There's probably a theme, a lesson, maybe some subtext in there, probably about not screwing with Mother Nature (because she screws back), and maybe, just maybe how brute
force military solutions, up to and including dropping a MOAB (the «mother of all bombs,» second only to an atomic bomb in terms of overall yield and destructiveness) in the middle of a city center, might not be the best call.
Not exact matches
The statement, which was issued by the Police Service and the Ghana Armed
Forces said a team of senior police and
military officers from Accra had also been dispatched to Tamale where «they joined the Northern Regional Security Council to hold a durbar with the
military and the police in order to bring lasting
solution to the cause of clashes in the region in particular.»
It used the provision of aid as a benchmark
solution, and then suggested the following: linking aid to limits on
military spending; sending significant
military forces into nations emerging from conflict to reduce the risk of a relapse into violence; providing (and having the ability to back up) a promise that a
military force will intervene when a democratically elected government is threatened by violence.
But you can expect pressure from the United States to get more Canadian water, and who knows, in the future a
solution forced by
military threats is not impossible to imagine.