Originally posted by DracoM
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Afghanistan - the reality
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scottycelt
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostScotty do you really believe that the point of these wars is to win them, and create a better, more peaceful, stable , Just and affluent country for the residents.
Really believe it, I mean?
What I do believe is that fighting some wars is preferable to the "peaceful" alternative. Democratic Europe preferable to a Nazi or Communist Europe, for example.
The proof of the success or failure of the Afghanistan operations will not be known for some years. It's now very much up to the Afghans themselves how things work out.
Only time will tell, team, only time will tell.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostDo I believe everyone will live happily ever after, following a war? No, I don't. Do I believe that all the countries which contributed to the Coalition forces went into Afghanistan just for the sake of it? No, I don't.
What I do believe is that fighting some wars is preferable to the "peaceful" alternative. Democratic Europe preferable to a Nazi or Communist Europe, for example.
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostThe proof of the success or failure of the Afghanistan operations will not be known for some years. It's now very much up to the Afghans themselves how things work out.
Only time will tell, team, only time will tell.
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It is my belief that Scotty Celt has set knuckle-dragging Neanderthal politics back by millennia (source: his avatar).
To quote his hero, Sir Richard Littlejohn(son), you couldn't make it up.
Even a defeat is a victory. Even negotiating with terrorists is a win. Every soldier's widow can sleep well tonight knowing SC thought their husband or wife's death was worthwhile. Let the record state, he didn't volunteer himself to defeat this nefarious Evil that is now being negotiated with to 'win the peace' or something. :whistle: x infinity. Debilos.Last edited by Thropplenoggin; 18-06-13, 21:19.It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Many (most?) Afghans do not like the Taliban. Anyone who has read The Kite Runner will know that. But likewise, anyone who has read the novels of John Masters will know that the indigenous peoples of those regions are tough, determined and intelligent who, when foreign forces invade will melt away, regroup, attack from remote mountainous hide-outs, do not seek modern comforts nor a materialistic lifestyle. They are still culturally 'medieval', that is to say, they are religious fundamentalists, do not flinch at (what we regard as) cruel and bloodthirsty punishments, hold life less dear, and see the role of women and the education of girls as 'The West' did a few centuries ago. It is completely hopeless and misguided for us to impose our mores upon them by force; and if we think a parliamentary democracy will spring up overnight then we are crazy. Moreover, it's none of our damned business. As for the argument about 'protecting Europe/America from terrorism', it is perfectly obvious that such anti-Western attitudes that exist (and the fanatics who express them in horrendous ways) are the product of our meddling in the region anyway. So I'm afraid, Scotty, I disagree with your disagreement!!!
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostMany (most?) Afghans do not like the Taliban. Anyone who has read The Kite Runner will know that. But likewise, anyone who has read the novels of John Masters will know that the indigenous peoples of those regions are tough, determined and intelligent who, when foreign forces invade will melt away, regroup, attack from remote mountainous hide-outs, do not seek modern comforts nor a materialistic lifestyle. They are still culturally 'medieval', that is to say, they are religious fundamentalists, do not flinch at (what we regard as) cruel and bloodthirsty punishments, hold life less dear, and see the role of women and the education of girls as 'The West' did a few centuries ago. It is completely hopeless and misguided for us to impose our mores upon them by force; and if we think a parliamentary democracy will spring up overnight then we are crazy. Moreover, it's none of our damned business. As for the argument about 'protecting Europe/America from terrorism', it is perfectly obvious that such anti-Western attitudes that exist (and the fanatics who express them in horrendous ways) are the product of our meddling in the region anyway. So I'm afraid, Scotty, I disagree with your disagreement!!!
You are right, though, that this complex tribal nation will outwit our interference and crass imposing of Western values, as it has always done. I have learned to accept that Scotty Celt has no understanding of historical precedent in this particular instance.
It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Originally posted by anotherbob View PostIt's my belief that time has already told.....
Time and time again.
Except, perhaps, by Eric Bogle.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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scottycelt
Originally posted by ardcarp View PostMany (most?) Afghans do not like the Taliban. Anyone who has read The Kite Runner will know that. But likewise, anyone who has read the novels of John Masters will know that the indigenous peoples of those regions are tough, determined and intelligent who, when foreign forces invade will melt away, regroup, attack from remote mountainous hide-outs, do not seek modern comforts nor a materialistic lifestyle. They are still culturally 'medieval', that is to say, they are religious fundamentalists, do not flinch at (what we regard as) cruel and bloodthirsty punishments, hold life less dear, and see the role of women and the education of girls as 'The West' did a few centuries ago. It is completely hopeless and misguided for us to impose our mores upon them by force; and if we think a parliamentary democracy will spring up overnight then we are crazy. Moreover, it's none of our damned business. As for the argument about 'protecting Europe/America from terrorism', it is perfectly obvious that such anti-Western attitudes that exist (and the fanatics who express them in horrendous ways) are the product of our meddling in the region anyway. So I'm afraid, Scotty, I disagree with your disagreement!!!
However, the Afghanistan of the 19th and 20th Centuries will not necessarily be the Afghanistan of the 21st and beyond. My only position is to state that it is far too early to say with any certainty what the legacy of the last 12 years will be and will it revert to the situation as it was prior to 2001? It might do but considering the current reality on the ground that is unlikely, I suspect. Terrorists were being trained in Afghanistan long before Nato started its 'meddling'. That's precisely why the UN gave it full authority to 'meddle'. I wholly agree with you that a Western-style democracy in a country like Afghanistan is a bit of a pipe-dream, to say the least. However any future arrangement that is suitable to most Afghans, and an improvement on what went before, has to be a good thing for both them and us, surely?
