>To get your nuclear war example you have to go back 62 years. The Germans, Japanese, and Soviets were all behaving much more monstrously than the United States at that time. If we meet on your playing field I could argue that the US wasn't starving millions of people and working millions more to death like the Soviets did, or using gas chambers and death camps like the Germans did, or doing all the sickening things with torture and mass murder that the Japanese were doing in China or Korea in those days. You weaken your case when you start dragging in the actions of generations who have long since been dead.
First of all, I don' think I weaken any case by pointing out that we used nuclear weapons. We did, and 62 years is not ancient history. We have demonstrated that we are ready to make preemptive strikes and have not ruled out nukes which we continue to make and improve. In fact, we have specifically made it a point to create nukes that we claim are small enough and specific enough (bunker busters) to use in a strategic way.
<On edit, if you want to play that game, just about every nation on the planet comes off looking worse than the US, since we become exempt from everything after you go back a little past 200 years. Compare our crimes with those of Italy, for example, or Iraq. Remember Tiberius and Hammurabi?
It's not a game. It's an issue of how we are viewed by the rest of the world. And if your bring up Tiberius and Hammurabi, I think it is you are playing a game. And a disingenuous one at that.
By the way, when has the US used biological weapons?
WIKIPEDIA: "China and North Korea, who accused the United States of large-scale field testing of biological weapons, including the use of disease-carrying insects<3>, against them during the Korean War (1950-1953). Their accusation is substantiated by Stephen Endicott and Edward Hagerman in 'The United States and Biological Warfare: secrets of the early Cold War and Korea' (Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1998)."
ALSO:
http://www.kimsoft.com/2000/mbc.htmALSO: Gen. Amherst against Native Americans with blankets infected with disease (More games, if you wanna call it that)