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#241873 - 12/17/07 02:04 AM
I Told You All
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veteran member
Registered: 11/29/06
Loc: PNW
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WASHINGTON — Deeply concerned about the prospect of failure in Afghanistan, the Bush administration and NATO have begun three top-to-bottom reviews of the entire mission, from security and counter terrorism to political consolidation and economic development, according to U.S. and alliance officials. Given the emphasis on Iraq, one thing that could have given President Bush a modicum of respect--the routing of and defeat of the Taliban in Afghanistan--is slipping through his fingers. Robert Gates is trying to get more NATO troops into Afghanistan because more troops are needed. The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, Rep. Ike Skelton, D-Mo., was more direct in assessing possible failure in Afghanistan.
"I have a real concern that given our preoccupation in Iraq, we've not devoted sufficient troops and funding to Afghanistan to ensure success in that mission," Skelton said. "Afghanistan has been the forgotten war.
"Strained by commitments in Iraq, the U.S. military has few troops available to expand its forces in Afghanistan. "It is simply a matter of resources, of capacity," Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Congress this week. "In Afghanistan, we do what we can. In Iraq, we do what we must." Is the government finally saying what I tried to get y'all to discuss re Afghanistan? The US has a reason for winning in Afghanistan! We went there to rid the country of terrorists, the Taliban and Osama bin Laden. That was the basis for the 'War on Terrorism.' What's gone wrong?
_________________________
Tomorrow's just your future yesterday. Craig Ferguson
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#242179 - 12/19/07 08:11 AM
Re: I Told You All
[Re: lizbeth]
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member
Registered: 07/03/03
Loc: varies from day to day
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Your nephew was there, like me there and here, because he raised his hand and took an oath. I know what you really meant was why did we as the United States make the decisions to go there? Well, the events of 9/11 certainly were part of it. THe nature of the Taliban regime and tribal society that spawned it were part of it. The continuing potential threat they posed were part of it.
My concern is not so much why we went, which I believe was completely justified. What concerns me is the inability of some members of our society to distinguish between our justified reasons for going and our dismal failure to execute after we arrived. I was there early in the process and played my own very small role in things. We did the very best we could with the resources we had and in the circumstances under which we operated. Frankly, you guys who don't know what the hell you are talking about can arm chair quarterback us to death and denigrate our performance but we did a DAMN GOOD job!
Political decisions over which we had no influence, let alone control, are responsible for the mess in Afghanistan now. Those decisions are responsible for the squandering of opportunity, resources, and lives in Afghanistan. But...and this is a big deal to me if not to you guys...we went where we were told to go and did what we were told to do. Our mission was to topple the Taliban government such as it was. We succeeded in that effort. The capture or killing of Osama bin laden was a goal but it was never our assigned mission and it was not resourced as such. Don't suggest we failed to do our duty or complete our mission.
_________________________
"America is at that awkward stage. It's too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards." ~ Claire Wolfe
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#242190 - 12/19/07 10:32 AM
Re: I Told You All
[Re: Lawmage]
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Administrator
Registered: 09/01/97
Loc: CT, US
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Political decisions over which we had no influence, let alone control, are responsible for the mess in Afghanistan now. Those decisions are responsible for the squandering of opportunity, resources, and lives in Afghanistan. But...and this is a big deal to me if not to you guys...we went where we were told to go and did what we were told to do. Our mission was to topple the Taliban government such as it was. We succeeded in that effort. The capture or killing of Osama bin laden was a goal but it was never our assigned mission and it was not resourced as such. Don't suggest we failed to do our duty or complete our mission. Lawmage, I believe that you will discover that not only liz, but virtually all critics of the war, agree with your statements. What we find fault with are the continually morphing reasons the administration gave for our reasons for invading Iraq (not Afghanistan!), and the failure of a decent plan to control things once the government had been toppled, which you guys accomplished in very short order. We blame the mess in Afghanistan and the mess in Iraq completely on the administration and your Commander in Chief and the piss-poor planning that went into the decision to attack, not on the performance of our brave troops who continue to risk their lives under abysmal conditions for an administration with its head up its ass who doesn't even provide complete body armor and vehicle armor for you guys. We find this to be an outrage on *your* behalf. Please do not mistake those who are dissatisfied with the administration's poor performance as being critics of the men and women who are doing their best to fight the administration's poor war plan. We do "support the troops" (I'm starting to hate that hackneyed phrase, but we do indeed support you guys whole-heartedly).
