Duckk wrote:And I'm sure the US has multiple war plans for invading China. That does not constitute a foreign policy. That's just good contingency planning.
No it doesn't. My apologies. I got a little carried away with my admonishment of the League government. Okay, a lot. Frankly, I don't understand it. It seems to be a government too big for its britches. No balance of powers and the President is only a figurehead.
Since my admonition is steeped in passion and since passion is long-lasting...
Your comparison is tepid at best. It is only good contingency planning in the face of an existing foreign policy. Contingency planning that would be metered and administered under our
functioning foreign policy and diplomacy. Something that the League would never do.
I also remind you one of the Mandarins, Innokentiy Kolokoltsov, is the Permanent Undersecretary of Foreign Affairs. Since he's a Mandarin, his office must have a significant utility to the League's operation.
Too Significant of a utility.
I can't argue that the position is there Duckk, but the fact that one of the Mandarins wields its power relegates it to so much of the League's other
dead letter acts.
For such ideals as a functioning foreign policy a Constitution has to enjoy a balance of power and checks and balances. Surely you are not suggesting that the League's government has either. I've seen no evidence there's even a functioning government. The foreign policy of the League's is what the Mandarins say it is. Heck, the Constitution of the League's is what the Mandarins say it is - that is how they were able to reinterpret Beowulf's obligation to them during Operation Raging Justice during peace.
Also, read chapter 34 of AoV. There, one of the characters describes the official and unoffical foreign policies of the League.
Thanks. I shall. I read in a thread some time ago the mention of a foreign policy but no reference. Your suggested reading must be it. Again, thanks.