Russia Wants War...look How Close They Put Their Country To Our Bases Lol

Discussion in 'OFF TOPIC SUBJECTS' started by CULCULCAN, Oct 16, 2022.

  1. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    Christopher Buckley

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    ·

    One of my old posts from 2016:

    The USA has 800 military bases worldwide yet mainstream media broadcasters
    including the BBC, SKY, CNN, FOX NEWS etc portray Russia as the aggressor.

    Do you ever get the feeling you're being lied to?

    Do your own research instead of blindly believing government propaganda.

    Propaganda means: information, especially of a biased or misleading nature,
    used to promote a political cause or point of view.
    1f642.

    Despite recently closing hundreds of bases in Iraq and Afghanistan
    , the United States still maintains nearly 800 military bases in more than 70 countries
    and territories abroad—from giant “Little Americas” to small radar facilities.
    Britain, France and Russia, by contrast, have about 30 foreign bases combined.

    By my calculation, maintaining bases and troops overseas cost $85 to $100 billion in fiscal year 2014;
    the total with bases and troops in warzones is $160 to $200 billion.

    These costs have heightened debate over whether the United States needs so many bases abroad:
    What effect do they have around the world, and are they really making us safer?

    The first step is looking at where U.S. bases are, and where they’re most prevalent.

    For my forthcoming book, Base Nation,
    I compiled a near-comprehensive list of overseas U.S. bases,
    including smaller cooperative security locations (“lily pads”)
    and suspected but unconfirmed sites (“unconfirmed lily pads”).
    Mapped all together, this data, which comes from the Pentagon’s annual Base Structure Report and additional government, news or academic sources, helps to show just how far America’s reach is.

    Italy
    Hundreds of bases in Europe have closed since the 1990s, but the base
    and troop ( 11,500) presence in Italy has been relatively constant.
    Recently, the military has built new bases and expanded Africa-focused operations in Sicily.

    Japan
    During the Cold War, U.S. forces occupied hundreds of bases in Japan and the Pacific
    to surround China and the Soviet Union.
    Since 1995, anti-base protests have escalated in Okinawa,
    where there are still more than 30 bases.

    Honduras
    A “temporary” base has existed since 1982, allowing officials to claim
    there’s no U.S. base in Honduras while circumventing the Honduran constitution’s prohibition
    against a permanent foreign troop presence.
    Some suspect the base’s involvement in a 2009 military coup.

    Burkina Faso
    A “cooperative security location” in Ouagadougou reflects a new generation of small,
    clandestine “lily pad” bases appearing in countries with little previous U.S. military presence.
    At least 11 such bases in Africa host special operations forces, drones and surveillance flights.

    Iraq
    There were 505 bases at the U.S. occupation’s height,
    but the Iraqi parliament rejected the Pentagon’s wish to keep 58 “enduring” bases
    after the 2011 withdrawal.
    U.S. forces have occupied at least five bases since 2014 and are considering more installations.

    Thailand
    The Pentagon rents space at U-Tapao Naval Air Base from a contractor,
    allowing U.S. and Thai officials to insist there’s no U.S. “base”
    and no inter-governmental basing agreement.
    The base was a major logistics hub for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.

    Philippines
    The Philippines evicted U.S. forces from massive bases in the 1990s.
    Since 2002, at least 600 U.S. troops have deployed to help Filipino forces
    combat insurgents from some seven lily pads; 6,000 U.S. troops
    have operated temporarily under the cover of military exercises.
     

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