A Call for Foreign Intervention
The world as we know it is a tumultuous place of anarchy, malevolence, and controversy occasionally inhabited by able intermediaries and keepers of the peace. Within societies, due to what appear as irreconcilable differences, periods of discrepancy arise. These divergences sometimes can result in bloodshed, war, harsh economic recession, or callous purging of the basic rights of man. Under the milder of these crises, outside involvement is superfluous, for time usually heals the tide conflict, and foreign intervention may sometimes only add fuel to the fire of hate. However, when man is alienated from his basic rights and left unable to break free, it is the obligation of those sovereignties in able position to come to the aid of the torn people using any means necessary, and not to rest until harmony has been restored. Otherwise, the end of a people may be at hand, and the ignorance of the world may be more heinous than the problem itself. This imperative is evident among the myriad of civil conflicts in the ocean of time, each obstruction but a drop among countless others. Yet certain controversies of scandalously monumental magnitude sometimes stick out among scores of others because of their overwhelming heinousnes
Therefore, there is a call for decisive action. The United States should support the independence of Kosovo so they can be free to live without fear of being exterminated, and so that they may unite with Albania who they truly are meant to be with. The United States has found itself at the point where its diplomatic demeanor has not solved the problem. It needs to forcibly support the Kosovo independence, possibly with more bombings, and increased trade sanctions, for the security of a race of people depends on our assistance. This is no the time for political bias and political correctness to interfere with the basic rights of man. We, being the superpower of the world are obligated now to come to the aid of a helpless people, and to secure the democracy we have always claimed to value so greatly. Not until the very end of the war when Nazi territory was invaded, did the Allies really begin to help the Jews and other victims of the Nazis, to finally put an end to this conflict that on far too long. When they invaded the bounds of the Third Reich at the end of WWII, the Allies finally liberated the concentration camps. It was only then that relief was provided to the people who had far to long been oppressed by their fellow countrymen. It was then that the much belated, much awaited intervention arrived, when the Nazis were crushed, and the rights of men were restored. Adolf Hitler and the Nazi party had risen to power in Germany, in the 1930's. They dreamed of their own perfect society where the Aryan race was the victor among the world. The Jewish people were seen as a threat to that society of perfection, for the Nazis viewed civilisation as a battle of races, in which one would have to transcend the rest. The Allies also missed other important opportunities for intervention. They possessed the prospect of bombing the death camps at Auschwitz and the railways leading to them. They clearly had the chance, for bombers regularly flew near Auschwitz on route to nearby targets where they performed heavy bombing in the surrounding areas. This really was a perfect opportunity because the camps had taken eight months to construct, and due to the war conditions at the time of opportunity in 1944, they could not have been rebuilt. Yet despite that, the opportunity was never seized, nor were many others very similar. This is an all to familiar image of the Nazi atrocities upon the Jewish people of the Holocaust, and the willingness and yearning of the Jews for care to be shown, for their savior to come, and for the day to come when Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich of Nazi Germany would become but only a page in a textbook. While this may has temporarily ended the persecution of the ethnic Albanians, it really has accomplished little. The stand that the Americans and much of the international community had taken was that while they strongly opposed the Serbian oppression of ethnic Albanians, they did not favor the independence of Kosovo either. Therefore, this leaves Serbia in a political stalemate. For while Slobodan Milosevic
Some common words found in the essay are:
, Slobodan Milosevic, Rafael Trujillo, Treaty Orginisation, Third Reich, Jews Holocaust, Hitler Nazi, WWII Allies, Albanian Kosovo, United America, ethnic albanians, third reich, basic rights, american spirit, independence kosovo, jewish people, nazi germany, jews denied, civil conflicts, intervening reaffirming,
Approximate Word count = 2071
Approximate Pages = 8 (250 words per page double spaced)
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