Those members who claim to already know the future of Afghanistan must all have crystal balls. I readily admit that I don't have a crystal ball and therefore retain an open mind as to the likely outcome, whether it be a political and social advance or just the same as before.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostThat is a perfectly reasonable point of view, ardcap, and you could well prove to be right.
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostHowever, the Afghanistan of the 19th and 20th Centuries will not necessarily be the Afghanistan of the 21st and beyond.
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostMy only position is to state that it is far too early to say with any certainty what the legacy of the last 12 years will be and will it revert to the situation as it was prior to 2001? It might do but considering the current reality on the ground that is unlikely, I suspect. Terrorists were being trained in Afghanistan long before Nato started its 'meddling'. That's precisely why the UN gave it full authority to 'meddle'. I wholly agree with you that a Western-style democracy in a country like Afghanistan is a bit of a pipe-dream, to say the least. However any future arrangement that is suitable to most Afghans, and an improvement on what went before, has to be a good thing for both them and us, surely?
If we must embrace speculation here, however, I wonder what the British government in 2001 would have thought had they been in possession of those crystal balls that you mention and thus been able to predict the current state of Afghanistan and compare it with their hopes and expectations of 12 years of involvement there, mindful that it would involve more than four hundred deaths of British military personnel and a sum in excess of forty thousand million pounds of hard pressed taxpayers' money?
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostThose members who claim to already know the future of Afghanistan must all have crystal balls. I readily admit that I don't have a crystal ball and therefore retain an open mind as to the likely outcome, whether it be a political and social advance or just the same as before.
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Richard Barrett
Regarding crystal balls: many people back in 2001 predicted exactly the kind of mess that the Afghanistan engagement would become, without the use of such devices, because it was so incredibly obvious. Our government and the US government are still lying about what its aims were and whether they can or will be achieved. Supposedly what was at stake was the safety of the citizens of these countries, but the expenditure of thousands of human lives on both sides, not to mention vast and continuing financial expenditure which ends up in the pockets of the fatcats of the "defence" industry, that is to say of the people who are really calling the shots, appears if anything to have had the opposite effect.
This war has now lasted as long as both world wars of the twentieth century put together, and so far has achieved nothing apart from death, pain and misery, unless I'm very much mistaken. How much more time, how much more death, is necessary before something positive could be said to have been achieved?
"Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." (attributed to Albert EInstein)
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostRegarding crystal balls: many people back in 2001 predicted exactly the kind of mess that the Afghanistan engagement would become, without the use of such devices, because it was so incredibly obvious. Our government and the US government are still lying about what its aims were and whether they can or will be achieved. Supposedly what was at stake was the safety of the citizens of these countries, but the expenditure of thousands of human lives on both sides, not to mention vast and continuing financial expenditure which ends up in the pockets of the fatcats of the "defence" industry, that is to say of the people who are really calling the shots, appears if anything to have had the opposite effect.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThis war has now lasted as long as both world wars of the twentieth century put together, and so far has achieved nothing apart from death, pain and misery, unless I'm very much mistaken.
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostHow much more time, how much more death, is necessary before something positive could be said to have been achieved?
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post"Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." (attributed to Albert Einstein)
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amateur51
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostRegarding crystal balls: many people back in 2001 predicted exactly the kind of mess that the Afghanistan engagement would become, without the use of such devices, because it was so incredibly obvious. Our government and the US government are still lying about what its aims were and whether they can or will be achieved. Supposedly what was at stake was the safety of the citizens of these countries, but the expenditure of thousands of human lives on both sides, not to mention vast and continuing financial expenditure which ends up in the pockets of the fatcats of the "defence" industry, that is to say of the people who are really calling the shots, appears if anything to have had the opposite effect.
This war has now lasted as long as both world wars of the twentieth century put together, and so far has achieved nothing apart from death, pain and misery, unless I'm very much mistaken. How much more time, how much more death, is necessary before something positive could be said to have been achieved?
"Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." (attributed to Albert EInstein)
Interesting that you should call up Einstein - of course what you and he lack, is ... faith :winkeye:
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostLucidly and angrily put, RB.
Interesting that you should call up Einstein - of course what you and he lack, is ... faith
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scottycelt
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostRegarding crystal balls: many people back in 2001 predicted exactly the kind of mess that the Afghanistan engagement would become, without the use of such devices, because it was so incredibly obvious. Our government and the US government are still lying about what its aims were and whether they can or will be achieved. Supposedly what was at stake was the safety of the citizens of these countries, but the expenditure of thousands of human lives on both sides, not to mention vast and continuing financial expenditure which ends up in the pockets of the fatcats of the "defence" industry, that is to say of the people who are really calling the shots, appears if anything to have had the opposite effect.
This war has now lasted as long as both world wars of the twentieth century put together, and so far has achieved nothing apart from death, pain and misery, unless I'm very much mistaken. How much more time, how much more death, is necessary before something positive could be said to have been achieved?
"Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." (attributed to Albert EInstein)
Here are some of the facts, though:
So we know 49 countries contributed forces to the huge Nato-led operation (up to Dec 2012). Even that number doesn't include the list of diverse nations who lent support to the operation in other ways, including Iran & Russia. All with the unanimous blessing of the United Nations Security Council.
It could be that the leaders of all these countries are either 'insane' or total mugs, completely failing to see the 'incredibly obvious'.
Yes, that must be it ... :ok:
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