Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Thailand News and Discussion Forum | ASEANNOW

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Can anyone stop Trump's foreign aggression?

Featured Replies

Most experts who are not compromised, who are not devotees of Trump, and who are not afraid of, or beholden to Trump are convinced that what Trump has done in Venezuela is highly illegal, and a violation of multiple International treaties. In addition it sets a potentially disastrous precedent for other nations such as China and Russia to invade nations at will.

The United Nations seems fairly impotent, and there doesn't look like there's an actor on the world stage who can stand up to Trump and stop his daily nonsense.

He claims this was about drugs and it's quite obvious that bombing the drug boats was simply a pretext to this invasion, and more than likely this is all about oil. How do you pardon a convicted drug smuggler and then just a few weeks later invade a country that's smuggling drugs? Trump doesn't care one iota about drug smuggling.

US President Donald Trump may have done the global community of nations a favour with his military invasion of Venezuela. He has placed a firecracker under the much-vaunted concept of a “rules-based world order”.

It is now time for world leaders to pause and reflect. Does the concept actually work or is it time to press the reset button? Political analyst Kio Amachree makes the point that for 80 years since World War 2 the international political system “rested on a fragile but essential idea: borders are not changed by force, leaders are not kidnapped and power is constrained by law”. When Trump treats international law as an inconvenience rather than a guardrail, the message is clear to the rest of the world: act first, justify later and dare anyone to stop you.” And “Dare anyone” is clearly what Trump is up to.

At his press conference after the kidnap of President Nicolas Maduro, he nonchalantly announced that his administration would “run” Venezuela.

Picture that.

A head of state decides one morning that he will violate the territorial integrity of another sovereign State, remove his counterpart by force and “run” the government of an independent nation. That’s Trump for you. He is like the drunk guy with the biggest pistol in the bar.

In terms of the US War Powers Act of 1973, a sitting president may not commit the country to an armed conflict without the “statutory authorisation” of Congress. On Trump’s orders, the US military has been bombing so-called “narco terrorists” in international waters in what some US lawmakers say are unlawful extrajudicial killings.

Congressman Adam Smith of the armed services committee expressed his fears that there may be more to come after the Venezuela invasion as Trump and his sycophants implement their strategy to dominate the western hemisphere, the so-called Monroe Doctrine.

American author Chris Hedges writes: “Violence does not generate peace. It generates violence.

“If there is one lesson we should have learned in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and Libya, it is that regime change spawns Frankensteinian monsters of our own making.”

Respected academic Professor

Jeffrey Sachs says said Trump, with his unlawful actions, has positioned the US as a “global thug”.

So who is going to stop the global thug? Russia is knee-deep in its invasion of Ukraine. Does it hold any moral authority to admonish Trump over Venezuela?

China is champing at the bit itching to take Taiwan by force. India is just about one incident away from formally declaring war against eternal enemy Pakistan. What about the multi-lateral structures?

The bad news is that almighty Trump is thumbing his nose at all of them.

https://share.google/shFjZIx5Ciu3W7MGy

MW-DQ790_ARENDS_ZG_20150724151031.jpg

1 minute ago, spidermike007 said:

Most experts who are not compromised, who are not devotees of Trump, and who are not afraid of, or beholden to Trump are convinced that what Trump has done in Venezuela is highly illegal, and a violation of multiple International treaties. In addition it sets a potentially disastrous precedent for other nations such as China and Russia to invade nations at will.

The United Nations seems fairly impotent, and there doesn't look like there's an actor on the world stage who can stand up to Trump and stop his daily nonsense.

He claims this was about drugs and it's quite obvious that bombing the drug boats was simply a pretext to this invasion, and more than likely this is all about oil. How do you pardon a convicted drug smuggler and then just a few weeks later invade a country that's smuggling drugs? Trump doesn't care one iota about drug smuggling.

US President Donald Trump may have done the global community of nations a favour with his military invasion of Venezuela.

He has placed a firecracker under the much-vaunted concept of a “rules-based world order”.

It is now time for world leaders to pause and reflect. Does the concept actually work or is it time to press the reset button? Political analyst Kio Amachree makes the point that for 80 years since World War 2 the international political system “rested on a fragile but essential idea: borders are not changed by force, leaders are not kidnapped and power is constrained by law”. When Trump treats international law as an inconvenience rather than a guardrail, the message is clear to the rest of the world: act first, justify later and dare anyone to stop you.” And “Dare anyone” is clearly what Trump is up to.

At his press conference after the kidnap of President Nicolas Maduro, he nonchalantly announced that his administration would “run” Venezuela.

Picture that.

A head of state decides one morning that he will violate the territorial integrity of another sovereign State, remove his counterpart by force and “run” the government of an independent nation. That’s Trump for you. He is like the drunk guy with the biggest pistol in the bar.

In terms of the US War Powers Act of 1973, a sitting president may not commit the country to an armed conflict without the “statutory authorisation” of Congress. On Trump’s orders, the US military has been bombing so-called “narco terrorists” in international waters in what some US lawmakers say are unlawful extrajudicial killings.

Congressman Adam Smith of the armed services committee expressed his fears that there may be more to come after the Venezuela invasion as Trump and his sycophants implement their strategy to dominate the western hemisphere, the so-called Monroe Doctrine.

American author Chris Hedges writes: “Violence does not generate peace. It generates violence.

“If there is one lesson we should have learned in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and Libya, it is that regime change spawns Frankensteinian monsters of our own making.”

Respected academic Professor

Jeffrey Sachs says said Trump, with his unlawful actions, has positioned the US as a “global thug”.

So who is going to stop the global thug? Russia is knee-deep in its invasion of Ukraine. Does it hold any moral authority to admonish Trump over Venezuela?

China is champing at the bit itching to take Taiwan by force. India is just about one incident away from formally declaring war against eternal enemy Pakistan. What about the multi-lateral structures?

The bad news is that almighty Trump is thumbing his nose at all of them.

https://share.google/shFjZIx5Ciu3W7MGy

MW-DQ790_ARENDS_ZG_20150724151031.jpg

Indeed, and Trump has his wish, to be a Dictator, well, sort of, he is a disaster..........😒

Create an account or sign in to comment

Recently Browsing 0

  • No registered users viewing this page.

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.