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Old 04-09-09, 06:43 AM   #1
JALU3
Grey Wolf
 
Join Date: May 2007
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Default Foreign Policy Question

During the 2008 US Presidential Campaign the OEF-A/ISAF operations were touted as "the Good/Just War", where as Iraq was described as the mistake, the detour, and so on. Our current President ran on such rehtorric. However, now with the announced draw down of US forces in Iraq, and a shift to Afghanistan as the main AO within the CentCom region, I have started to hear calls of Afghanistan not being a just war, that it's one that we need to get out of, and that we cannot succeed. I am sure there might have been calls of that in the past, but to me it seems to be a slowly increasing drumbeat from those on the opposite aisle from myself on the plitical spectrum. Is this the case, or am I mistaken? If this is the case, why?
Does the US and NATO plan to succeed in Afghanistan? If so, how? If so, why are some nations not willing to commit the forces and resources to achieve said success?
__________________
"The Federation needs men like you, doctor. Men of conscience. Men of principle.
Men who can sleep at night... You're also the reason Section Thirty-one exists --
someone has to protect men like you from a universe that doesn't share your
sense of right and wrong."
-Sloan, Section Thirty-One
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