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	They are not mutually exclusive. Ok, the economic war against Iran has not, until now, been fought with weapons, but most wars that American military have engaged in since WWII have been, at least to some degree, economic wars.
		
			
			
				
					  Originally Posted by poop I'm talking about military expenditures and military conflicts. You're talkng here about economic war, which is not the same thing. 
 
 
	I think this is way too simplistic. I think the goal of sanctions against Iran is to hurt their economy, which in turn impacts on their military capabilities. If USA wanted Iranian people to overthrow their government, then they would be funding and arming internal opposition groups, like they did in Syria.
		
			
			
				The goal with the sanctions is to make the Iranian people so miserable they overthrow their government,
			
		 
 
 
	I suspect you think Solemani is actually revered amongst these people. I don't think that's true. I think the opposite is true. Solemani was responsible for crushing uprisings in Iran, he was hated by a lot of people and there were celebrations when news broke. Those celebrations were somewhat muted when they remembered they still have to worry about those in power who remain alive and well. The people on the streets "mourning" are probably doing so under duress. I do not know this, it's what I suspect. I find it hard to believe that Iranian people could actually celebrate this guy. I suspect a lot of people feel this guy got what he deserved and hope his successor is less brutal.
		
			
			
				When Trump killed Sulemani, millions of Iranians instantly forgot how much they hate their own government and remembered how much they hate America.
			
		 
 I don't think Trump gives a fuck about impeachment. He's not going to be removed from power, we all know it. Impeachment is only something to worry about if your own party supports it. Otherwise it's just theatre.
 
 
 
	I'm in no doubt they're spending more than they need to in order to maintain their dominance, but I have no idea if their spending is unsustainable.
		
			
			
				I agree, but like I said there's no-one who can threaten them anyways. Even if their military budget were cut by 50%, they'd still be spending twice as much as the next biggest spender.
			
		 
 
 
	idk about Korea and Vietnam, but Iraq, USA certainly did benefit economically, assuming Saddam Hussein was actually trying to sell his oil in Euros. That sent a message out to every world leader that if you try to replace the dollar as the world's petrocurrency, then assassination is a serious risk.
		
			
			
				You would have a hard time convincing me that the US benefitted at all economically from Korea, Vietnam, or Iraq. Otoh, the costs of those wars are certainly much easier to estimate and they run into the trillions.
			
		 
 How much is the dollar petrocurrency worth to the American economy? I'd wager it's in the trillions.
 
 
 
	True, but it's another matter to argue they made a mistake. Perhaps they have been bought off. People in these positions are a lot smarter than I am, and a lot more psychopathic. I can't get into their heads.
		
			
			
				I also wouldn't put too much faith in the wisdom of our dear leaders. There's plenty of occasions in the past when leaders have done things that clearly weren't in their country's best interests.
			
		 
 
 
	Yeah, because of corruption. They could likely make it for a couple of million, but that benefits the taxpayer, not the shareholder.
		
			
			
				The drone the Iranians shot down a few months ago cost $123 million.
			
		 
 
 
	I wasn't suggesting you can. I'm just saying that the money lost in training a soldier who dies is peanuts to a government, even if as many as 20% are being lost, which is a huge number. Ok so it's $100b to train a million soldiers. So if 20% were killed in action, then it cost $100b to train 800k soldiers.
		
			
			
				Obviously you can't fight a war with 8 soldiers.
			
		 
 Meanwhile, the average hurricane costs $20b. Seriously, we're talking peanuts here in the context of military and government spending.
 
 
 
	I'm sure with the right tactics, we could defeat them without too much economic hardship on our end.
		
			
			
				 Iran is not a pushover the way Iraq was, and the terrain is more like Afganistan than Iraq.
			
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