🟨 TEXTO-BASE.
CAN THE SPREAD OF WAR BE STOPPED?
The Washington Post. Jan. 04, 2024 (By David Ignatius)
At the dawn of 2024, we should recognize that violence is ravaging our planet and the mechanisms to prevent it are failing badly. U.N. peacekeeping resolutions are routinely vetoed by combatants or their protectors; “deterrence” doesn’t deter Russia, Hamas or the Houthis. The “rules-based order” that President Biden proclaims has become a slogan rather than a fact.
The folly of war is the belief that it solves problems. Israelis and Palestinians have been battling for more than 50 years without gaining lasting security. Russia’s unprovoked war in Ukraine began as a fever dream of President Vladimir Putin. He failed to conquer Kyiv, thanks to brave Ukrainian resistance, but the bloody war of attrition has cost Russia an estimated 320,000 casualties and Ukraine an estimated 170,000 to 190,000.
The biggest national security question for 2024 and beyond is how to craft new mechanisms that would actually combat the spread of war. Drums are already beating for future conflicts that would be far more deadly even than the current round: a battle between the United States and China over Taiwan, for example, or a military campaign to stop Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.
As we think about avoiding future wars, a good guide is President Dwight D. Eisenhower, a heroic commander in World War II and a determined opponent of what he called the “military-industrial complex.” “I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity,” he said in 1946.
“The only way to win the next world war is to prevent it,” Ike said in 1956 as president. He succeeded in avoiding a nuclear catastrophe, and every subsequent commander in chief has echoed his message. The latest version was President Biden’s reported avowal with Chinese President Xi Jinping that “a nuclear war should never be fought and can never be won.”
Under its nuclear umbrella, the United States pays lip service to conflict resolution. But in reality, we’ve been an enabler of limited wars nearly as much as Russia, thanks to use of the U.N. veto power. When Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, the U.N. Security Council immediately crafted a resolution calling for withdrawal; Moscow vetoed it. In December 2023, as the civilian death toll in Gaza climbed toward 20,000, the Security Council crafted a cease-fire resolution with broad support. Washington vetoed it.
Yes, I know, there are reasons to oppose a cease-fire now in Gaza. Hamas remains a threat; Israel has killed less than half of the CIA’s prewar estimate of the group’s 20,000 fighters. But Israel doesn’t have a good plan for obliterating the rest and “winning” this conflict. Israel needs the United States as a stabilizer and bridge-builder in Gaza, not just an arms dealer.
The United States embraces the “rules-based order” when it suits its purposes. When President George W. Bush wanted to wage a misconceived war against Saddam Hussein in Iraq, he steered around U.N. objections; when he wanted to battle the Taliban in what proved a fruitless 20-year war in Afghanistan, he used the shopworn authorization of military force from Sept. 11, 2001, along with a beefy coalition from NATO. The United States insists on the primacy of international law but won’t join the International Criminal Court for fear its officials might be targeted.
America has often invoked its values in going to war or supporting insurgencies. That interventionist spirit is infused with idealism, and often I’ve shared it. But it has led to an almost unbroken chain of U.S. involvement in conflict overseas, from Vietnam to Central America to the Balkans and, most of all, to the Middle East.
Putin is wrong about most things. But there was an element of truth in his 2015 address to the United Nations about the effects of U.S. intervention in Iraq, Syria, Libya and Egypt: “Rather than bringing about reforms, an aggressive foreign interference has resulted in a brazen destruction of national institutions and the lifestyle itself. Instead of the triumph of democracy and progress, we got violence, poverty and social disaster.”
Because the United States has been so willing to intervene abroad to help its friends and values, it creates a kind of moral hazard for smaller, weaker countries or political groups. They start wars they can’t finish, expecting the United States will come to their aid. That was true in the Balkans in the 1990s and in the Middle East during the Arab Spring of the 2010s, and I fear it might become true again as Israel moves toward a direct confrontation with Iran. America isn’t good at saying no.
🔗 Texto adaptado de: Can the Spread of War Be Stopped?. The Washington Post. Disponível em: washingtonpost.com. Acesso em: 04 jan. 2024.
🟨 QUESTÃO 27. In the fragment: “I hate war as only a soldier who has lived it can, only as one who has seen its brutality, its futility, its stupidity”, the word “one” refers to:
A) The number one, referring to the soldier.
B) The number one, referring to the war.
C) The pronoun someone, that was reduced to the form one.
D) The pronoun someone, since it brings a negative connotation.
E) The adverb one, referring to the verb seen.
Gabarito: C
🧭 1️⃣ Leitura orientada
A questão cobra o valor gramatical e referencial da palavra “one” no trecho citado. O foco está em identificar se “one” funciona como número, advérbio ou pronome, e a que elemento do discurso ele retoma.
📝 2️⃣ Análise técnica das alternativas
A) Errada. “One” não tem valor numérico no trecho. Não indica posição nem quantidade relacionada ao soldado.
🚩 Pegadinha da banca: confundir o pronome “one” com o numeral.
B) Errada. “One” não retoma “war” nem funciona como numeral ligado ao substantivo.
🚩 Pegadinha da banca: associação forçada com um substantivo próximo.
C) Certa. “One” funciona como pronome indefinido, equivalente a “someone”. Ele retoma a ideia de “a person who has seen”, evitando a repetição de “a soldier” ou “a person”.
🚩 Pegadinha evitada: reconhecer o uso clássico de “one” como pronome genérico.
D) Errada. Embora “one” possa equivaler a “someone”, ele não carrega, por si só, conotação negativa.
🚩 Pegadinha da banca: atribuir valor semântico inexistente.
E) Errada. “One” não é advérbio e não modifica o verbo seen; ele exerce função nominal.
🚩 Pegadinha da banca: erro de classificação morfológica.
🚩 3️⃣ Armadilhas da banca
1) Confundir one (pronome) com one (numeral).
2) Buscar conotação emocional onde há apenas função gramatical.
3) Ignorar o papel de “one” como recurso de evitação de repetição.
🧠 4️⃣ Resumo B3GE™ Master
No trecho, “one” substitui a expressão “someone / a person”, funcionando como pronome indefinido para evitar repetição. Não tem valor numérico nem adverbial.
Gabarito: C