debatable. or mixed I guess. for all the "humanitarian" angle a lot of it (propping up Kosovo agianst traditional Russian ally Serbia, for example) clearly had ulterior motives.
OK, so there were possibly other motives. None of which alters the fact Milosevic's Serbia instigated three wars in a few years, erected concentration camps, dragged the male townfolk of Srebinica out into the woods and murdered them, turned Sarajevo into a months-long turkey shoot etc etc. given all that, do you
a) support intervention to prevent genocide
b) say "fuck that, intervention is just part of a plot to spread capitalism/NATO/the EU and weaken Russia (already ex-communist and rushing headlong into neoliberalism by this stage, but what the heck?). let the poor bastards burn"
This last comes with an optional extra of claiming the camps didn't really exist (thank you and goodnight, the RCP) or supporting authors who downplay massacres, but later claiming you didn't necessarily support the book (despite signing a ltter describing it as "outstanding"), merely the author's right to publish.
"democracy promotion" is kind of a laugh. yeah like Central Asia where we (oh, I'm American mate, no need to refer to "they", the barbarians

) gladhanded the same dudes who ran tings the USSR so we could build airbases & get access to pipelines & such.
My bad, that should've said East Europe
or Russia itself, clearly the democratic 90s were great for foreign investors if not really so many actual Russians.
Agreed, though some 'actual Russians' benefited enormously. A few thousand at least
even in the places where democracy was "promoted" there's usually a self-serving interest as well. the Ukraine for example - do you think we "promoted democracy" there cos we believe in Freedom & Democracy or cause a pro-Western Europe Ukraine is much preferrable, in terms of U.S. foreign policy, to a pro-Russia one?
Well i'd say it's a bit of both. But until 'they' (in this case Russia) adopt liberal democracy, that's yet to be really tested in the post-Cold war world.
oh yeah human rights. this one yes, to an extent. though that's more the product of American free society (where people can stand up & complain about things like human rights) than any specific "foreign policy".

It all boils down to this - the U.S. is an empire, it does what empires do. Which, I mean, whatever, if Americans supported it cause they wanted their team to kick ass that I could understand. It's this illusion of things like "promoting democracy", of noble ideals & all that tosh, that's really galling. Of course as you allude to the alternatives aren't very appealing either.
I accept a lot of this. My point is that by scoffing at the idea that America, or whoever, will
ever act as anything other than en empire, by reflexively opposing whatever it does
regardless, by sneering, downplaying or outright denying the (occasional) positive consequences of their actions or questioning the motives to such an extent they turn into a negative anyway, you become the sulky teenager of world politics.
At Chomsky's age, that's really not a good look.