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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 6, 2023

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Did the US blow up the Nord Stream Pipeline?

https://seymourhersh.substack.com/p/how-america-took-out-the-nord-stream

That was linked to me and it appeals to my sense of - conspiracy? warmongering? ... But I also don't really understand if it could be true.

What's the consensus here about the pipeline?

(I don't really even care if we discuss the article, it's long and I don't know who the person is - just interested in all kinds of thoughts)

I don't think any of my hypotheses for the NS incident are above 50% probability, tbh, which is not a particularly confident place to reason from. Accidental clathrate gun is like 40%, some combination of West state actors is like 30%, leaving another 10% each for Ukraine, non-state actor explanations, and Russian sabotage. Despite the ink here on sonic buoy-activated detonators, nothing about this necessitates a particularly complex or expensive operation. I do think that conditional on the US being behind it, it is unlikely that Germany was not also in on it. It cuts through a particularly thorny knot for German leadership, taking a decision out of their hands that had no good political options. It also could have been an unwritten part of the July 2021 agreement reached between the US and Germany that had Germany commit to decertifying the pipelines in the event of Russian invasion.

I do think that conditional on the US being behind it, it is unlikely that Germany was not also in on it. It cuts through a particularly thorny knot for German leadership, taking a decision out of their hands that had no good political options.

Do you actually believe USA cares about its "allies" or considers them in any way peers?

It has betrayed pretty much all its "allies" to the point it's not trusted anymore by most of the world, and two quotes of Henry Kissinger explain that:

  • “To be an enemy of America can be dangerous, but to be a friend is fatal.”

  • “America has no permanent friends or enemies, only interests”

Do you actually believe USA cares about its "allies" or considers them in any way peers?

What does it mean for a country to care about another country? Not everyone in the US feels the same way about anything, but I'd venture that a sizeable majority do care about our allies, and a smaller majority do consider them peers. For one thing, many of us look to Europe as an example of good policies. Another partially overlapping group looks to Japan for examples of good governance.

It has betrayed pretty much all its "allies" to the point it's not trusted anymore by most of the world

OK, when has the US ever betrayed Japan? I won't count a reasonable number of spies here because I think basically all nations spy on each other.

I'd be interested in hearing about these "betrayals" more generally because the world has a lot of history and this is one part of it that I haven't heard much about.

Not everyone in the US feels the same way about anything

We are not talking about everyone in the USA, we are talking about USA in practical terms.

It literally doesn't matter what USA citizens feel about Germany, the USA government can do whatever they want in regards to Germany independently of its citizens.

So what does the USA government consider Germany? Not an ally.

I'd be interested in hearing about these "betrayals" more generally

Here's a brief list:

  • Afghanistan

  • The Kurds

  • France

  • Georgia

  • South Vietnam

  • Philippines