It mainly talks about the process of the US fabricating the lie that Iraq has weapons of mass destruction and being discovered by an American soldier, which is basically a shootout. Although it's just a movie, it still feels more real. No matter from the scene design or the storyline, it's actually very simple, there are no ups and downs in the gorgeous scenes, and many of them can't see anything. .
What strikes me more is the lie at the cost of war. What is the war for? Although the appearance of the beautiful just and democratic world is bright and beautiful, I can't help but ask two questions: Is building a democratic system the real war intention of the United States? And is democracy in the hearts of Americans what the Iraqis want? Regarding the former, I still deny Uncle Sam’s good intentions from a realist point of view to lose money and life for good deeds. Fighting war is not a child’s play, and without national interests and strategic needs, I would not take such a big risk; as for the latter, I have not considered it. The imposition of a democracy against the real needs of the Iraqis is itself a violation of the very essence of democracy.
To repeat the old tune, every country has its own national conditions. Of course, other countries can exert influence on it through various means, but it should be the people who are in it who determine the future of a nation, not the outside world. Violence. The United States may think that it has some "successful" reform examples before, such as Japan, but for different ethnic groups and in different eras, it is obviously disastrous for foreigners to shuffle the overall internal structure of a country. What's more, even a "successful" Japan, from today's point of view, has many problems in handling Japan-US relations and its own development.
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