_________________________
Helice
Nemo me impune lacesset. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Of all the tyrannies that affect mankind, tyranny in religion is the worst; every other species of tyranny is limited to the world we live in; but this attempts to stride beyond the grave, and seeks to pursue us into eternity."
-- Thomas Paine
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#242196 - 12/19/07 11:12 AM
Re: I Told You All
[Re: Helice]
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Administrator
Registered: 08/01/99
Loc: New York, NY (New York)
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I agree with Helice, and find it astonishing that the American people support the troops far more than Bush-Cheney seems to.
They sent you guys out to accomplish a mission, then basically abandoned you to their appointed political hacks and neocrat hawks who didn't seem to care whether you had proper armor or proper vehicles, and who chose to privatize your security by putting it into the hands of the scumbags at Blackwater, who ride around with better weapons and armor than you have, and make three or four times as much as you.
That must frost you even more than it does me.
The idea that Americans, and I mean almost ALL Americans don't support the troops is as great a lie as has ever been put forward by this corrupt, criminal administration. They are the ones who don't support the troops. But these miserable bastards in the white house would rather blame us than admit to their own mistakes. It's much easier for them that way.
The only way this administration supports the troops is by torturing people who may have some information they want, then denying that we torture anyone because the torture was performed in foreign countries, to whom we handed over our captives.
And the sophistry of that argument, and the pure inhumanity of it is something that will be denied only by the fringe neocrats, not by any real American.
Wolfowitz, Perle, Bremer, all the sadistic chickenhawk neocrats who want nothing more than continuing war in the ME, are far, far less patriotic than the housewife who sends a box of cookies and a cheery letter to a GI.
Edited by Dax (12/19/07 11:21 AM)
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#242218 - 12/19/07 02:55 PM
Re: I Told You All
[Re: Lawmage]
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regular member
Registered: 11/16/04
Loc: Canada
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Hello again Law...as usual you take everything personal (I.E.we are critizising the troops ) when nothing like that was ever mentioned or even hinted at. just read your post again : We did the very best we could with the resources we had and in the circumstances under which we operated. Frankly, you guys who don't know what the hell you are talking about can arm chair quarterback us to death and denigrate our performance but we did a DAMN GOOD job! and then read what everyone had posted...It was the leadership in washington that we raked over the coals and not the troops ...nobody was "armchairing" any military operation as you insist we did ...instead you (the military) had our sympathy when decisions made thousands of miles away negated most of your accomplishments...Afghanistan was solidly under our control , But failure to follow up inevitable led to the mess that that country is in now.
_________________________
Amboss...Nullius In Verba
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#242392 - 12/20/07 09:26 AM
Re: I Told You All
[Re: lizbeth]
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member
Registered: 07/03/03
Loc: varies from day to day
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As Dax said, Afghanistan has as much oil as Baltimore(?) which puts the lie to the claim that we invaded Iraq 'just' to topple Saddam's government Huh? Non sequiter alert... The Taliban is slowly gaining ground in Afghanistan and, I believe, is spreading into Pakistan. Since the Taliban are extremist Muslims, shouldn't they become a part of the 'War on Terrorism' and shouldn't resources be expended on that war and not just on those countries with both terrorists and oil?
