^^ I suppose it's easier for you to post nonsense than address the legitimate points I've made.Let me break it down for you, engineer:1. Barack Obama has clearly stated that Afghanistan is the "central front" in the War on Terror overseas contingency operation. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cug26zopm8c
9/17/2009 3:22:38 AM
9/17/2009 12:49:22 PM
alright, this is just retarded and no one is this stupid. whose alias is this?
9/17/2009 12:53:39 PM
Actually, leave America or go to Switzerland. The rest of the world is THIS stupid.
9/18/2009 1:55:43 PM
Yeah, like those stupid NATO countries.
9/18/2009 3:41:32 PM
Switzerland aint in NATO, nice try though.
9/19/2009 2:21:54 AM
This war will take Decades, not years. They just dont want to tell everyone that.
9/19/2009 10:38:56 AM
^^ Hahaha, no shit. I assume that's why you singled it out. Of course, citing the neutrality of a historically neutral nation that never deploys it's military is an idiotic yardstick to use when arguing that a specific troop deployment is unjust.
9/19/2009 6:09:23 PM
McChrystal: More forces or 'mission failure'Top U.S. commander for Afghan war calls next the 12 months decisiveupdated 12:38 a.m. ET, Mon., Sept . 21, 2009
9/21/2009 6:57:22 AM
I made a long post. Are you going to debate points or sit in here and talk trash all day?
9/21/2009 7:27:07 PM
^^they won't be. can't he just move unilaterally?i mean, historically, it's permissible, right?
9/21/2009 10:40:24 PM
Weimar Republic anyone
9/22/2009 11:33:59 AM
^^ To what historical move are you referring? The latest:Obama vs. McChrystal: How to Fight the War...or Why?September 22, 2009
9/22/2009 11:45:49 AM
9/22/2009 7:55:09 PM
^ So, the majority should rule?Military growing impatient with Obama on Afghanistan
9/23/2009 8:29:30 AM
^^so, regular civilians ought to have the say, rather than military generals on the ground there?Oh, ok.[Edited on September 23, 2009 at 8:59 AM. Reason : dasdfasda]
9/23/2009 8:56:11 AM
9/23/2009 1:15:10 PM
i really really hope obama does not get suckered in by the war hawks on this one. aka lyndon johnson'ed
9/25/2009 4:33:06 AM
watching 60 Minutes right now...the new commander McChrystal or something like that seems like he really has his shit together...emphasizing less killing enemies, and more winning over the Afghani people...pretty interesting
9/27/2009 7:25:51 PM
^ I was watching that too, and I loved that quoteSounds like he has a good plan together. Hopefully he will be successful in his attempt to win the respect of the people.
9/27/2009 8:38:55 PM
9/30/2009 1:57:59 PM
i hope you people are happy...http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/asiapcf/10/04/afghanistan.troops.killed/index.htmleveryday more blood
10/4/2009 10:55:50 AM
I haven't read this threadand even aside from why it's important to succeed in afghanistan for the sake of afghanistan...and why if we had cooperative regimes in iraq and afghanistan, it would afford us more leverage over iran...has anyone considered that we're fighting the Taliban, and that they don't exist strictly in Afghanistan (and that we don't fight them strictly in Afghanistan, for that matter)? Does anyone really want a nuclear Pakistan with militant, extremist Muslim control?
10/4/2009 2:44:53 PM
10/4/2009 3:11:56 PM
10/4/2009 3:28:58 PM
You have to understand the region though. Google won't quite do that for you. The Northern portions of Pakistan are tribal, extremely rural and the Pakistani government doesn't have much reach there at all. They somewhat ignore the Taliban's existance there but its not like nuclear weapons are growing on trees all over Pakistan either. They are all securely stored in regions of the nation that are completely controled by the government. These tribalesque factions of militants have no chance of "taking over the nation overnight". Any mention of that is simply another example of a common occurance: American media fear mongering to sell a story.[Edited on October 4, 2009 at 3:54 PM. Reason : pakistan doesn' control the north, they dont try to,they could if they wanted to. no threat to them]
10/4/2009 3:53:14 PM
Didn't Pakistan's secret intelligence force create or at least nurture the Taliban?
10/4/2009 4:00:45 PM
^^Oh no, I'm fully aware that the many parts of the country are very much the "wild west", a sort of no-man's land. I agree with the majority of your last post, and even that there is little or no danger of the Taliban "taking over the nation overnight", but that isn't what I was arguing to begin with. I'm saying that, among other reasons to stay in Afghanistan, there is the stabilization of Pakistan angle to consider, which I think is a very legitimate, viable point.My overall point was that we are essentially fighting Al-Queda organizations and the Taliban. If you think that we should just leave them all alone, that's a seperate argument. If we're going to be fighting them, then pulling out of Afghanistan is a foolish proposition.^ They nurtured them in the Taliban's early days. Now it's more of a blind-eye and/or appeasement/compromise relationship.[Edited on October 4, 2009 at 4:08 PM. Reason : ]
10/4/2009 4:04:30 PM
We should definitely pull out of Afghanistan. We have no obligation to them whatsoever. They hit us first. We do have an obligation to rebuild Iraq, though.
10/4/2009 4:09:22 PM
Absolutely, regarding the latter.Regarding the former, it has little to do with obligation. I'm more concerned with self-interest.
