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I wouldn't qualify. Being blind to what the Taliban are 'up to', as we were once before, doesn't sound like a good idea. It sounds like a for real National security issue. Listed some locations where an Afghanistan deployment could be off set, where national security doesn't appear to be as much 'in play'.Would you like to be part of that small presence?
So long as they dont use it to attack americans, they can have it. Yes, this is just another example of how a small determined group of people with no rules can beat a bigger force. Unfortunately Im not sure what the alternative is to fight islamic fascism. They wont give up? They cant win, we cant win.
Nice try. We know this is all horseshit. Because even AFTER our invasion and occupation, our own military still found nothing of what was alleged by Powell at the UN General Assembly, so there was nothing "to clean up at the target sites". Saudi Arabia was so unconcerned with any threats from Iraq, they didn't even join the "coalition of the willing" in our invasion efforts. The shear folly of attempting to occupy Iraq was well understood by the VP Dick Cheney when he was interviewed in '94 after the first Gulf War.
BRINKLEY: One other question — it keeps coming up. Why didn’t we go to Baghdad and clean it all up while we were there?
Sec. CHENEY: "Well, just as it’s important, I think, for a president to know when to commit U.S. forces to combat, it’s also important to know when not to commit U.S. forces to combat. I think for us to get American military personnel involved in a civil war inside Iraq would literally be a quagmire." . . . .
. . . and . . . .
"If you can take down the central government of Iraq, you can easily see pieces of Iraq fly off. Part of it the Syrians would like to have in the West. Part of Eastern Iraq the Iranians would like to claim – fought over for eight years. In the North you have the Kurds, and if the Kurds spin loose and join with the Kurds in Turkey, then you threaten the territorial integrity of Turkey. It’s a quagmire if you go that far and try to take over Iraq."
We never had to go into Iraq, but even if we had elected to go in - just to unseat Saddam - we didn't have to bomb their infrastructure into oblivion, we didn't have to put millions of trained and armed military-aged men out of work, and we didn't have to disband their civilian authority. We could have deposed Saddam and left the secular Baathist government intact to find its own way, instead of disenfranchising millions and allowing them to devolve into the fundamentalist Islamists who later formed ISIS.
The risks were well understood beforehand, but it was all done for the profit of the few, at the expense of the many, and at an incalculable cost to the future.
Before our invasion and occupational folly, Saddam was in complete compliance. 700 inspectors in Iraq guaranteed that. Bush himself admitted there were no WMD in a White House press conference as early as August 21, 2006. But even after 3-1/2 years of occupation, he was still desperate to continue to conflate Iraq, and reasons for our invasion, with the events of 9/11/01.You are not completely accurate. We did find wmds, just not the expected massive quantities. And that's beside the point. Under the agreement the regime signed to end the 91 war, it was up to the regime to cooperate with inspectors and prove that they destroyed the wmd material that was uncovered in the 91 war and admitted to by the regime. Or should we have just taken the word of the brutal tyrannical dictator?
REPORTER: A lot of the consequences you mentioned for pulling out seem like maybe they never would have been there if we hadn’t gone in. How do you square all of that?
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: I square it, because — imagine a world in which you had Saddam Hussein who had the capacity to make a weapon of mass destruction, who was paying suiciders to kill innocent life, who would — who had relations with Zarqawi. Imagine what the world would be like with him in power. The idea is to try to help change the Middle East.
Now, look, I didn’t — part of the reason we went into Iraq was — the main reason we went into Iraq at the time was we thought he had weapons of mass destruction. It turns out he didn’t, but he had the capacity to make weapons of mass destruction. (This too was untrue) But I also talked about the human suffering in Iraq, and I also talked the need to advance a freedom agenda. And so my question — my answer to your question is, is that — imagine a world in which Saddam Hussein was there, stirring up even more trouble in a part of the world that had so much resentment and so much hatred that people came and killed 3,000 of our citizens.
The fact is there was never any good reason to invade Iraq. But even after Bush's uncalled for invasion, there was no reason to engage in such a ham-handed occupation and "nation building".You know, I’ve heard this theory about, you know, everything was just fine until we arrived, and then, you know, kind of that we’re going to stir up the hornet’s nest theory. It just — just doesn’t hold water, as far as I’m concerned. The terrorists attacked us and killed 3,000 of our citizens before we started the freedom agenda in the Middle East."