Not so fast, Liz. It is not quite correct to say the Taliban is expanding into Pakistan. The Taliban is largely a creation of the Pakistani ISI in the first place, one intended to more or less stabilize Afganistan in the post Soviet withdrawal period. It was formed from among the Afghan refugees in Pakistan and is predominately Pashtun in its ethnic character. As such, it had and still has enormous relevance in Afghanistan but not so much in Pakistan. Indeed, its Pashtun character serves to ensure it will only ever have limited influence in Pakistan except among the Pashtuns of the Northwest Frontier Territory. Pakistan has its own homegrown Islamic extremists, extremist groups cultivated by the ISI for use in the Kashmir conflict with India. These groups have some commonality of interest with the Taliban in so far as they are all militant Islamic groups but those commonalities do not necessarily translate into a unified front. It would be unwise to treat them all as a single cohesive enemy. Their divergent goals means they cannot be addressed with a one size fits all solution. The tenor of your question suggests we are NOT expending resources in Afghanistan or against the Taliban...that is clearly untrue. We have expended an enormous amount of resources there. However, our interests are less directly threatened in Afghanistan and frankly, the threat there does not justify the expenditure of resources on the scale of Iraq. You guys like to play political games and decry everything as being about oil and thats fine...continue to be intellectually dishonest if you like. The simple truth of the matter is that oil is indeed a strategic interest of the United States and it makes the Middle East a region of strategic importance. In short, oil is indeed worth fighting for because our entire way of life and standard of living in the West is inexorably tied to oil. You guys how suggest its not worth fighting for are hypocritical...I don't see any of you volunteering to go live in the Thirld World with its standard of living...which is what we would face in the West without oil. Indeed, I would suggest securing our oil supplies is MORE important than fighting terrorists. Terrorists are an annoyance but they do not in and of themselves represent an existential threat to the West. Significant disruptions in our supply of oil does. Unfettered Islamic extremism has the potential to rise to a similar level of threat and so ought to be addressed but terrorism is only one facet of the Islamist threat. Law, you claim to have knowledge of military strategy--what do you think? Should we pull out of Afghanistan and send those troops into Iraq? Should we give up in Afghanistan and let the Taliban do as they please in the ME?
Liz...I am hurt. The tone of you statement suggests you do not in fact think I have any knowledge of military strategy. No matter...Should we pull out of Afghanistan? At the moment, I would say no. I would suggest a radically different strategy though. I would abandon reconstruction efforts and all the Civili Affairs projects. They are a waste of resources. I would build a handful of large and well fortified bases in the area and use them to support and sustain strictly military operations targetted at the Taliban and its "infrastructure." This would not do the average Afghan a great deal of good in terms of improving his quality of life and in truth might actually degrade it. So what...What it would do is serve our strategic interest in preventing a resurgent Taliban re-establishing a national government and providing a safe haven wherein groups like Al Qaeda can operate freely and openly. Strictly speaking, Afghanistan is not the Middle East. Moreover, the Taliban is not operating outside of Afghanistan and to a lesser extent in the Pashtun tribal areas of Pakistan's NWFT. So, even complete abandonment of Afghanistan to the Taliban does not significantly impact the Middle East except in so far as a provides a safe haven for extremists who may subsequently pose a terrorist threat to ME nations like Saudi Arabia and Jordan. I have noticed before, Liz, that you seem to prefer to conceptualize the Taliban as if it were some regional group eather than a strictly national group with some small spillover into Pakistan. You also seem to prefer to extend the issues of Pakistan and Afghanistan into the Middle East proper...both of those are intellectual errors that will cause you to misidentify not just the actors but also the agendas in the Middle East. As I have suggested elsewhere, I think we have already "lost" in terms of Pakistan and Afghanistan. We are not going to reverse the slide into ever more extremist versions of Islam in those two nations. Instead, we ought to embrace a policy of containment. We ought to focus our efforts on strengthening India and moderating Iran with the ultimate goal of normalizing relations there and allowing the Iranians to absorb some of the spill over. The predominatnly Sunni tribal groups of Pakistan and Afghanistan have little affection for the Persian Shiites of Iran...we can use that scism to our advantage.
_________________________
"America is at that awkward stage. It's too late to work within the system, but too early to shoot the bastards." ~ Claire Wolfe
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#242431 - 12/20/07 06:25 PM
Re: I Told You All
[Re: Lawmage]
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Administrator
Registered: 08/01/99
Loc: New York, NY (New York)
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LAWMAGE: Terrorists are an annoyance but they do not in and of themselves represent an existential threat to the West I feel compelled to ask, after reading this statement, why we are always told we are fighting the "war on terror"? How about the "war for oil"? How about the "war for our way of life?" How about the "war to keep everyone in Hummers?" Are you really risking your life, and the lives of those in your unit, to fight a war on terror that is not a threata to the west? It's an astonishing admission on your part, and if true does more to condemn the Bush administration than I, or any of my "secular-progressive" colleagues could possibly do. If "terror" isn't a threat to us, why the f*ck are we there? And I think you mean "essential" rather than "existential" threat to the west, because if it were existential, we wouldn't give a damn what they do.
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