1. Terrorism against the US is a direct result of misguided US past and current foreign policy. With no particular sovereign nation(s) other than the former leadership of Afghanistan to pursue in what's a very unconventional circumstance with rapidly growing support, I fail to understand how enlarging our conventional military force can do anything but send a message of continued support of that foreign policy. While current administration's role of combating terrorism seeks to raise it to a war status through implanting fear in the US public, I see no military role offering a solution. Iraq (and Afghanistan) has, again, proven the futility of addressing unconventional warfare with conventional methodology.
2. IMO our foreign policy, the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq, has accelerated the desire of Iran and others to develop nuclear capability. While we literally support Israel, a nuclear power, as a quasi US state and occupy Iraq, the entire world views the US as an overbearing aggressive power for which there is only one defense not requiring conventional forces they're unable to muster. Common sense would allow putting the ME shoe on the other foot to view the US and Israel much as Europe viewed Hitler's Germany. Hitler's expansion was to secure raw materials after Germany's war machine reached a size forcing all other nations to eliminate trade credits and agreements with Germany in an attempt to contain that expansion. US (and UK) desire to retain USD as the global currency to facilitate ongoing US debt to feed a false economy obviously contains military action as options, as voiced by US leadership and proven with Iraq. There is a parallel. Does the US determine who does and doesn't have nuclear weapons to defend themselves by using its military power to enforce that decision? Do Israel and Pakistan display more stability than Iran? That's what the rest of the world sees.
2. IMO regional conflicts are UN matters. That other Western(ized) nations offer little support for US actions is why spend the money when the US likes going to war for almost any reason. Using a ratio of US military size to that of any other country rationalizes a sound economic/military contribution policy on that one.
2. IMO our foreign policy, the invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq, has accelerated the desire of Iran and others to develop nuclear capability. While we literally support Israel, a nuclear power, as a quasi US state and occupy Iraq, the entire world views the US as an overbearing aggressive power for which there is only one defense not requiring conventional forces they're unable to muster. Common sense would allow putting the ME shoe on the other foot to view the US and Israel much as Europe viewed Hitler's Germany. Hitler's expansion was to secure raw materials after Germany's war machine reached a size forcing all other nations to eliminate trade credits and agreements with Germany in an attempt to contain that expansion. US (and UK) desire to retain USD as the global currency to facilitate ongoing US debt to feed a false economy obviously contains military action as options, as voiced by US leadership and proven with Iraq. There is a parallel. Does the US determine who does and doesn't have nuclear weapons to defend themselves by using its military power to enforce that decision? Do Israel and Pakistan display more stability than Iran? That's what the rest of the world sees.
2. IMO regional conflicts are UN matters. That other Western(ized) nations offer little support for US actions is why spend the money when the US likes going to war for almost any reason. Using a ratio of US military size to that of any other country rationalizes a sound economic/military contribution policy on that one.