pretty much the same as before, so, is anything different? Not on the surface. It doesn't seem all that different. Perhaps because the same people and the same problems are still there. Still, though, we went from dumbass Shrub to Obama, both of whom failed to extricate the US, to Trump who -- achieved nothing.

Repeating one's actions and expecting a different result seems to be US policy in the Middle East.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
...that killed "at LEAST 22 people" ( love those new metrics!)

FUN FACT : Obama changed the definition of "militant" to include ALL MALES OF MILITARY AGE IN THE STRIKE AREA. That was his "solution" to the incredible number of civilian casualties from his drone strikes. Creative motherfucker, eh?


Joe Biden : ****killing people overseas***
Resistance : GO JOE! So much better than Trump!
!View attachment 4848638
Reported as spam.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Speaking of propaganda...does any media outlet kiss Biden's ass harder than the WaPo? Calling the meager funds a "shower"? While other countries are giving their citizens MONTHLY payments? It's a fucking joke.

View attachment 4848643
Actually, this is exactly what the US government needs to do right now. Tell us why we shouldn't?
 

Choco8

Well-Known Member
The only people who deny that Skripal was poisoned by Russian agents are Putin and his followers.
lmao. I guess that makes me a "Putin Follower", right? I love this kind of simple-minded amateur-hour McCarthyism. :clap:
Again...there is no actual evidence, only "assertions" pointing to more "assertions".

Hey have you heard about Biden's point man for Iran? Pretty much like the ghouls crowing about the "sanctions crushing the economy".

 

Choco8

Well-Known Member

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
It's a fact. One that makes Obama look bad.

lulz at the biden hobgoblin shooting drone missiles at brown children.

Does that kind of Pravda-propaganda poster-shit work any more?
 

Choco8

Well-Known Member
Actually, this is exactly what the US government needs to do right now. Tell us why we shouldn't?
I think you misunderstood that post. Maybe read it again? I am saying that the WaPo is characterizing the reduced payments from Biden as generous when they are in fact NOT.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
lmao. I guess that makes me a "Putin Follower", right? I love this kind of simple-minded amateur-hour McCarthyism. :clap:
Again...there is no actual evidence, only "assertions" pointing to more "assertions".

Hey have you heard about Biden's point man for Iran? Pretty much like the ghouls crowing about the "sanctions crushing the economy".

Nobody but a Putin follower would believe him, so, I guess you are one.

Don't go near any windows. People who are close to Putin tend to get sucked out of them when they are 9 stories up.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
I think you misunderstood that post. Maybe read it again? I am saying that the WaPo is characterizing the reduced payments from Biden as generous when they are in fact NOT.
Biden and Democratic Congress will be judged according to how well they handle the end days of this epidemic and how well the economy recovers. I think the bill goes a long way to supporting both. If successful, it will cause many GOP tears in 2022.

You: I want a bigger check

Take your complaint to West Virginia.
 

Choco8

Well-Known Member
Nobody but a Putin follower would believe him, so, I guess you are one.
Ladies and Gentlemen : Presenting the McCarthyism Revival Resistance! Mindlessly insinuating that people are "Putin followers" ( whatever the fuck that is) because you are sick of US imperialism and military adventurism and question the narrative presented by the war-machine-backing US media. It's the perfect solution when you don't actually have any facts on your side.

Super Savvy Liberal BidenStans: "Yeah sure we have been lied into every war before, but THIS ONE"S DIFFERENT"
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Ladies and Gentlemen : Presenting the McCarthyism Revival Resistance! Mindlessly insinuating that people are "Putin followers" ( whatever the fuck that is) because you are sick of US imperialism and military adventurism and question the narrative presented by the war-machine-backing US media. It's the perfect solution when you don't actually have any facts on your side.

Super Savvy Liberal BidenStans: "Yeah sure we have been lied into every war before, but THIS ONE"S DIFFERENT"
Hey, you are the one who is mindlessly repeating his lies. Skripal was poisoned by Putin's agents and that's a fact. Assad used Sarin gas on civilians and that was the least of his war crimes. Fact

Don't go near any windows. I'm sure it's all just "coincidence" but politifact has a nice write-up about Putin's murders.

Chris Wallace asked why Vladimir Putin’s critics end up dead. Here are the details

Wallace mentioned Sergei Skripal, a former Russian spy who doubled as a spy for the British government. Skripal and his daughter were the victims of a nerve agent attack in England in March. The British government blames Russia for the attack, which Russia denies.

Wallace also mentioned Boris Nemtsov, a political star with presidential aspirations in the 1990s. Nemtsov supported Putin’s victory in 2000, but became an anti-Putin activist as his fellow young reformer increasingly curbed civil liberties. He was shot in 2015 the day before a march he organized to protest Russia’s economy and military involvement in Ukraine.

Alexander Litvinenko was a former Russian secret service agent. In November 1998, Litvinenko and other FSB officers accused their superiors of assassinating a Russian tycoon. Litvinenko was arrested and eventually had charges dismissed in 2000. Litvinenko was granted asylum in London, where he wrote two books accusing Putin of staging a terrorist attack linked to his rise to power and ordering journalist Anna Politkovskaya’s murder. He subsequently fell ill and died of radioactive polonium poisoning.

Journalists
In January 2016, we tallied journalists whose deaths were classified as homicides by authorities or watchdog groups since Putin assumed office in 2000. The updated count is 38.

(The tally only includes deaths confirmed or likely to be work-related homicides committed in Russia. It doesn’t include murders where the motives are unclear, or journalists killed in war and on other dangerous assignments, like covering the mob or riots.)

Here are some of the most famous cases.

Politkovskaya, who covered human rights abuses by the Russian military in Chechnya, was shot outside her apartment. While five men were convicted of her murder, the judge found it was a contract killing by an unknown person. The European Court of Human Rights determined the court "failed to take adequate investigatory steps to find the person or persons who had commissioned the murder."

Natalia Estemirova, who sometimes worked with Politkovskaya, covered abductions and murders in Chechnya until she became a victim herself. She was kidnapped on her way to work, shot and found in the woods near her home.

Anastasiya Baburova, another journalist, was shot and killed within walking distance of the Kremlin alongside Stanislav Markelov, a human rights lawyer representing Politkovskaya and other journalists critical of Putin.

Yuri Shchekochikhin, an investigative journalist and liberal lawmaker, investigated the Three Whales affair, a corruption scandal that implicated officers across Russia’s secret service. Days before his scheduled meeting with FBI investigators in 2003, Shchekochikhin died in his apartment from an unknown allergen. His medical documents were classified by Russian authorities


Not to mention the poisoning of Novalny.
 

mooray

Well-Known Member
Never liked the "it's not a war if you're going after individuals not connected to the government" angle. Bush Jr. didn't exactly help the world getting lawyers to weasel that loophole. Have some other country come here and bomb Antifa or the Proud Boys and see how that goes over. It'd be stamped as an act of war in two seconds.
 

Choco8

Well-Known Member
Hey, you are the one who is mindlessly repeating his lies
No, actually. My position is that there is no proof that Russia was behind either "poisoning", because to date there is no actual EVIDENCE, only "assertions". I don't even know or care what Putin has to say about it. THOSE are the facts.
 
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