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#16 | |
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[quote=UnderseaLcpl]
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![]() Afghanistan is not Iraq. Afghanistan is much more complex and difficult. As the old saying goes: it is easy to get into Afghanistan - but it is extremely difficult to get out again. The Brits lost one complete colonial army that was considered very modern and well-armed for the standards of it's time, it was completely wiped out, there were almost no survivors. One could have known the problems in advance, the Russians offered to brief the americans on their experiences. But Rumsfeld, like always, knew anything so many times better. And even the US military was clever enough not to be enthusiastic about invading Afghanistan, and thus their limited starting engagement on the ground. But rum,sfeld wanted his party in Iraq, and so silenced every voice in the Pentagon to act with more determination and long-time perspective. The Russians, for their part, also were far from being happy when they say themselves more or less with no other chnace than to go into Afghanistan. what many do not know is that that was no premature hooray-assault with cheers and flying colours. they just did it with determination and stunned NATO with their efficiency and success in the fiorst 12-18 months. But when they had lost the freedom to move in the country at will, they hunkererd down in invincible garrisons and stayed there for the most, like I hear it being described from the Germans as well (I know two officers having to do with that). When they left these strongholds, they liived dangerously. In the Pandjir Valley, they suffered repeated defeats at very high losses in armour and infantry. If there is one man in the US military knowing insurgencies, than it is Patreus - although being smiled about when he was in Levenworth, he effectively is the inventor and father of the new insurgency doctrine that he then implemented in Iraq, and which did not win the war, but brought down violence considerably. Once he has spend some time in Afghanistan and gives his assessment, people better listen very closely to what he has to say. no matter wether it fulfills political demands at home, or not.
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#17 | |||||
Silent Hunter
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#18 |
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#19 |
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Lance, my simple point is - that the Taleban once were seen as exactly that "counter-army" (against Soviet influence) like you now want a counter-insurgent-group being implemented. CIA and ISI thought and said the same that you say now - about the Taleban. The Taleban are what you want to form now. and back then the eggheads thought they could keep their self-created tool to fight the Soviets under control.
doesn't this raise concerns for you? what you want, has been tried already. and it created the enemy they now fight against. Frankenstein turned against his creator, so to speak. Must we really repeat that? during the Soviet occupation, there was a green league, foreign Muslims going into Afghanistan and fighting there, but they never were accepted by Afghans, and were driven away, even by force - only some minor social work projects remained from them. and concerning allies raised amongst Afghans, they have a saying there, and there is much historic truth in it: "you can lease an Afghan for some time, but you can't buy him forever". Alliances between local warlords during the Soviet war changed incredibly quickly at times. Some of the most influential leaders there today had switched sides repeatedly back then. Your plan is reasonable, but it is reason made in the West. That place of theirs - does not work like that. It'S all old avice that already has been tried once. what was done back then, turned against us. So, no reason to do it again and make the same mistake twice. at least as long as you do not wish to trade with changing temporary partners on a day-to-day basis for many, many years to come, before you get sick and tired of it - and then leave it behind, just as many years later. The alternative is to unleash the full, unlimited, brutal firepower of all the Western military might and shatter the place into a thousand pieces, then collect the remains and put them together to your liking - or throw them away with the rest of the garbage. But that is to destroy Afghanistan in order to "save" it, as a general during vietnam once said before he flattened a whole Vietnamese city. to do so may be acceptably if letting Afghanistan and Pakistan live is at our cost and causes them to export more terrorism to our countries. But how many people would be willing to sign in to such a brutal policy of displaying brute, lethal force with no restrictions? Not even me is sure wether that would be worth it, or not. And in my focus is not so much Afghanistan, but Pakistan and it'S nukes anyway. If Pakistan would be neutralised and it's nukes along with it, the Afghanistan issue probably would come to solve itself all by itself. delete Pakistan from the formula, and you stabilise a whole complete global region.
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#20 | |
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But, ok, I trust that you know more about than me. So since if we rule out eradicating Afghanistan again, that leaves us with neutralizing Pakistan. I didn't ever really consider that as an option, but how would you go about doing it without risking nuclear conflict?
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#21 |
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I either risk it, or I do not start.
You can't confront a nuclear power without risking that scenario. However, in the long run it may prove better to do it while they still cannot shoot ICBMs as far as to Europe, what of course doe snot mean they could not take revenge by nuclear smuggle and proliferation - the nuclear terror option having been my much greater concern since long time anyway, compared to Iran or Pakistan getting ICBMs. every Pakistani should be clear about that for each of his 50 bombs that he drops, a hundred American, British and French ICBMC come flying back. On the other hand, western civilisartion is far mor vulnerable to just even one nuclear bomb hitting a Western metropole. Let'S build a time machine, go back to when Pakistan still had no nukesl and THEN crush it and delete it from the map, forever. Would have saved the region and world stability many worries. It has been a centre of "evil", so to speak, since its very beginning. Hell, it was even born in and through violence. 750 thousand people got killed during the founding time when Muslims and Hindus had to move due to the splitting of British India. It was about forming an islamic country, of course.
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#22 |
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Maybe we could start a fight between India and Pakistan, instead?
That way the only harm to Western civilization would be millions of people unable to get tech support for Windows ![]()
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#25 | |
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#26 |
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If you don't work on-change-break the tribal system you'll just be another "passing by conquerer". They had many. They either fought them or waited them out. In either case they didn't "change". And that is their victory! So you need a social engineering plan. Maybe a fundamental change in the traditional economy so as to bring people from their villages to the 4 or 5 bigger cities. In this context maybe the real enemy isn't the taliban but the puppy flower!
![]() Anyway I think that, for the US, Afganistan is actually a "secondary target" when compaped to Iraq. Maybe this is the reason behind the stalemate.
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#27 | ||
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CCIP is right though, we(USA) need to decide exactly how many enemies we are willing to make. If we are really in a 'War on Terror', in all the forms it may take, and not just concentrating on hounding Al Quaida......we're sunk. You don't defeat a tactic anymore than you defeat murder or rape. I fear we made a big mistake treating 9-11 as a 'act of war' instead of a horrific 'crime'. |
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