10/4/2009 7:35:11 PM
Whoops, signed in under my roommate.[Edited on October 5, 2009 at 12:30 PM. Reason : See above]
10/5/2009 12:28:50 PM
As stated by Just War Theory: when a citizen becomes a soldier, he gains the right to kill while at the same time his right to live is revoked. Civilians, who by there very nature are non-combatants, do no give up their right to live. To logically extend upon this matter - if we do not properly employ soldiers because we fear they will be killed, and in doing so civilians die, we are preventing the military from being an effective tool of our society. From "Army Professionalism, the Military Ethic, and Officership in the 21st Century:""The trust in operational commanders’ability to accomplish missions prudently and competently,irrespective of the number of American casualties, must berestored, and immediately so. Without that, few officersaware of the profession’s need to maintain its own uniqueethic will seek command. Ultimately there will be noprofession, only an obedient military bureaucracy with noautonomy, one which responds in an unthinking anduncritical manner to the requests and directives of civilianleaders. We doubt the military effectiveness of such abureaucracy."I bring this up because I'm tired of people bitching and moaning about soldiers dying in Iraq. Not because I don't care about them - quite the opposite. I bitch because when your only concern is a body count and not the accomplishment of the mission, the mission naturally deteriorates until it can't be accomplished. We were so terrified of people dying in Kosovo that we decided that we'd do everything with high-altitude bombing. In the end all we did was destroy a bunch of dummies, and quite possibly killed people who might have lived, had we accepted that fact that PEOPLE IN THE MILITARY GET KILLED. What a novel, shocking concept. By the way, we're still in Kosovo, for those of you who have let that one get buried in the news. Funny how Americans don't pay attention to any conflict that doesn't make page one of the newspaper. BLUF - we can't do our job if smother us in your 'concern' over our fallen comrades, and in the end, that makes their sacrifice all for nothing.Now, onto a SEPARATE topic - the war itself. It has been consistently shown that successful counter-insurgencies require time and investment, both cultural and monetary. Americans lack the ability to think of anything in the long-run; when they don't see immediate results, they automatically assume failure. The war's taking a long time. I got it. You're tired of it. Got it. I hear your words, and they speak to me. Drive on, Turbo.Finally, a little word on violence and war. We live in a world where the only perfection is imperfection. There will always be people, and by extension, countries and cultures, that wish to do harm to others. On the debate as to whether or not 'violence never solves anything,' I merely quote this:""Anyone who clings to the historically untrue -- and thoroughly immoral -- doctrine that 'violence never settles anything' I would advise to conjure up the ghosts of Napoleon Bonaparte and of the Duke of Wellington and let them debate it. The ghost of Hitler would referee, and the jury might well be the Dodo, the Great Auk, and the Passenger Pigeon. Violence, naked force, has settled more issues in history than has any other factor, and the contrary opinion is wishful thinking at its worst. Breeds that forget this basic truth have always paid for it with their lives and freedom.""[Edited on October 5, 2009 at 12:36 PM. Reason : s]
10/5/2009 12:31:21 PM
The current situation in Afghanistan is precisely what Bin Laden wanted. 9/11 could have been an isolated incident, where we learned from our mistakes and effectively defended against terrorist attacks in the future. Instead, we sent an army over, which would drain military capacity, taxpayer money, and human lives over many years. For all intents and purposes, the terrorists have won.
10/5/2009 2:43:46 PM
that's a bingo.
10/5/2009 5:53:01 PM
I would disagree with that statement, simply because for the longest time we never truely responded to mass attacks such as that with military force. Since Vietnam we have, as a nation, been rather loath to commit ourselves to prolonged engagements. I'm pretty sure an "oh shit" went through quite a few heads when we sauntered on over.That's not to say they haven't adapted and overcame, or that they simply rolled over. Just that I'm sure us coming over there was not factored in to their original plan.
10/5/2009 6:10:39 PM
since this is becoming the generic Afghanistan thread:
10/5/2009 6:28:16 PM
10/5/2009 6:35:31 PM
10/5/2009 7:33:29 PM
10/5/2009 7:35:51 PM
Dammit. I meant to quote Hawthornes "oh shit" line.
10/5/2009 7:43:38 PM
This is the bottom line for me concerning the explanation I need from Obama and many other Democrats: During the campaign, Obama and Company mercilessly bludgeoned Bush with Iraq, claiming that Afghanistan--not Iraq--was the "central front" in the War on Terror overseas contingency operation. The Obama campaign and its surrogates incessantly made this point and you know they did.If Obama's (and others') position concerning Afghanistan has changed, I want to know (1) why, (2) how, and (3) when--at a minimum. Setting all ideological bullshit aside, I don't think this is an unreasonable request.
10/5/2009 8:12:54 PM
This thread was pretty good until it got hacksawed to pieces.
10/5/2009 8:37:18 PM
hey, you're back!from the dead!
10/6/2009 2:53:42 AM
10/6/2009 4:27:12 PM
Split Persists Over McChrystal TestimonyOctober 6, 2009
10/10/2009 4:33:11 AM
I mentioned this in another thread, but it fits here too . . . the policy that Joe Biden is recommending for Afghanistan is pretty much the exact policy that caused Iraq to descend into chaos between 2003 and 2007. You know, for what that is worth.
10/10/2009 8:54:25 AM
^ Yep.Taliban cannot be split from al-Qaeda, Obama warned11 Oct 2009
10/11/2009 7:06:42 AM
Weapons failed US troops during Afghan firefight (AP) – 1 hour ago
10/12/2009 4:43:42 AM
Why was the XM-8 cancelled? Everything I heard about that project was pretty positive.
10/12/2009 2:05:59 PM
^ If Wikipedia has it right. . .
10/12/2009 3:22:19 PM