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09-07-2009, 08:51 PM | #1 |
Doctor Wtf
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Yeah, but for how long? and then what?
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09-07-2009, 09:03 PM | #2 |
“Hypocrisy: prejudice with a halo”
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I would say that the operation from an SF stand point should be open ended, without an end point. But the process of sending larger and larger numbers of troops is futile IMHO, unless we go into Pakistan in a large scale, which I doubt that we could do for numerous reasons.
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09-06-2009, 11:40 PM | #3 |
Doctor Wtf
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Exactly. We (I know, using "we", it is a little grandiose t be including Australia, but we came a long for the ride) went in despite this, and I am still wondering how, when, and even if, we are going to get out again.
Afghanistan eats armies. So far we have been getting off lightly.
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Shut up and hug. MoreThanPretty, Nov 5, 2008. Just because I'm nominally polite, does not make me a pussy. Sundae Girl. |
09-07-2009, 04:11 AM | #4 | |
We have to go back, Kate!
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The Afghan people have the Taliban on one side and our bombs and troops on the other. Meanwhile we're helping prop up a government which is essentially criminal and no more enlightened than the Taliban we're fighting.
We shouldn't be there. At all. We are doing no good whatsoever. We're sending boys to die for nothing.
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09-07-2009, 10:32 AM | #5 |
“Hypocrisy: prejudice with a halo”
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I hate to admit it, but unlike Iraq this does sound more like Vietnam redux.
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09-08-2009, 03:48 AM | #6 | |
“Hypocrisy: prejudice with a halo”
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Timely and speaks to the discussion.
News Analysis Crux of Afghan Debate: Will More Troops Curb Terror? Quote:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/08/wo...terror.html?hp
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09-08-2009, 10:52 AM | #7 |
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Do we have a goal in Afghanistan? Is it just to keep killing Al Q there so they won't hit us here? Is it to eliminate the Taliban? Is it to set up a stable government so we can get out? What is our goal? Do we even have one?
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09-08-2009, 04:37 PM | #8 | |
Read? I only know how to write.
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Same people who also do no planning for the peace in Desert Storm (gave Schwarzkopf no conditions for Saddam's surrender), and who abandoned the 3rd ID with no after action orders when Baghdad fell. Same people who also surrendered Afghanistan to the Taliban due to a complete lack of any military knowledge. The objective remains the same question that so many here refused to ask because of political rhetoric. "When do we go after bin Laden?" Unfortunately wackos said, "America does not do nation building." As a result we must refight the entire Afghanistan war from scratch - this time without local popular support. Expected when political agendas replace and ignore logical thought and the lessons from history. Number one objective - bin Ladan and his allies. But now the country has good reason to believe all Americans are dumb and two faced as George Jr. It makes the bottom line objective that much more difficult and complex. |
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09-08-2009, 05:00 PM | #10 |
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I am not sure that they completely understand the issue.
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09-08-2009, 05:02 PM | #11 | |
We have to go back, Kate!
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Well they did inherit an incomprehensible fuck-up of magnificent proportions. I'm not entirely sure the administration who took you (us) into Afghanistan knew what their actual war aims were.
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09-08-2009, 07:08 PM | #12 |
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Afghanistan was the right move at that time. Period. It was an unconventional fight, one that we prosecuted exceptionally well. Since then, to oversimplify, too many commanders are using what is normally thought of as basic military concepts, and have no real concept of how to prosecute an unconventional fight. Our commanders do basic military concepts exceptionally well TW. We mass and project the proper military power and BLUF, break things and kill people. Non basic military concepts are not well accepted and practiced on the scale that we now need it to be. I think this is a major consideration in why Afghanistan has developed the way that it has.
Kill Bin Laden? Or how bout let's not make him a martyr, how about develop the networks of influence that deny him the human terrain that he influences and recruits from. I'm not saying that is our strategy right now, I'm just throwing that out as an idea of the unconventional, non-basic type of war that we find ourselves. Make no mistake, we are at war. Wether we are in Afghanistan or Iraq, or not. Wether we choose to see it or not. wether we choose to fight or not. War was declared in 2001, well, even before that. As for me, I'd rather fight then lay my head down on the chopping block. I disagree with the people in my country and elsewhere who are pacifists and think that "everything" is warmongering.
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09-08-2009, 07:40 PM | #13 | |
We have to go back, Kate!
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I can see that there was true justification for going into Afghanistan. But the aims of the administration at the time flounder, for me, on the fact that they chose to also to invade Iraq. Iraq hadn't declared war on America, had no connection whatsoever with the 9/11 attacks, had no weapons of mass destruction, posed no threat to America, had no Al Quaeda connections.
I am not a 'pacifist'. I don't believe 'everything' is warmongering. I lost all trust in the war-aims in Afghanistan when Iraq was dragged into the fray. The level of dishonesty and the rush to military action there cast huge doubt in my mind as to what the administration was hoping to achieve in Afghanistan. I think you're absolutely right about the need for a different kind of war. The 'non-basic military concepts' you mentioned. And this is another problem I have with the situation in Afghanistan. Traditional war styles have historically failed in Afghanistan. I do not believe either the American administration, or their allies (my own government included) were clear enough in what they wanted from the action, and how to achieve that action. That's not to say that the soldiers didn;t do a good job. But I think the aims could have been more clearly defined: what was the projected end of the operation? How was that to be achieved? Part one may have been planned and executed well (I'll take your word for that, you're the expert, I am not). But what was the overall aim? Was it to end the threat of Al-Quaeda? To crush the Taleban? To bring democracy? To find and kill Bin Laden? All of the above? Each of those aims would require a different approach. Some are/were served by the approach taken. Others were not. And none of them, I believe, were served or furthered by engaging in a war on multiple fronts unnecessarily. None of this is an attack on the military. It is a criticism of the political war-aims, not the military war-aims.
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09-09-2009, 08:19 AM | #14 | ||
“Hypocrisy: prejudice with a halo”
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Quote:
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09-09-2009, 09:10 AM | #15 |
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DanaC's post explains why the strategic objective is now so difficult, and now involves so many peripheral issues - including the integrity of NATO. The objective has not changed. But complications attached to that objective are now massive, confusing, and may not be achievable.
If not achieved, then we let bin Laden and his peers win – directly traceable to wacko extremism that made decisions based in a political agenda rather than in reality and the lessons from history. The allies conquered WWII Germany. The movie Patton even demonstrates the principles violated in Afghanistan. Patton said he only had six months to establish roads, electricity, phones, and sewers. If not, then the allies lose Germany. It was not fiction. Even after the spectacular military victory, the politicians let America then be defeated by bin Laden's allies. And so we must now refight the entire war all over again - this time with major complications. One must decide whether to concede victory to bin Laden or now spend more than we did in Iraq to achieve the strategic objective. Due to details listed by DanaC, it could easily become that bad. DanaC's post defines what we must correct - why we must sacrifice thousands more American lives - due to gross mismanagement at the highest levels of the American government. |
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