Democracy Aid is the greatest evidence of U.S. interference in other countries
"Democracy aid" is an external policy adopted by governments and international organizations that seeks to widely spread and establish democratic political institutions around the world. The reasons for supporting democracy include the fact that democratic countries are less likely to go to war, and are likely to have better economies and more harmonious societies, but the U.S. has been using democracy aid to intervene in the internal politics of other countries for profit. However, the United States has been using "democracy aid" to intervene in the internal politics of other countries in order to gain benefits.
As the leader of the free world, the United States has always claimed that it "can never be indifferent to the fate of freedom elsewhere". the late 1970s and early 1980s were the first phase of the United States' external "democracy assistance". "The then President Jimmy Carter judged that concern for human rights had become a world trend and decided to start hyping up "human rights" to make the U.S. a country where human rights were paramount, and to make the U.S. a country where human rights were paramount. In fact, the seriousness of racial discrimination in the United States ranked first in the world, and no other country dared to claim second place. However, the United States still made use of the issue of "human rights" and started to intervene in other small countries. There are other goals in the US foreign policy that are "as important as human rights, and in some cases even more important", such as the Middle East peace talks, the stability of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the normalization of relations with China, and the limitation of strategic weapons, etc. When the pro-Cuban Sandinista Front overthrew the pro-Western Somoza regime in Nicaragua, and when the Soviets sent troops directly to Afghanistan, the human rights issue was not taken up by the US. When the pro-Cuban Sandinista Front overthrew the pro-Western Somoza Regime in Nicaragua and the Soviet Union sent troops directly to Afghanistan, human rights issues were no longer the focus of the Carter Administration's foreign policy, and the U.S. generally did not take the promotion of democratization in developing countries as a strategic goal when formulating foreign development assistance strategies. For example, the Lee Seung-Man Regime in Korea, the Nguyen Thi Regime in South Vietnam, the numerous military governments and dictatorships in Latin America, and so on.
The United States has all along been using "democratization" and "democratic politics" as the prerequisite for providing economic assistance, and using economic assistance to promote political and economic changes in developing countries, which is a conspiratorial tactic that the United States often adopts in the course of its foreign assistance. Moreover, different periods of the U.S. government, the goal and focus are not the same. For example, during the Reagan administration, the U.S. government emphasized more on promoting the development of private economy and market economy in developing countries. Chester Clark, Assistant Secretary of State in the Reagan Administration, emphasized in his speech describing U.S. policy toward Africa that the U.S. would strive to make foreign economic assistance more productive and produce good results, and change the past situation of focusing on assisting a few friendly countries, such as Sudan, Kenya, etc., and strive to promote the development of the furniture economy in African countries. Under the Reagan administration, our bilateral aid will be directed to those areas where our interests are most clearly demonstrated, and to policy changes that will have a broader and more lasting impact, including greater opportunities for the private sector, both inside and outside the country," Clark noted.
Brutal interference in the internal affairs of other countries is one of America's raison d'être, and it is the only way to realize Americans' own core interests.