[QUOTE=CM]If we are to go off on a tangent so be it. The US accepted (not acknowledged, accepted) in realpolitik terms the official international boundaries of the Soviet Union. It did so internationally and domestically. To say otherwise is illogical. The example of India and Pakistan does not apply as we are not dealing with territorial integrity.[/quote]
I beg to differ, and think you're splitting hairs. You're refusing to acknowledge the fact that no Western nation acknowledged what the Soviet Union did as morally correct. Why did President Eisenhower call upon the Soviet republics to revolt against their masters? And why aren't you addressing the invasion of Yugoslavia, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, and Albania by Soviet forces, the wholsesale destruction of democratic sympathizers, and the installation of puppet regimes led by Communist aparachiks?
Ok now i am highly confused. Now speeches written politically have more weight than actual physical interaction and diplomatic dealings? The US did not bring any international legal measure. Rather it accepted the soviet union as it was even though Poland was a party to the original charter.
Of course it "didn't bring any international measure," whatever that means. Where would the US bring it to force any action against the so-called Butcher of the East, Uncle Joe Stalin, who was responsible for the death of tens of millions of people in lands
he conquered? Can you say, "bad for future international cooperation?"

Does this mean the US accepted the borders? Read what I wrote, above. And besides: what does accepting borders have to do with the fact that the Soviet Union invaded, in the 20th century, the largest percentage of land consumed by any nation on the face of the earth, and killed the largest percentage of its peoples? Please answer these questions. Explain to me how allowing a nuclear power to exist somehow clears that same nuclear power of the endless series of atrocities it committed.
As for the Poles: Do you mean the Polish government forcibly installed by the Soviets after WWII? Or do you mean the one the Soviets installed after ruthlessly repressing the Polish attempt to restore their sovreignty in 1956?
Ironic considering all you have discussed are domestic issues and i have repeatedly called for us to stick to the definition of hegemonies.
Fas, will you get a few good, solid histories of Europe in the 20th century, already? Stop insisting that nations that were conquered by the Soviet Union were simply examples of "domestic repression." Yes, I know this contradicts the case you want to make about the US as the Evil Boogeyman of All Time, but if you won't acknowledge the realities of history, how can expect to be taken seriously in a discussion of it?
Alas here we go again. Now we have comments on my knowledge on history and then we have comments on Nazi germany and Soviet Russia during world war 2 which have not even been mentioned before. I will repeat for the umpteenth time, i am looking post world war 2. The last 60 years.
And I will repeat, because you didn't apparently note it when I mentioned it, earlier: looking over the last 60 years, the Soviet Union's actions in its satellite republics and conquered "Eastern Bloc" constitute a far worse international military hegemony than that of the US. But until you read up on Stalin's Soviet Union, you won't accept that. And you won't read up on it, because the US must be The Great Evil. Every factual misstatement you make about it (and about US history), every attempt you make to duck the issue of other hegemonies of a far worse stripe, only confirms this more.
I would also note that you changed the conditions of discussion. Originally, you stated, "There is not a single decade in the past 60 years where the US has not attacked another country only to further its own political agenda." This was the first mention you made of a 60-year deadline; nothing before that. I should have noted the shift, since I was discussing a much broader timeframe with Sytze. But I didn't note it, because your comment seemed so innocuous. In fact, you didn't finish the shift over to hegemonies only in the last 60 years, until another post of yours, later.
I don't know why you want to shift the hegemonies discussion only to the last 60 years--why the magic cutoff date? Personally, since I wasn't consulted when this change was made, I don't care to see it imposed. As far as I'm concerned, I want the discussion to be about hegemonies in the 20th century.
Deliberate? It is reality. There is only one hegemony today.
Here is eliminated the rest of the US-bashing commercial. Sorry, Fas, but ignoring facts because you feel so passionately about what the US has done to the Islamic world doesn't convince me. You have convinced me, however, of one thing, that I hadn't thought I'd ever believe about you: that you regard the US as the most evil nation on the face of the earth, and will acknowledge no facts that bring this opinion into question.