In response to rising complaints about the presence of U.S. troops, the
Bush administration is making plans to reduce the number of American
forces in both South Korea and Germany. At present, there are 37,000
U.S.
troops stationed in South Korea and 71,000 in Germany.
The timing of this move is not coincidental. Since the election of South
Korean president Roh Moo-hyun, who took office on February 25, that
country has been making greater and greater strides towards distancing
itself from the United States. In Germany, Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder
has been a highly outspoken critic of U.S. policies towards Iraq; last
fall,
one of Schroeders ministers compared Bushs actions to
those of Adolf Hitler.
So it comes as no surprise that President Bush is taking steps to remove
American soldiers from those two countries but not without
making it quite clear what is motivating the decision. According to the
Washington Times, A senior [administration] official
said the sudden action contains a not-so-subtle message....
Lets just say that if they take [the removal of troops] as a
slight, theyre paying attention, the official said.
Why should anyone be slighted? Bushs temper tantrums are his own
problem.
The president thinks hes making a bold statement by threatening to
bring our soldiers home. If foreign governments no longer want American
troops around, then hell give them what they want and see how
they like it. To which Messrs. Roh and Schroeder should enthusiastically cry, Thank you, President Bush!
For more than a century the U.S. government has sought to control the
world and build its own sprawling empire. From the Philippines to Latin
America, the number of times American soldiers have been deployed to
foreign lands exceeds the number of years our country has existed.
Rather
than making the world safer, continued U.S. intervention in foreign
affairs
most often brings instability, resentment, and hatred.
Its time to stop babysitting the world. The United States can
start
with Germany and South Korea, but the end goal should be that there are
no
U.S. troops on distant soil. Bring the soldiers back home.
Scott McPherson is a policy advisor at The Future of Freedom Foundation in Fairfax, Va.
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