You are not completely accurate. We did find wmds, just not the expected massive quantities. And that's beside the point. Under the agreement the regime signed to end the 91 war, it was up to the regime to cooperate with inspectors and prove that they destroyed the wmd material that was uncovered in the 91 war and admitted to by the regime. Or should we have just taken the word of the brutal tyrannical dictator?
Yep
They found the WMD's Jr's daddy gave them when they were fighting Iran. None of it was usable.
Sadam was a buffer to Iran. Removing him destabilized the entire region.
All to fulfill the neocon dream of American oil companies controlling all of Iraq's oil reserves.
Greed does it again.
And the blame for destablaiztion of the middle east goes to Jimmy Carter's poor handling of Iran when they seized the American Embassy.
Prove it.
The alternative is like with any and every religion, education and technology.
The more educated people are the less they believe in crazy ass myths and kill one another over who's God is in charge....
The whole "withdrawal with conditions" was falling apart before they even started. The Taliban made that abundantly clear all the while the US kept negotiating with them.
What do you think he should have done? Invade Iran?
Exaggerate much? I recall - quite vividly - that the Ayatollah held onto the hostages deliberately because back door negotiations from Reagan's campaign team promised weapons in exchange for that accommodation, which was designed just to make Carter look weak and lose the election. That covert weapons sale was one leg of the Contra-gate scandal where the money paid by Iran was then used to buy drugs, the sale of which funded the Nicaraguan Contras in violation of the Boland Amendment.No. However he could have been a bit more forceful. He could have parked an aircraft carrier nearby and given the regime an ultimatum. Instead he wrote love letters to the Ayatollah appealing to his religion.
Exaggerate much? I recall - quite vividly - that the Ayatollah held onto the hostages deliberately because back door negotiations from Reagan's campaign team promised weapons in exchange for that accommodation, which was designed just to make Carter look weak and lose the election. That covert weapons sale was one leg of the Contra-gate scandal where the money paid by Iran was then used to buy drugs, the sale of which funded the Nicaraguan Contras in violation of the Boland Amendment.
Don't tell me you slept through that one, Van Winkle. North and Poindexter were both convicted of multiple felonies for that fiasco.
You are not completely accurate. We did find wmds, just not the expected massive quantities. And that's beside the point. Under the agreement the regime signed to end the 91 war, it was up to the regime to cooperate with inspectors and prove that they destroyed the wmd material that was uncovered in the 91 war and admitted to by the regime. Or should we have just taken the word of the brutal tyrannical dictator?
no they didn't "win", but they didnt "lose", they will probably be stuck in this limbo of where they cant get too powerful but dont go away foreverAfghanistan: 'We have won the war, America has lost', say Taliban
I tend to agree. The Taliban are still around, still controls parts of Afghanistan, and will probably be in charge of all of it within a few years. America is leaving and the people they went to unseat from power will be back in charge.
No. However he could have been a bit more forceful. He could have parked an aircraft carrier nearby and given the regime an ultimatum.
The opposition to the Najibullah regime was fractured, turned to squabling internally, and fought each other. The Taliban are unified. They'll take Kandahar, Helmand, and the West before they move on Kabul, but, it's hardly implausible.The Taliban were never going to say anything different.
That said, I rather doubt the Taliban are going to roll into Kabul any time soon. The modern Afghan government is much stronger than the Soviet puppet state, and even they held on for years after the Russians left.
No. However he could have been a bit more forceful. He could have parked an aircraft carrier nearby and given the regime an ultimatum. Instead he wrote love letters to the Ayatollah appealing to his religion.
For the record, actually, Carter weighed the option of military action against Iran, but the post-Vietnam malaise resulted in the Joint Chiefs bluntly stating the US military wasn't capable of it.
The Iranians were gassed by the Iraqis and it didn't deter them, so I'm not sure what you expect an aircraft carrier would have accomplished.
“We” pulled out of Vietnam. Technically “we” didn’t “win” that war either.
Now Vietnam is a rather nice place to go visit.
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